Monday, 12 May 2025

Porky's Celebrity Guest

Hunter Porky Pig decides to eat a sandwich on his rowboat, but it interrupted by a quacking flock of ducks in Porky's Duck Hunt (1937)



Porky goes for his shotgun. I like how the ducks simply fly up with their butts in air, like someone hit the reverse button on them.



The second time, Porky somehow gets his gun twisted around shoots a hole in the boat.



Out of the lake comes Joe Penner and Goo-Goo (his duck). This gives Penner a chance to shout one of his catchphrases—“Wanna buy a duck?” The scene ends.



Director Tex Avery didn’t know it, but this cartoon was the forerunner of another hunting cartoon starring a different character, a rabbit in complete control of the situation instead of a darn-fool duck being crazy. It also launched the duck on a wild career of several personalities.

Boxoffice magazine had this to say in its issue of June 7, 1937:
The grown-up kiddies, as well as those of school age, will doubtless find enjoyment in this first-rate Looney Tune produced by Leon Schlesinger. The little stuttering pig decides to go duck shooting and, although well equipped with bullets, decoys and a complete hunting outfit, he has difficulty locating the elusive ducks. When he finally finds one it proves to be entirely too smart for him, so much so that it even shows Porky the proper way to fire his gun. After many more mishaps Porky returns home empty-handed where the scornful ducks outside his window give him the “bird.” Deserving a spot on any program, this cartoon is lacking in only one element, that of color.
Interestingly, about the same time, Walter Lantz released a duck hunt cartoon starring Oswald the rabbit and his dog Elmer. It was the forerunner of, well, nothing.

Bobe Cannon and Virgil Ross are the credited animators of this landmark Warners short, with the best drunken fish in cartoondom.

Sunday, 11 May 2025

And the Michael Goes To...

How could Jack Benny win an award from a television academy before he ever appeared on TV?

Simple. He didn’t win an award for television.

In case you’re confused, we’ll sort it out.

The year was 1950. Jack’s award did not come from the American Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, which gave out the Emmys in January that year in a ceremony from Los Angeles. His honour was handed out in March by the Academy of Radio and Television Best Arts and Sciences in New York. Benny’s radio show was still going strong, so the Academy feted him for his radio show.

From what I can tell, this was the first and only time this Academy mounted an awards ceremony. While the winners were announced in the national press, the ceremony itself was not broadcast on radio or TV, and it avoided the notice of the show biz bible, Variety.

The awards were called the “Michaels.” Who Michael was, I leave you to discover.

The International News Service wire wrote, in part, on March 22, 1950, the day after the awards.


GODFREY SHOW UP FRONT
Dinah, Bing top list for radio-TV ‘Oscars’
NEW YORK (INS)—The Academy of Radio and Television Best Arts and Sciences made its first annual awards for the year's best performances in those fields last night to a host of celebrities including Walter Winchell, Jack Benny and Arthur Godfrey.
The radio and video awards were made at a reception and dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel as the first annual designations in several radio and TV classifications in what is hoped will be the equivalent of the movie "Oscar."
The winners were chosen by a field of top experts in radio, newspaper, magazine, educational and sociological fields from throughout the country. [The AP reported there were more than 1,250 judges]
[...]
• • •
NOT ALL those honored could be present personally. Among the radio and television celebrities present were Tex and Jinx Falkenberg, singer Monica Lewis, Columnist “Bugs" Baer and Mrs. Baer, Mrs. Wendell Winkle, RCA president Frank Folsom and CBS vice president Hubbell Robinson.


Radio Daily had a full list in its story:

Award Winners Named At Dinner In Waldorf
Winners in 27 categories were named last night as recipients of the first annual "Michael" Awards, sponsored by the Academy of Radio and Television Best Arts and Sciences. The awards were announced by Ed Sullivan at a $25-a-plate Awards Dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria, which was co-sponsored by the New York Heart Fund.
Winners listed in one-two-three order were as follows:
News & Commentary (radio)—Walter Winchell, ABC; Edward R. Murrow, CBS; Lowell Thomas, CBS. Comedy & Variety (radio)—Jack Benny, CBS; Amos 'n' Andy, CBS; Godfrey's Talent Scouts, CBS.
Education, Forums, Etc. (radio)—American Town Meeting, ABC; People's Platform, CBS; Meet the Press, MBS.
Religions Programs (radio)—Greatest Story Ever Told, ABC; Eternal Light, NBC; Family Theater, MBS.
Drama (radio)—Theater Guild on the Air, NBC; Lux Radio Theater, CBS; Railroad Hour, NBC.
Educational Documentaries (radio)—You Are There, CBS; Living, NBC; United Nations Series, NBC.
Agricultural (radio)—Farm & Home, NBC; CBS Farm News, CBS: American Farmer, ABC.
Music (radio)—Telephone Hour, NBC; Voice of Firestone, NBC; NBC Symphony. NBC.
Children's Programs (radio)—Let's Pretend, CBS; Juvenile Jury, MBS; Greatest Story Ever Told, ABC.
Outstanding Comedian (radio)—Groucho Marx, CBS; Jack Benny, CBS; Bob Hope, NBC.
Outstanding Comedian (television)—Milton Berle, NBC; Ed Wynn, CBS; Sid Caesar, NBC.
Outstanding Dramatic Actor (radio)—Everett Sloane, House Jameson, Staats Cotsworth.
Outstanding Dramatic Actor (television)—Ralph Bellamy (Man Against Crime), Charles Heston (Studio One), Everett Sloane.
Drama (television)—Philco Playhouse, NBC; Studio One, CBS; Ford Theater, CBS.
News & Commentary (television)—Camel News Caravan, NBC; Headline Clues, DuMont; Leon Pearson & News, NBC.
Variety Programs (television)—Toast of the Town, CBS; Texaco Star Theater, NBC; Talent Scouts, CBS.
Children's Programs (television)—Kukla Fran & Ollie, NBC; Mr. I Magination, CBS; Singing Lady, ABC.
Sportscasters Mel Allen, Bill Stern, Harry Wismer, ABC.
Promising Stars—Dave Garroway, Abe Burrowsm Jack Carter, Fran Warren.
Special Citations — Lawrence Tibbett, Paul Winchell, Fred Waring.
Outstanding Dramatic Actress (radio)—Helen Hayes (Electric Theater); Agnes Moorhead (Suspense); Ann Sothern (in Theater Guild's "Burlesque").
Outstanding Dramatic Actress (television)—Gertrude Berg, CBS; Felicia Montealegre; Faye Emerson.
Top Feature Vocalist (radio & TV)—Dinah Shore, CBS; Jo Stafford, CBS; Monica Lewis.
Top Male Vocalist (radio & TV)—Bing Crosby, CBS; Frank Sinatra; Perry Como, NBC.
Outstanding Radio Writer Cy Howard for “My Friend Irma" and "Life with Luigi"; Norman Corwin; Morton Wishengrad.
Outstanding Producer Director (radio)—Homer Flickett for "Theater Guild on the Air"; Fletcher Markle; William Keighly.
Outstanding Producer Director (television)—Worthington Minor for "Studio One" and "The Goldbergs"; Mark Daniels; Burr Tillstram [sic].
Program of the Year (radio)—You Are There, CBS; "Could Be" by Norman Corwin, NBC; "Sister Carrie" (NBC University Theater).
Program of the Year (television)—Godfrey's Talent Scouts, CBS; Eisenhower's Crusade in Europe, ABC; Kukla, Fran & Ollie, NBC.


The Michael wasn’t the only honour Benny got in March 1950. Radio Daily made this declaration on its front page of March 10.

BENNY ACCLAIMED TOP PERSONALITY
Crosby, Hope And Amos 'n' Andy Also Rate High With Radio Editors In Radio Daily Poll
Jack Benny has been acclaimed "the greatest radio personality during the last 25 years" in a questionnaire poll of 330 of the nation's radio editors completed yesterday by RADIO DAILY.
In naming Benny many of the radio editors supported their choice with comments about him as a master show-man who has consistently presented top comedy programming over the years. Second choice of the radio editors was Bing Crosby who ran close to Benny in the balloting while third place resulted in a tie between Bob Hope and Amos 'n Andy.
In selecting Benny most of the radio editors wrote in their non-commercial choice. This honor went to the late Franklin Delano Roosevelt, of whom one editor wrote: "He relied almost entirely on radio to instill confidence, faith and courage in this nation."
Comments were many and varied among the radio editors in awarding the honor to Benny. Among them were:
"Jack Benny for his personal accomplishments and those he has helped to stardom."—Nat Lund, Seattle Times, Seattle, Wash.
"Jack Benny is not necessarily the best or the greatest judged in terms of pure talent—but he deserves the title of 'greatest' in the sense that his radio characterization has not only become a national tradition, but has maintained itself as such in the top levels of public acclaim longer than any other." — Ben Gross New York Daily News.
"If by radio personality you mean entertaining personality, I'd say Jack Benny." — Peg White, San Diego Journal, San Diego, Calif.
"If F. D. R. is barred from competition, I'll throw my vote to Jack Benny who had led the way so many years."— John Crosby, New York Herald-Tribune.
In taking the poll RADIO DAILY asked radio editors one question: "Who Was the Greatest Radio Personality During the Last 25 Years?" Editors were invited to comment on their selection.
Among other personalities who received ballots in the poll were Walter Winchell, Arthur Godfrey, Lowell Thomas, Major Bowes, H. V. Kaltenbom, Alexander Woollcott and Will Rogers.
Jack Benny, currently starred in the "Jack Benny Show" on Columbia Broadcasting System Sundays from 7:00 to 7:30 p.m., EST, under sponsorship of the American Tobacco Company, first entered radio 18 years ago.
Started In 1932
Back in 1932, Benny bumped into columnist Ed Sullivan one night in a Broadway restaurant. Sullivan asked him to guest on his radio program the following evening. "But I don't know anything about radio," Jack protested. "Nobody does," Sullivan replied.
Benny offered to give it a whirl, gratis, and on this first broadcast of his life introduced himself with a line now immortal in radio, "This is Jack Benny talking. Now there will be a brief pause for everyone to say, 'Who cares'?"
First Commercial On NBC
Millions did care, as Benny soon found out. The same year, 1932, he had a sponsor and a network program on NBC. He was a sensation from the start, zooming to the top in rating sweepstakes and helping to put radio on its first real pants. He has remained at the top, or pretty much so, ever since, a national institution and trail-blazer in radio comedy.
The "Jack Benny Show" has remained virtually constant in basic pattern through the years, evidence of its tested value as a style of entertainment. As everybody knows, Jack doesn't tell the jokes himself, though he is a master wit. He is the "unhappy" target for the barbs of his radio gang.
As a master showman, Jack Benny's genius is universally recognized. His knack of building personalities into stars of their own right is well known. Dennis Day, Eddie Anderson, who plays Rochester, and Phil Harris are notable examples of his star system.
Benny and his company moved over to CBS from NBC in January, 1949, and since then his Lucky Strike broadcasts have been a Sunday night feature from Hollywood.


The day before the survey results came out, Radio Daily published the latest Pacific Hooperatings. Jack’s show was number one at 40.9, with Bergen and McCarthy next at 33.1. Incidentally, Dennis Day was 11th at 19.6, while Phil Harris and Alice Faye followed at 18.9.

Jack continued to popular. It took another 15 years before he succumbed to glum ratings. 1932 to 1965 is a pretty good run for anyone.

Saturday, 10 May 2025

Bray vs McCay

Animated cartoons started filling movie screens during World War One, and one of the men behind them was J.R. Bray.

Historians tell us Mr. Bray was involved in a little subterfuge. The story goes in 1913, he paid a visit to cartoonist Winsor McCay, who explained the techniques he used in making and filming “moving” cartoons. On January 9, 1914, he filed for a patent (granted Aug. 11) for a process to create animated films, and started pushing others to pay him royalties—including McCay.

This is either a syndicated or (more likely) wire service story about one of Bray's several court cases to uphold the Bray-Hurd patent on the process of making animated cartoons.

I like the way Bray paints himself as a champion of the individual animator, and how Bray is actually helping the poor innocent cartoonist to make money, money, money. Bray glosses over the fact he wants his cut.

This version of the story appeared in the June 6, 1915 edition of the Brooklyn Eagle though I've seen the same story in other papers on later dates.

J. R. BRAY EXPLAINS LAW SUIT
Considerable comment has been created lately by reason of a suit by J. R. Bray, maker of the Pathe-Bray Cartoon Comedies, against certain other cartoonists for infringement of his patents on his process for producing animated cartoons.
In the answer filed in the suit the claim is made that Mr. Bray's patents should not have been granted on the grounds that the process is the same as that previously used by Mr. McCay. An article appeared recently in a New York paper criticising Mr. Bray for bringing suit for infringement of his patent, and expressing the belief on the part of the writer of the article that Mr. Bray is endeavoring to corner the market on animated cartoons. When Mr. Bray's attention was directed to this article by our correspondent, he stated that the party responsible for the article was laboring under an entirely wrong impression.
"I am not endeavoring to corner the market for animated cartoons," said Mr. Bray, "nor am I desirous of keeping any artist or cartoonist of ability out of the field. The idea of making drawings that move was not original with Mr. McCay. Animated cartoons had been produced in Paris by Pathe Freres several years before Mr. McCay made his first film, and moving drawings of a very simple and crude type had been produced long before that in the form of toys called "The Wheel of Life," and other novelties. However, either these cartoons were so crude or the methods of producing them were so tedious, complicated and expensive as to render them impractical commercially.
"I have invented methods of simplifying the work so as to make the animated cartoon economically practical. I have just had a second patent granted which embodies improvements, and new features which greatly improve the quality and the effect of the animated cartoon. I have spent thousands of dollars and years of time developing the animated cartoon on a practical basis, and have just perfected a new improvement which we will have patented, which will simplify matters still more and bring the product to a still higher slate of perfection. Instead of spending six months on one film, we are now producing at the rate of several a week. None of these methods were over used by Mr. McCay or anybody else prior to ourselves. We have a large and well organized staff, and have laid our plans for the development of this business on a tremendous scale. We do not want to limit the field to a few artists, but want the work of all the best men obtainable. We plan to protect the quality and hold up the price to a level that will give the artist what his work is really worth. Our plan is co-operative. The average artist, humorist or otherwise, is not a business man, and has in most cases, received a very small proportion of the returns his talent has produced. It is our plan that under our co-operative system, all cartoonists of ability who are able to do high-class animated cartoons, shall be able to take advantage of our patented process, thereby caving a vast amount of work for themselves and get a higher rate than if they attempt to produce the cartoons independently. Furthermore, all of the artists co-operating with us are advertised extensively, and given full credit for their work."


Bray had a number of animators under contract and was able to put them to work. In late 1915, he signed a contract with Paramount.

The Motion Picture News of Dec. 18, 1915 tells the story.

Col. Heezaliar Will Tell the Truth for Paramount
His Creator, J. R. Bray, Who Was a Steady Contributor to Life, Puck and Judge Before Going to Pathe, Will Furnish One Reel of Animated Cartoons a Week

SMALLER even than "Little Mary" Pickford is the newest star who has been signed up to appear exclusively on the Paramount Program. He is Colonel Heezaliar, who for many months has materialized from the pen of J. R. Bray, the noted cartoonist, and appeared with his travel notes and records of doughty exploits, on the screen.
Colonel Heezaliar, it will be remembered, is the man who calmly stood at the plate, with the bases full, and allowed the second strike to flick the ashes off his cigar, and then clouted the next one a rap which would make the swats of Home-Run Baker sound like the drop of a ripe grape into a coal bunker.
And now the Colonel is to star alongside Mary Pickford, Marguerite Clark, Pauline Frederick, Hazel Dawn and the other notables on the Paramount Program. It has been brought about by a new contract between the Paramount and the J. R. Bray Studios, Inc., whereby Paramount will have one full reel of animated cartoons each week.
J. R. Bray, the creator of Colonel Heezaliar, and inventor of several patented processes by which these funny cartoons are produced, has added five noted artists to his staff. Each one will specialize in one form of cartoon work, and their productions will supplement the bi-weekly appearances of Heezaliar.
In addition to this feature, Mr. Bray is preparing something which he is confident will be the most startling and original feature of this kind ever shown, and will open up Ma new field in motion pictures.
He is not yet ready to announce it, but C. Allan Gilbert, long famous as artist and illustrator, is working with him on the first releases, which will be ready some time in January. The new feature will be known as the "Bray-Gilbert Releases," and will appear once a month.
"I am surprised myself at the immense popularity of Colonel Heezaliar," said Mr. Bray to Motiox Picture News. "It is without doubt the strongest cartoon character in existence, and is second only to Chaplin as a comedy character. Consequently we are going to feature this subject in the new releases, but in addition we will release a quantity of cartoon material, which will include a topical cartoon to accompany the Paramount Newspictures.
"Besides Mr. Gilbert I have added such artists as L. M. Glackens, Earl Hurd, C. T. Anderson and Paul Terry to the staff at the Bray Studios, and each will contribute something strong and striking to the new cartoon releases. Mr. Gilbert's new series is to be a phantasy novelty almost startling in its originality and conception.
"It has long been my ambition to produce the highest class of cartoon comedy possible, and place it before the highest class audiences in this country. For this purpose I have concluded that Paramount best suits my needs, and hence I have joined the Paramount program.
"In addition to these releases, we have arranged extensive distribution abroad. I believe my work is even better known in England than it is at home, and we plan to take advantage of the European market for such subjects. I have studied this cartoon question as related to motion pictures for more than eight years, and my original object in going into it was to open and develop a new field for the activities of artists. I believe I have done this."
Mr. Bray was born in Detroit, Mich., and has lived in New York since 1901. He was for seven years a newspaper artist, being also a steady contributor to the humorous weeklies, such as Life, Puck and Judge. He took his ideas to Pathe Freres over three years ago, since he felt that such a house with its many foreign branches could give him a larger international circulation than any other.
The Pathe officials at once saw the value of his work, and from that day to this he has dealt only with Pathe. Millions of persons have laughed and are laughing at the "Heezaliar" and "Police Dog" series, and his political cartoons in the Pathe News, the motion picture weekly, have attracted widespread newspaper comment.
Mr. Bray has truly originated a new school of art.




In 1919, Bray severed ties with Paramount and formed the Bray Pictures Corporation, then hooked up with Sam Goldwyn. But Bray lost interest in cartoons having made money with government and educational films during World War One. Bray closed his entertainment studio in spring of 1927 and carried on making other kinds of films.

His name appeared in the early sound cartoon period, but only to mention the cel process used in a film had been licensed under the Bray-Hurd patents. Theatrical animation would move forward, thanks to other people.

Note: part of this post appeared on the old GAC forums.

Friday, 9 May 2025

Story By

Friz Freleng’s Slick Hare (1947) featured celebrity caricatures, notably of Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, but cartoon expert E.O. Costello pointed out a couple the other day I should have caught.



Just as Tex Avery’s Hollywood Steps Out (1941) includes a happy producer Leon Schlesinger and right-hand man Henry Binder, the shot above is of the authors of this particular cartoon, Tedd Pierce and Mike Maltese.

Pierce was a noted martini imbiber when he wasn’t writing cartoons.

The two turn up in an early Bugs Bunny cartoon, Wackiki Wabbit (1943).

Pierce and his sister were amateur stage actors in the late 1920s. Maltese was a frustrated comedian. The two of them, remembered Warners assistant animator Jerry Eisenberg, would entertain staff members during studio coffee breaks.

Maltese succumbed to Joe Barbera waving dollars in front of him in November 1958 and moved to Hanna-Barbera. Pierce left the studio around 1960 and was soon writing The Alvin Show at Format Films.

Maltese and Pierce did another fine job on this cartoon, with Leopold Stokowski conducting a juke box and Ray Milland’s typewriter scene in The Lost Weekend being parodied. Director Friz Freleng shows perfect timing in the “pick up pie” scene with Bugs and Elmer.

Thursday, 8 May 2025

How To Clobber a Wolf

Tex Avery’s wolf is calling for Swing Shift Cinderella, not knowing she’s behind him with a frying pan.

She slowly moves the pan back over her head and, then, wham!

The action is all accomplished in these drawings. The first two are on two frames, the rest on single frames.

>

Preston Blair, Ray Abrams and Ed Love are the animators on this 1945 release. Whether Avery had his own effects animator, I don't know. Heck Allen gets the story credit.

Wednesday, 7 May 2025

The Heartbreak of Cake Pans

Bob and Ray brought several characters with them from WHDH Boston when they were hired at NBC New York in July 1951, mainly Mary Margaret McGoon and Tex Blaisdell. Then, at the network, they created more people.

One concept they came up with was a staff of announcers. There were ten. The problem was finding a personality for them; a character has to have characteristics. On the first shows, Shep Carruthers was the head announcer. One of the others was a guy who sounded like Elmer Fudd.

Carruthers was dropped, but Bob and Ray found something else for the other to do. They eliminated the “w” for “r” vocalistics and, instead, made him an incompetent roving reporter who talked before his mike was on. He was Wally Ballou.

However, Shep was not forgotten. He was revived in John Crosby’s Herald Tribune syndicate column of April 25, 1954. Crosby was away, so Bob and Ray filled the space with material that was much like you would find on their radio show. In fact, the whistling “s” routine was on an NBC radio show involving another of their phoney announcers, Artie Schermerhorn, who later was a partner or rival to Ballou on the CBS radio shows of around 1960. The fake bandleaders are based on, I think, a WHDH routine.

Nighttime Soap Opera
While John Crosby is on vacation, his column will be continued by a number of guest writers.
By BOB (ELLIOTT) and RAY (GOULDING)
SHEP CARRUTHERS, a former member of our announcing staff, dropped into our office the other day. His new teeth look just fine, and the sibilant trouble he once had is practically gone. (So much so, that he's back on the staff of WSSS, Sioux City.)
In addition to his on-the-air chores, Shep tells us he's also to be assistant program director, and that he's got a lot of new plans for shows. Radio listening habits have changed due to TV, says Shep, and it's now imperative for stations to revise their schedules.
* * *
Among his ideas for Sioux City, he may have stumbled upon a few that will bear watching. For instance, instead of the usual early morning "rise and shine" program (news, weather, farm news, etc.), Shep will sign the station on at 6 a. m. with an educational series, conducted by Dr. Harvey Hurtle, the author, lecturer, and former soap box derby winner. From 9 a. in. to noon, Shep plans three hours of dance band remote broadcasts from local ballrooms. Not that folks would be there dancing that early, but he feels it would be different anyway. Already slated for appearances are such well-known musical figures as Guyl Ombardo. Tom E. Dawsey, Vonman Rowe, and the one and only Fred E. Martin Orchestra, with vocals by Sink Rossbee.
Later in the day, the schedule will spotlight Happy Jack Forbush and his disk jockey program from the Peeping Tom Country Club, where the good folks from the surrounding fox-hunting country get together in their pink coats and battered top hats, after an afternoon of jumping.
* * *
FINALLY, in a daring departure, the new Carruthers lineup features soap operas for evening listening. Shep feels the men-folk miss too much of the daily pathos and drama so popular with their wives, so from now on, they'll be able to enjoy this truly American institution right along with them. He left with us a sample script from his new series, "Mother McGee, the Best Cook in the Neighborhood," and it sure looks good.
Roughly, the story line revolves around the baking of a layer cake for the country fair, under almost insurmountable difficulties. First, she misplaces her baking powder; then her almond extract turns up on the third shelf of the pantry, when it should have been on the second shelf. Discovering that it is impossible to bake a layer cake with one layer, Mother McGee is thwarted because she has only one 9-inch cake pan.
* * *
But let us quote directly from the script. Mother McGee has just welcomed Burford Leffingwell, the village half-wit, into her sunlit kitchen. She tells him to go over and lie down behind the stove, but instead he crawls under the rub and plays he is dust, as a knock sounds on the door:
SOUND: KNOCK ON DOOR.
MOTHER: Come in . . .
SOUND: DOOR OPENS AND CLOSES.
O'FAIL: How do you do, madam? I am Sean O'Fail, a traveling tinker. I also sell 9-inch cake pans. Could I sell you a 9-inch cake pan?
MOTHER: What did you say?
O'FAIL: I said . . .
MOTHER: Bless you, m'lad! How much is the cake pan?
O'FAIL: Tuppence ha'penny.
MOTHER: Here you are, and bless you, lad.
SOUND: COINS FALLING INTO TIN DISH.
O'FAIL: Good day to you kindly.
MOTHER: Good luck attend you, Sean O'Fail, the traveling tinker.
SOUND: DOOR OPENS AND CLOSES.
MOTHER: (musing) Now that I have another 9-inch pan, I can get on with my baking. (HUMS) I will bake a sugar cake . . . Oh! . . . Oh!!!! Where is my OLD 9-inch cake pan?
MUSIC: STING (AND UNDER).
ANNOUNCER: Well . . . it is incredible, but true. Now, kindly Mother McGee has lost her OLD cake pan. She has the new one, but where is the old one? Is there a curse on the tidy little McGee home? Is Sean O'Fail, the traveling tinker, really a tinker, or didn't he speak clearly? What is that letter from J. Edgar Hoover on the mantelpiece? Is there a hint of coming events in the rumor that Anthony Eden is going to switch to snap-brim hats? Listen tomorrow, when we'll hear Mother McGee say. . .
MOTHER: Where is my oregano?
MUSIC: THEME UP TO END.

Tuesday, 6 May 2025

Mouth A-Fire

Good pacing and some fun sight gags highlight the Art Davis unit’s last cartoon at Warner Bros., Bye, Bye Bluebeard (released in 1949).

A mouse in Porky’s home disguises himself as Bluebeard the killer to get food from him. It turns out the real Bluebeard is in the house. The villain decides to chow down on a steak, only to find the mouse eating it, claiming he’s Bluebeard’s conscience.

Bluebeard tries to swallow the mouse because a conscience is supposed to be inside him. The mouse is a step ahead of the bad guy, dousing himself with tabasco sauce before Bluebeard swallows him.

First, some contented chewing.



Anticipation.



Extreme. These frames are back to back.



Anticipation drawing and extreme. Back to back frames.



Sid Marcus wrote the story for his old Columbia partner. Animation is credited to Bill Melendez, Basil Davidovich, Emery Hawkins and Don Williams.

Monday, 5 May 2025

A Terry Transformation

There’s some interesting morphing animation at the start of Bluebeard’s Brother, a 1932 Terrytoon.

A sometimes cross-eyed spider has killed his girl-friend. Since it’s a Terrytoon, she’s a mouse. As he growls to himself about the death, he turns into her. These are consecutive drawings.



Later, during a goofy walk cycle, he turns into a judge.



Frank Moser and Paul Terry got screen credits, but word is Bill Tytla is responsible for animating this odd scene. In fact, the whole cartoon is strange and seems to be about bats attaching a circus, and the deranged spider (Bluebeard’s brother?) kidnapping a girl fly. Only a TV print is available and it seems two minutes was cut for television.

Regardless, it’s worth seeing so you can ask “What did I just watch?” when it’s over.

Charlie Judkins tells me Terry voiced the spider.

Tomorrow on Tralfaz, a different Bluebeard.

Sunday, 4 May 2025

Tralfaz Sunday Theatre: Going Places

This may be the most obscure inside gag you will find in a cartoon from the Golden Age.

A number of studios inserted names of staff members in the backgrounds their cartoons. The frame below is no exception.



At first glance, you might think “Abe’s Sea Food” refers to animator Abe Levitow. This film was made in 1952 when Levitow was still at Warners. You can tell by the drawing style this is not a Warner Bros. cartoon.

Observe the “Hotel Foutz” sign. It refers to non-other than C. Moray Foutz.

Who?

Charles Moray Foutz’s obituary in the Los Angeles Times of December 11, 1998 tells us he was born in L.A. on January 24, 1917 and “His many years in the film industry actually began as a young boy of eight when he made the acquaintance of a neighbor by the name of Walt Disney. Moray and a handful of other neighborhood youngsters were involved in the very earliest Disney efforts which were then live action, rather than animation.”

After graduating from Beverly Hills High, he went to work for Disney. The obit doesn’t say what he did, but it does mention a later venture which is the subject of this post. The Business Screen Magazine production review for 1953 has this entry:

ACADEMY PRODUCTIONS
7934 Santa Monica Boulevard
Hollywood 46, California
Phone: Hollywood 9-5873
Date of Organization: 1951
OFFICERS AND DEPARTMENT HEADS
Edward L. Gershman and C. Moray Foutz, Partners
Arthur Babbitt, Supervising Director
William Lightfield, Production Manager
Services: Motion pictures and animation, both l6mm and 35mm.
Facilities: No data provided.
RECENT PRODUCTIONS AND SPONSORS
TITLES UNKNOWN but sponsor references provided include General Electric Company; McGraw Hill Book Co.; J. Walter Thompson Co.; Champion Spark Plug; and Pan American Airways.

Animation fans reading this don’t need to be told about Art Babbitt. Ed Gershman had been selling shoes after being fired at Disney before being picked up by UPA’s predecessor, Industrial Film and Poster Service, in 1942. He was business manager for UPA in 1951 when he was fired by company boss Steve Bosustow.

Public notices began appearing in the press in July 1951 announcing Foutz and Gershman were forming Academy Productions. However, the company was already in operation in 1949 as Billboard reported on Dec. 24 that year that Academy had begun shooting a $30,000 film for General Electric involving a diesel promotion, and that Foutz was the company president.

To add to the confusion, there were other companies with the same name; one distributed foreign films. Then on March 31, 1954, the Hollywood Reporter reported Academy was expanding to New York City, where the operation would be called Academy Pictures. (Gershman died in Nov. 1956 after a heart attack on a New York street).

How long Academy carried on isn’t clear. Broadcast Advertising of Oct. 23, 1961 mentioned Foutz was a production manager for Era Productions in Hollywood, which also employed former Disney and Lantz cartoon writer Milt Schaffer. Foutz ended his film career with Pacific Title Digital.

A film for General Electric is mentioned above. This is the short that contains the reference to Foutz. It is mostly live action, narrated by Marvin Miller (who had his own UPA connection), and is a plea to reduce traffic clogs by improving public transit. The kind that runs on electricity, no doubt. The film seems to have been a failure. Cities tore up streetcar lines. Traffic snarls are worse today. If you like early 1950s cars (like bullet-nosed Studebakers), you may like this film. Anything with Marvin Miller is worth listening to.



P.S. This will likely be the last Tralfaz Sunday Theatre post. I don’t know if I mentioned it before, but the title was stolen from British Sunday Theatre, where aged English films were used to burn off time on KVOS-TV in Bellingham when I was a kid. I finally found the theme for the show. It was “Knightsbridge March” by Eric Coates.

The Horn Blows

On a whim, I decided to flip through some newspaper clippings about Jack Benny in May 1945.

You could certainly get your fill of Benny then, on radio and on the big screen.

Jack’s last show before summer break was on the 27th, with Larry Adler as his special guest. The show also featured Prof. LeBlanc (Mel Blanc), a “typical American family” soap opera announcer (Bea Benaderet), Speedy Riggs’ mother (Elvia Allman), and a plug for Yhtapmys Soothing Syrup with Jack chuckling in the background over Frank Nelson’s delivery.

But he wasn’t through with radio yet. On the 29th, he and Keenan Wynn co-starred in “Please, Charley” on NBC’s This is My Best at 9:30 Eastern. It was based on Lawrence Riley’s humorous short story. Then the following night at 11:30 Eastern, he emceed the second half of a two-hour Seventh War Loan show on the network. His gang was there, as was Ronald Colman to lend some seriousness to the proceedings. On May 16, he appeared from Hollywood in a segment of the series for wounded servicemen, The Road Ahead, airing on the Blue network at 9 Eastern and hosted by Clifton Fadiman.

Among the clippings is a story by Tom Dammann in the May 11th edition of the San Luis Obispo Telegram-Tribune. We quote part of it:

SAN FRANCISCO, May 11.—No gathering of people is complete without funny incidents. The United Nations Conference is no exception. [...]
The other evening, to show you what we mean, we were standing with a large crowd just outside the Opera House to watch the delegates arrive for a plenary session. [...]
Where’s Rochester?
Finally a long black limousine drove up and the crowed quieted, awed, because here perhaps was a Molotov or Stettinius. Out stepped a handsomely dressed man and three well gowned women. The crowed craned its neck, including us. Here was obviously a delegate of importance, but who was he? He walked hurriedly up the steps, followed by the three women. He got just inside the door when a sailor in the crowd recognized him.
“JACK BENNY!” the sailor hollered.
And it was Jack Benny, with Mary Livingston [sic] and two friends. He turned and shouted “Hiya, folks,” and went on to watch the proceedings. The crowd laughed.
It seems others got to meet Jack in the flesh during his trip to the Bay area. His May 20th show came from San Francisco. Before and after the broadcast, the cast took part in an “I Am An American Day” show at the Civic Auditorium. As for the show, it made the May 19 edition of the Fulton Daily Sun-Gazette of Missouri.
Dudley Payne, Hospital Attendant 2-c at the U. S. Naval Hospital in Oakland, Calif., and son of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Payne of Fulton, will play with a navy band on the Jack Benny radio program at 6 p. m. Sunday night.
Young Payne, who plays trombone, has written his family that he is a member of a band which has been judged the best at his base, and will make a guest appearance on the nation-wide radio show tomorrow night. In his letter he said, "If you hear an extra loud note on a trombone, that's me!"
He has been stationed in California almost two years and is movie projectionist and in charge of the sound equipment at the hospital. In this capacity, Payne has met and worked with many famous radio and motion picture stars and has written home often of his interesting and amusing experiences.
Jack stayed after the broadcast, as we learn from the Vallejo Times-Herald of May 22.
Comedian Jack Benny, accompanied by members of his radio troupe, entertained Mare Island Hospital patients at a program in the hospital garden yesterday. After the outdoor show, Benny toured wards to meet patients unable to leave their rooms.
Feature films and Benny didn’t mix, at least according to legend, but in May 1945 he could be seen in movie theatres across the country. Some theatres were playing It’s in the Bag, in which he had a cameo with Fred Allen. Others were advertising his appearance in Hollywood Canteen, released in late December the previous year.

And then there was The Horn Blows at Midnight.

Benny fans know he used this unusual film as a whipping boy, whipping up laughs on his radio show. At the time, it got mixed reviews, more so, I believe, than any other film he made in the ‘40s. The Oregonian’s Drama Editor wrote on May 16:

Benny Film Needs Help
Jack Benny came to the Orpheum screen Tuesday in “The Horn Blows at Midnight.” The film proves definitely that Mr. Benny should have stuck to his violin and “The Bee.”
However, died-in-the-wool Benny fans will pehaps gather joy from this production for it does hold a few laughs.
The story is one of those dream affairs with the comedian playing the role of a third-rate trumpet player on a radio program. He falls asleep as the program is about to go on the air. The picture is devoted from this point to the Benny dream.
The Louisville Courier-Journal of May 11 had a different take.
Not since the heyday of Harold Lloyd has a comedian created so much unalloyed hysteria in audiences as does Jack Benny in his roof-top escapades in “The Horn Blows at Midnight,” [...]
Mr. Benny, we might add, is very pleasantly cast in this film, playing with a droll sense of bewilderment and timidity.
Jack put his name to a column that was kind-of about the movie. The only version I can find is in the Charlotte News of May 26, 1945.
That There Benny Fellow Is A Card
(Editor's note: The following story by Jack Benny was apparently hidden away in an old show since the picture he refers to has long since been completed. Proceed at your own risk.)
By JACK BENNY
HOLLYWOOD — Oddly enough, my day starts in the morning. At 6 A. M., an alarm clock rings in my ear, so I take it out of my ear and go back to sleep. About half an hour later I hear a bell ringing again, but this time it's a telephone call from the Make-up Department of Warner Bros. Studio, urging me to hurry over — because putting enough make-up on my face so that I will look ten years younger, is equivalent to making a "Dogwood Sandwich". I would resent that if there weren't a clause in my contract telling me to "SHUT UP". So I inform them that I will rush over to the studio as soon as I comb my hair. But they tell me not to bother because they got it there and it’s combed already.
It is now 6:30 and still dark, so not wanting to wake up Mary or my daughter, Joanie, I tip-toe through the hall, slip out the front door, ease down the curb where my convertible is parked. Just as I open the car door, I hear a window being raised, and Mary's voice raised even higher yelling, "It's about time you got home." I would give her an argument but I recall that she had "that same certain clause" put in our marriage license: so I throw her a kiss and drive off.
COFFEE TIME
In no time I am at Schwab's Drug Store where I always stop in for my morning cup of coffee: 5 cents, plus doughnuts; 15 cents, plus sales tax $1.30. Finishing my breakfast, I jauntily flip a 10-cent tip on the counter. It comes down tails so I have to leave it there. This is the third time it's b[words missing] and I'm really becoming quite popular.
Anyway, I jump in my car, drive through Laurel Canyon to Burbank, and there in spite of yesterday's rain, stands Warner Bros. Studio. As I pass through the main entrance, I wave a cheery hello to the gateman, who waves back and yells, "STOP." So I back up, show him my studio pass which has my picture on it. He seems quite interested, and shows me a picture of his wife and son; so I show him a picture of Mary and Joanie. At this point we are even. Then he shows me a picture of his dog, so I show him a picture of a girl I used to go with in Waukegan. The competition being too tough for him, he lets me through, and I park my car right between Barbara Stanwyck's and Ann Sheridan's which keeps my motor from getting cold.
And so to work making love to Alexis Smith and Dolores Moran in "The Horn Blows at Midnight."
Editor's second note: Ho. Hum. And unquote.
Here’s the oddest Benny connection I found in newspapers of May 1945. I don’t know the background behind these panel cartoons, if some Hollywood war bond campaign organisers asked the stars for captions. But several of them have Jack’s name on them. The ones below were found together in the May 30th issue of the Goldsboro News-Argus. Goldsboro, coincidentally, is where L.A. Speed Riggs of the Benny opening/closing commercials worked as a tobacco auctioneer.