Pioneers of Animation: Bray Productions

We’ve talked previously on this blog about the influence of cartoonist/animation pioneer Winsor McCay, but I’m going to mention it again (and again and again and again), as it would be nearly impossible to overstate his importance in promoting animation as a viable artistic medium. Films like Little Nemo (1911) and Gertie the Dinosaur (1914) directly inspired countless young artists and cartoonists to try their hand at making their static pictures “move” onscreen. An entire industry was born off the scaly back of McCay prehistoric creation–an industry that, much to McCay’s chagrin, quickly became a highly commercialized one, one that remains to this day a huge moneymaker, inviting both inventive creations and hasty, ill-conceived attempts to capitalize on children’s short attention spans and rake in the dough.

jr bray

Even in its infancy, animation lured those with dollar signs in their eyes, men who perhaps cared less about making an artistic statement and more about churning out multiple reels of crude entertainment every week. John Randolph Bray, a contemporary of McCay’s, has such a reputation in the annals of animation history. The man who has been referred to as the “Henry Ford of animation” was instrumental in forming the production model that still serves as the basis for the industry today. But for all his undeniably important contributions to the growth of animation as a cinematic form, Bray also demonstrated a famously litigious nature (he was almost Thomas Edison-like in his attempts to corner patents for the animation process) and a sometimes heavy-handed rule of the animation studio that bore his name. The result is a series of conflicting portraits of Bray, ranging from the reverent to the disdainful, depending upon the source.

Like McCay, Bray started out in journalism and eventually created his own weekly comic strip, Little Johnny and His Teddy Bears, which capitalized on the fervor for the stuffed toy in the wake of Theodore Roosevelt’s presidency. The strip debuted in 1907, and several years later, Bray was inspired to try his hand at animating Teddy Bears. He was likely inspired by a similar short, the 1907 Edwin S. Porter release The “Teddy” Bears, which largely used puppetry to portray a satirical animated recreation of Goldilocks and the Three Bears. But Bray, unfamiliar with the process involved in transferring action to the screen, was unhappy with his own results and scrapped the project.

By 1913, in the wake of McCay’s success with Little Nemo and another short, How a Mosquito Operates, Bray was ready to give animation another try. Building off McCay’s model, Bray produced The Artist’s Dream, a live-action/animation combo in which Bray stars with a ravenous animated dachshund.

This relatively simple short led Bray to develop several innovations that would greatly impact the work of future animators. When Bray signed a deal with Pathé to distribute The Artist’s Dream, the company expressed an interest in distributing even more animated shorts. An eager Bray set to work figuring out a way in which he could meet the demand without collapsing from sheer exhaustion. Up until this point in time, animators typically would complete their shorts entirely by hand (sometimes with assistance, sometimes without), drawing and redrawing each individual frame, a process that added up to hundreds upon hundreds of drawings. Bray soon realized that by delegating work to other artists–essentially dividing the production of each cartoon into several different units who could work concurrently on multiple shorts–he could greatly streamline production, saving time and money.

His most important innovation, however, was born out of Bray’s decision to print the backgrounds as opposed to animating them by hand on each frame. Originally, Bray had the backgrounds–which were little more than simple zinc drawings–printed onto many individual sheets of paper with a blank space remaining in which the animated action would then be depicted. This allowed for a certain uniformity from shot to shot as opposed to the sometimes wavy or fuzzy backgrounds in earlier cartoons. In later years, when Bray began working with fellow animator Earl Hurd, the two of them collaborated on the creation of the cel animation process, which took Bray’s initial idea a step further by having the backgrounds reproduced on celluloid, which then allowed images to be layered over the background images, creating a more seamless sense of movement in a solid setting. Bray and Hurd patented their process in 1915, and it remained the standard for hand-drawn animation for decades.

john r bray

In 1914, Bray founded and incorporated one of the first full-fledged animation studios in Hollywood, Bray Productions. As the studio grew, Bray stopped animating and took on the responsibilities of running the studio full-time, adeptly managing promotions, marketing, and distribution of his shorts. By some accounts, Bray ruled with the proverbial iron fist, reportedly taking credit for work that his employees actually completed and even attempting to patent ideas that were not his own. [In fact, Bray attempted to patent practically every aspect of the animation process, even techniques that his predecessors like McCay had utilized for years before Bray ever animated his first frame. He sued anyone he thought had violated his patents--including McCay--until the patents expired in 1932.] Bray was largely responsible for animation becoming a formalized industry, and he played the part of big businessman well, separating himself physically and mentally from his employees and creating a stratification that separated the workers from the “front office.” He was, by some accounts, standoffish and cold, with a highly superior demeanor that was rather off-putting to some in his employ.

Bray’s wife, Margaret Till Bray–a successful businesswoman in her own right who also managed her own real-estate company while working alongside her husband–was instrumental in helping Bray run the new studio. She was given the title of production manager, which in actuality meant that she was little more than a glorified babysitter at times, as it was her responsibility to corral the animators on staff and ensure that they were meeting deadlines. She was well-suited to the position; like her husband, Margaret Bray was a no-nonsense type of personality who frowned upon wastefulness. When she realized that the animators would leave the studio on Friday, paychecks in hand, and spend the weekend blowing their money on booze and women before stumbling back to work late the next week, she changed payday to Monday to facilitate more productivity. She was also one of the strictest enforcers of Bray’s animation patents, encouraging him to pursue any perceived violation without delay.

heeza liar

In the studio’s heyday–from the mid-1910s through the early 1920s–Bray Productions released hundreds of animated shorts, and brought a number of popular series to theaters. The first series released under the new Bray Productions banner was Colonel Heeza Liar, who initially debuted in the 1913 cartoon Colonel Heeza Liar in Africa. The Heeza Liar shorts are notable for being the first animated series starring a recurring character, the titular big-game hunter/boastful Teddy Roosevelt caricature. The first cartoon was intended to be a parody of Paul J. Rainey’s African Hunt, a hugely popular 1912 documentary-type film that followed the titular hunter on safari, as he spent time with some native tribes and slaughtered more than his fair share of exotic creatures. The animated short’s success led to a series of nearly five dozen Heeza Liar cartoons, which followed the Colonel’s “daredevil” adventures around the world.

In 1915, Hurd began animating the studio’s second recurring character, a mischievous young boy named Bobby Bumps (some modern-day animation scholars refer to Bobby as the “Bart Simpson” of the 1910s). Young Bobby was not an entirely new creation–he was based, in part, on a character Hurd had created for another comic strip earlier in the decade. The Bobby Bumps shorts were the first to be wholly created using Bray and Hurd’s patented cel process. The series was popular from the start, and remained one of Bray Production’s biggest draws from his debut until 1919, when Hurd left Bray’s employ. Afterwards, Hurd animated only a couple of Bobby’s adventures each year (for other distributors) before the series came to a close in 1925.

When William Randolph Heart’s animation studio, International Film Service (founded the year after Bray’s studio), folded in 1918, its many popular series like Krazy Kat and Jerry on the Job were left virtually homeless. A year later, Hearst allowed Bray to license certain IFS properties to be released under the Bray Productions banner. In the process, Bray inherited Gregory La Cava, who had directed many of the cartoons for Hearst’s company; La Cava, who would later become an influential, Oscar-nominated film director in the 1930s, continued to direct some animated shorts for Bray for a couple of years before leaving animation altogether.

Bray may not have been an ideal boss, but he was singularly proficient in drawing talented artists into his crew. Bray’s studio, at one point or another, hired some of the most famous names in classic animation, many of whom got their start there: Walter Lantz (creator of Woody Woodpecker), Paul Terry (of “Terrytoons” fame), Max and Dave Fleischer (Betty Boop, Popeye, Superman), Grim Natwick (the “father” of Ms. Boop), and early Disney animator Burt Gillett, among others. Some of these artists even created their own indelible characters while under the auspices of Bray Productions–for instance, the Fleischers’ innovative Out of the Inkwell series, which ultimately ran for more than a decade, spent its first two years as a Bray production before the Fleischers opened their own studio, and Terry’s Farmer Al Falfa was created during the brief period in which the animator worked under Bray (Terry, unhappy working for the studio, barely lasted a year before striking off on his own. He and Bray subsequently spent years in court, as Bray alleged that Terry’s own studio, Fables Pictures, regularly violated Bray’s cel patent).

Conflicting accounts of Bray’s life and career indicate that the idea of Bray as the prototypical soulless businessman may or may not have been blown out of proportion over the years. History is subjective, dependent on memory, and Bray is remembered almost equally as a gallant pioneer of a new industry and a tyrant who stifled artistic intent. Still, there is little doubt that Bray began his career as a creative artist in his own right (if his early cartoons are any indication) and came to know his craft well. Nor is there any question that Bray was intent on improving upon the creative process so as to bring animation–and lots of it–to the masses. In many ways, it seems Bray set the stage for Walt Disney’s ascension and eventual stranglehold on the animation business in subsequent decades; at the very least, like Bray, Disney’s personal reputation is a veritable grab bag of both good and bad recollections, told by friends and foes, supporters and detractors alike. In the end, though, perceptions of his behavior and business practices are extraneous–what’s important is that animation, as it exists to this day on screens both big and small, owes an immeasurable debt to the work of John Randolph Bray.

 

Selected sources:
Bachman, Gregg and Thomas J. Slater, eds. American Silent Film: Discovering Marginalized VoicesCarbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2002.
Crafton, Donald. Before Mickey: The Animated Film, 1898-1928. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1982.
Sito, Tom. Drawing the Line: The Untold Story of the Animation Unions from Bosko to Bart Simpson. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 2006.
Stathes, Thomas J. The Bray Animation Project. 1 June 2011. Web.

 

Rare animation on TCM: Join the party!

Tomorrow evening on TCM, Robert Osborne and animation scholar/historian Jerry Beck will be co-hosting a six-hour block of classic, rare animation in prime-time.

To say this is an extremely welcome night of entertainment is an understatement.

Robert Osborne and Jerry Beck, filming segments for a night of rare animation. Photo via TCM.

Classic animation gets the short shrift nowadays. Sure, you can find hour-long blocks of Looney Tunes and Tom & Jerry cartoons weekdays on Cartoon Network (though these ‘toons tend to derive solely from the 1940s through the 1960s). And sure, there’s Boomerang, the cable channel specifically established as an outlet for classic cartoons, whose schedule sadly now includes only a handful of those classics (and usually late at night). But rarely, if ever, do the cartoons being highlighted Sunday night on TCM get even that relatively minuscule amount of attention. That’s why this move on TCM’s part is so very important. As Beck pointed out in a post on his essential animation site, Cartoon Brew, earlier this week:

“The six hour spotlight on classic animation coming this weekend is a test. Will TCM’s traditional viewers respect and understand these are classic films? I’m betting they will. As far as I’m concerned, animated shorts and features – especially those produced for theatrical showing – from 1906 to umm, let’s say 1970 – are ‘classic film.’ They are not ‘old kids fodder’ – which is how they are perceived by their parent companies. They do not get the proper respect they deserve. The TCM broadcast is a rare opportunity for the medium; a great place to expose more people to the art, entertainment and legacy of animation.”

Tomorrow evening’s #TCMParty on Twitter will be devoted to the animated prime-time lineup, and I am excited to have the opportunity to serve as host! I am no Jerry Beck (far from it!), but I have great love for classic animation, and have spent the last couple of years immersing myself in it through the writing of our “Pioneers of Animation” series here at True Classics. I am looking forward to sharing the tidbits that I’ve learned about these features and the legendary, awe-inspiring animators who created them.

Seriously, I’m going to be a giddy fangirl tomorrow night. Brace yourselves.

 

Here’s a brief preview of the “coming attractions” Sunday evening (all times cited are EST):

8PM: Gulliver’s Travels (1939)
9:30PM: Mr. Bug Goes to Town (1941)

The night kicks off with the two feature-length animated films that the Fleischer brothers produced for Paramount. You can read a bit more about these films–and how their production eventually spelled the end for the Fleischers’ studio–in our profile of Fleischer animation from last month.

11PM–12AM: A selection of UPA “Jolly Frolics” cartoons

This hour features some of the best-known and most beloved shorts from the inventive animators of United Productions of America. The schedule includes:

Fudget’s Budget (1954): In this (deceptively) simply animated short, a couple faces financial difficulty when they find themselves (quite literally) struggling to stay afloat.

The Unicorn in the Garden (1953): An adaptation of James Thurber’s hilarious short story about a man’s strange hallucination–or is it, really?

Gerald McBoing-Boing (1951): The brainchild of children’s author Dr. Seuss, this Academy Award-winning short is the story of a little boy who speaks only in sound effects.

Rooty Toot Toot (1951): A jazzy retelling of the traditional American pop song “Frankie and Johnny.” Will Frankie beat the murder rap for plugging Johnny “rooty toot toot, right in the snoot?”

The Tell-Tale Heart (1953): Narrated by the incomparable James Mason, this short is a striking adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe’s classic short story.

Christopher Crumpet (1953): The fantastical tale of a young boy who, instead of throwing a tantrum when his desires are thwarted, transforms into a chicken instead.

The Ragtime Bear (1949): In this first appearance of the beloved character Mr. Magoo, the severely near-sighted curmudgeon mistakes a banjo-playing bear for his nephew, Waldo.

12AM–1:15AM: A selection of silent film animation from the collection of Tom Stathes

All of these shorts are digitally remastered, and some are accompanied by new or updated musical scores. For more information about the silent film block, check out Stathes’ blog, CartoonsOnFilm, which features a detailed preview of each short on the schedule. [The listings here reflect those on the TCM website, which differ from the order in which Stathes listed them on his blog, so the order of airing may be subject to change.]

Scents and Nonsense (1926): A silent entry in the Krazy Kat cartoon series.

Down on the Phoney Farm (1915): A recently rediscovered cartoon animated by Paul Terry (of Terrytoons fame). featuring his popular “Farmer Al Falfa” character. [Stathes warns that this one is a fragment of the original, but still "may be close to complete."]

Springtime (1923): Another Terry cartoon featuring the antics of Farmer Al.

Out of the Inkwell–Trip to Mars (1924): An episode in Max Fleischer’s imaginative series of the adventures of Koko the Clown. This time, Max (unwillingly) goes on the adventure with his animated pal.

The Artist’s Dream (1913): A live-action/animation short by animator J.R. Bray, founder of Bray Productions, one of the first studios established solely for the production of animated cartoons.

The Farmerette (1932): A parody of the immensely popular Betty Boop, this cartoon was produced as part of the Aesop’s Film Fables series, which had been created in the 1920s by Terry.

Fireman Save My Child (1919): Featuring comic duo Mutt and Jeff.

The Bomb Idea (1920): An adaptation of the popular early twentieth-century comic strip Jerry on the Job. [Stathes notes that this one was "likely animated" by Walter Lantz, later the creator of Woody Woodpecker.]

The Haunted Hotel (1907): A combination live-action/stop-motion short feature, produced by animation pioneer J. Stuart Blackton.

Bobby Bumps Starts for School (1917): One of the many adventures of the mischievous title character, created by legendary animator Earl Hurd, who developed the cel animation process alongside Bray.

Lightning Sketches (1907): The earliest-produced feature on the schedule, this short is one of Blackton’s “chalk talks,” straight out of vaudeville tradition.

1:15AM: The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1927)

The night concludes with German animator/director Lotte Reiniger’s beautiful animated fairy tale feature, which predates Walt Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs by more than a decade. Rendered in paper silhouette against lovingly detailed backgrounds, Prince Achmed is nothing less than a treat for the eyes.

 

Tune in at 8PM to watch this fantastic lineup, and join us on Twitter (hashtag #TCMParty) to discuss and share your reactions to these films! And to echo Beck’s and Stathes’ pleas this week: if you long to see more classic animation featured on Turner Classic Movies, PLEASE share your thoughts on the TCM message boards. Here’s hoping that The Powers That Be at the Best Damn Cable Channel in the Known Universe recognize the importance of presenting these animated rarities much more often!

The early days of animation at Paramount, courtesy of the Fleischer brothers.

By 1927, Adolph Zukor, the Hollywood mogul behind the rapidly-expanding Paramount-Famous Lasky Corporation, had built a veritable entertainment empire. The studio had moved into a new, multimillion-dollar twenty-six acre lot off Melrose Avenue. They had amassed a chain of nearly two thousand theaters across the country, called Publix Theatres, in which to screen their many productions. Paramount was the home of some of the most popular films and biggest stars of the silent era–Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Rudolph Valentino (before his unfortunate early death in 1926), Clara Bow (star of 1927′s Wings, the first film to win the Academy Award for Best Picture), and Gloria Swanson among them. By the end of 1928, Paramount would move forward technologically with the release of their first all-talking film, Interference, starring William Powell. It was a time of success and unchecked progress, but Zukor wasn’t through expanding his empire. His ambitions soon led him to the one area Paramount had yet to conquer: animation.

Meanwhile, in New York, the Fleischer brothers, Max and Dave, had themselves built an animation studio that garnered much acclaim for their wildly inventive cartoons. In 1914, Max invented the rotoscope, which allows an artist to trace over live-action footage to create realistic-looking animated movement. Dave would don a clown costume, and Max would trace over his movements to produce the antics of a character they christened “Koko the Clown.” This gave rise to a series of animated vignettes called Out of the Inkwell, which depicted the adventures of Koko and his companion, a dog named Fitz. The Inkwell shorts were not just animated, however; they typically began with live-action footage of Max Fleischer interacting with his characters, much in the way Winsor McCay had done with his legendary dinosaur, Gertie, in 1914. The Inkwell cartoons were initially distributed through Bray Productions, a studio that focused singularly on producing animated content, and were included regularly in Bray’s newsreel features for Paramount. By 1921, the Fleischers (along with their brother, Lou) took control of production and formed the Fleischer Studios. The move was a prolific one for the brothers, as they produced more than sixty animated Inkwell shorts between 1921 and 1926, which were distributed by several studios, including Warner Bros.

But the Fleischers’ output didn’t stop there; in addition to the Inkwell cartoons, Max had begun to dabble in combining sound and animation in a series of shorts called Song Car-Tunesbeginning in 1924. While Walt Disney’s 1928 classic Steamboat Willie is generally recognized as the first cartoon to feature synchronized sound and music (even though Paul Terry’s Dinner Time technically premiered–and failed at the box office–more than a month before Willie), it’s important to note that the Fleischers were experimenting with the combination of animation and sound years before Mickey Mouse was created. The Car-Tunes soon employed a new gimmick created by either Dave or Max (there’s some dispute as to who actually came up with the idea)–the “follow the bouncing ball” routine. As the lyrics to a popular song appeared on the screen, the ball would bounce across the words to indicate the proper rhythm and cadence of the song, so viewers could follow and belt out the tune along with the rest of the audience. The first short to utilize the technique was the 1925 entry My Bonnie Lies Over the Sea, featuring the Scottish tune of the same name.

In 1927, Paramount made a deal with Fleischer Studios to distribute their cartoons. It would be a lucrative partnership. Out of the Inkwell became Inkwell Imps, producing over four dozen more Koko-starring shorts before being discontinued in 1929. Song Car-Tunes (which ended its run by the end of 1927) was then reborn as Screen Songs in 1929, and featured appearances by Paramount-contracted entertainers like Rudy Vallee, Cab Calloway (who also appeared in several other cartoons for the studio), and Ethel Merman. At the same time, Max and Dave collaborated on a new series of shorts called Talkartoons, in which Koko’s sidekick, Fitz (now rechristened Bimbo) became a star. Max’s preferred method of rotoscoping was eventually phased out in favor of more ambitious, stylized animation, led by the talented, young animators who flocked to the Fleischer studio, allowing Paramount to compete on the same level as animation giant Disney. And one of those fresh new cartoonists–Grim Natwick–produced Paramount’s first bona fide animated star in 1930, when Bimbo was given a girlfriend named Betty Boop.

Betty Boop wasn’t just popular; she was a phenomenon. Originally starting out as a canine companion to Bimbo, in 1932, Betty was made over into a human character, a flapper girl with naughty hemlines and a heart of gold. She sang and simpered her way through dozens of adventures–usually involving a lecherous threat to her treasured “boop-oop-a-doop.” By 1932, Talkartoons ceased to exist, and Betty was given her own series, with Bimbo and Koko as her frequent companions. She remained a popular figure and sex symbol until 1934; when strict enforcement of the Production Code took effect in July of that year, Betty’s hemlines were lowered, her overt sexuality was greatly tamped down, and the endearing naughtiness that made her cartoons so appealing was essentially gone. The Fleischers continued to produce Betty Boop cartoons through 1939, but the character never regained the same wild level of popularity that she had enjoyed in the early 1930s, and the series was finally discontinued.

In 1933, a Betty Boop short was used as a platform for the animated debut of a popular comic strip character, Popeye the Sailor. The comic strip depicted the love triangle between Popeye, his “goil” Olive Oyl (originally voiced by Mae Questel, who also voiced Betty Boop), and his rival, Bluto, a buff bully. The character immediately took off, and the Fleischers gave Popeye his own series two months later. As Betty Boop’s popularity waned, Popeye’s grew exponentially, and within three years, he was Paramount’s number-one animated star, even rivaling Mickey Mouse at one point as the most popular animated character in the world. Popeye was also notable for being one of the few cartoon characters to have his own theme song, which has remained a well-known tune since its introduction in the first Popeye short, I Yam What I Yam. More than one hundred black-and-white Popeye shorts were released between 1933 and 1939; between 1936 and 1939, the series also featured three double-length color features, which inserted the Popeye characters into the Arabian Nights tales.

Max Fleischer had long sought to secure funding from Paramount to create a feature-length animated film. But it was not until the groundbreaking success of Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs that Zukor and company agreed to give the animator free reign to complete his dream project: an animated film based on Jonathan Swift’s 1726 novel Gulliver’s Travels (but only the first part–the most famous part, featuring the tale of Gulliver’s encounter with the tiny Lilliputians). The catch? Fleischer’s film would have to be ready in time to be released at Christmas in 1939, and, more importantly, he would have to sign over the Fleischer Studios’ assets to Paramount in order to secure the loan–a move that eventually came back to haunt Max.

Paramount built a new animation studio for the Fleischers in Miami, and in 1938, they left New York and took up residence in Florida to complete the work on Gulliver’s Travels. In order to complete the film by Paramount’s imposed deadline, Fleischer Studios welcomed an influx of new artistic talent, and poached animators from Disney and other animation studios. The new team faced many issues, not the least of which was rivalry between different factions of animators within the studio, creating an air of discord throughout the film’s production. Still, despite these issues, Gulliver’s Travels was indeed completed on time and released by Paramount on Christmas Day, 1939. Though it was successful at the box office, however, it did not reach the same heights as its Disney-produced predecessor, and it did not quite recoup the costs of its production. The Fleischer studio had to swallow the loss.

In 1941, Fleischer Studios tackled another comic character, Superman, in a series of gorgeously-animated shorts. The Superman comic books were immensely popular, and Paramount salivated over the idea of cashing in on the superhero phenomenon. But the Fleischers were reluctant. The infighting among the animators had spread to Max and Dave; neither could stand to be in the same room with the other. On top of that, Paramount essentially owned the studio by this point, having called in its loans. And on top of that, they were finishing the production of their second animated feature, Mr. Bug Goes to Town. The brothers decided the best course of action would be to overestimate the necessary budget for adapting the comic book, but Paramount agreed to their terms and they were forced to undertake the series anyway. The first cartoon in the new series, simply titled Superman, debuted in September of that year, and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Short.

Mr. Bug Goes to Town had the great, unforeseen misfortune of being released in theaters two days before the bombing of Pearl Harbor. This essentially killed its chances at the box office; the film was an unmitigated flop. And it spelled the end for Fleischer Studios–Dave left to take control of Columbia’s animation division, Screen Gems, which put him in violation of the brothers’ contract with Paramount, and in return, Paramount forced the brothers out of their own studio and took full control. Fleischer Studios was renamed Famous Studios (in honor of Paramount’s origins), production was moved from Miami back to New York, and Max Fleischer joined the animation arm of the Jam Handy Corporation, producing military training films and eventually overseeing the 1944 animated version of the tale of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (which was re-released in 1948 with the addition of the popular Johnny Marks-penned song of the same name).

Without the Fleischer brothers, Paramount was unable to attain the same level of animated success. Famous Studios continued producing Fleischer creations Popeye, Screen Songs, and Superman, but the heyday of those series were soon behind them. Newly introduced characters such as Casper the Friendly Ghost and Baby Huey (whose adventures comprised a new series of cartoons under the heading of Noveltoons) were no match for Disney stars like Donald Duck and Goofy, or Warner Bros. stalwarts like Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck. In the mid-1950s, Paramount sold most of its pre-1950 animated library, excluding Popeye (which had been sold to Associated Artists) and Superman (for which Paramount’s rights had expired); many of those cartoons have been severely edited in the ensuing years, and most are now in the public domain in one butchered form or another. By the late 1950s, Famous Studios had been downsized into a smaller unit called Paramount Cartoon Studios, and the quality of production dropped steeply.

In 1967, a year after Gulf+Western acquired Paramount, the studio’s animation department was shuttered completely. By then, it was a pale ghost of what it had been under the Fleischers. But once upon a time, Paramount was a leader in the animation business, and the only serious challenger to the Disney conglomerate in the 1930s. Five Paramount-distributed Fleischer shorts appear on animation scholar Jerry Beck’s seminal 50 Greatest Cartoons list–Popeye the Sailor Meets Sinbad the Sailor (#17, 1936); Snow White (#19, 1933); Minnie the Moocher (#20, 1932); Superman (#33, 1941); and Bimbo’s Initiation (#37, 1931). It’s undeniable that, at the height of the Golden Age of Hollywood animation, Zukor’s studio empire presented moviegoers with some seriously entertaining, beautifully-drawn, and thought-provoking cartoons–animated gems that are, to this day, recognized and celebrated for their intelligent composition and artistic value.

 

This post is our contribution to the Paramount Centennial Blogathon, hosted this week by The Hollywood Revue. There have been some great contributions in the past two days, so head on over there and check them out!

Wait ’til you get a view of sweet Betty.

In 1918, Max Fleischer, the innovative mind behind early Walt Disney Studios rival Fleischer Studios, began producing a series of silent cartoon shorts called Out of the Inkwell. Much like earlier efforts by animation pioneers such as Winsor McCay, many entries in this series combined live-action with animation, showing Fleischer drawing the figures that would then come to “life” on the screen (as demonstrated in the 1921 short “Modeling“).

The Inkwell shorts featured two notable recurring characters: Koko the Clown, who was first animated in 1915 as Fleischer developed his revolutionary rotoscope (a device which allowed animators to trace over live-action scenes in order to recreate them in a relatively lifelike manner), and Fitz the dog, introduced as Koko’s sidekick in 1923. When Koko’s popularity waned by the end of the 1920s, the character was temporarily retired, and Fitz was re-envisioned as a leading man (so to speak) and renamed “Bimbo.” Bimbo became the first recurring character for the new sound-synchronized Talkartoons series, which replaced the silent Inkwell shorts in 1929.

After two successful solo cartoons, Bimbo was given a girlfriend in 1930′s Dizzy Dishes. But little did anyone realize that this new character, an anthropomorphic, stocking-wearing chanteuse/poodle who came to be known as Betty Boop, would become a groundbreaking cartoon character in her own right within months.

Thought not officially christened “Betty Boop” until the 1932 short Stopping the Show, the character, a quintessential flapper type, was popular almost from the start. She retained her canine features–low-hanging, floppy ears, a dog-like button nose, and a jaw structure that suggested a muzzle–until 1932, when she was redesigned to be more overtly human. This ultimately signaled the death knell for Bimbo; though Betty maintained a romantic relationship with Bimbo for a short while, he was ditched in 1933, as it was considered unseemly for a human girl to be in love with a dog (a year later, Betty was given a pet puppy named Pudgy, ostensibly to replace Bimbo as her sidekick).

The Betty Boop cartoons–at least, the ones produced before the enforcement of the Production Code in 1934–are not intended for children. There is a darkness to many of the earlier Boop shorts, which reference controversial themes such as rape (1932′s Chess-Nuts), sexual harassment (1933′s Betty Boop’s Big Boss), and even ephebophilia (after all, Betty’s supposedly only sixteen years old!). Tied into these darker themes is an inescapable, pervasive sexuality, marked by innuendo and risqué imagery. This is not to say that these early shorts are not enjoyable; quite the opposite, in fact, and they seem incredibly tame by today’s standards (as one might expect). But the scenarios in which Betty finds herself can be quite disturbing, and the innuendo is sometimes overly heavy-handed.

Whatever problems arise in Betty’s animated life, the girl just can’t help it: to co-opt Jessica Rabbit’s famous catchphrase, she’s not bad–she’s just drawn that way. As Grim Natwick, the animator who crafted the original design of Betty Boop under the auspices of Fleischer, once said, “Although she was never vulgar or obscene, Betty was a suggestion you could spell in three letters: s-e-x.” Indeed, every aspect of the character is designed to entice, from her Kewpie-doll features (inspired by actresses Helen Kane and Clara Bow) to her short, low-cut dresses and garters. And yet there is an innocence to Betty that is encapsulated in her breathy, squeaky, baby-talk voice, brought to life most memorably by voice-over artist Mae Questel (who also provided the voice for Fleischer’s other popular leading lady, Popeye’s paramour Olive Oyl). This makes for a character who is a potent combination of girl and woman, protecting her chastity from wolves and scoundrels while punctuating every song with an alluring wink and a shake of the hips.

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And now, four pre-Code Boop classics with which every self-professed fan of classic animation should be familiar …

 

Boop-Oop-A-Doop (1932)

Like Chess-Nuts, this short employs rape as a central conceit. Betty is the star of the circus, trying to avoid the advances of the smarmy ringmaster who’s determined to take her “boop-oop-a-doop away.” Can Koko’s interference save her from this awful fate? (Spoiler alert: it can, and he does.)

 

Minnie the Moocher (1932)

This one is notable for the vocal and musical contributions of the great Cab Calloway; in fact, the short opens with a great live-action shot of Calloway sliding sinuously across the screen in front of his orchestra as the music swells. There’s not much to the story–Betty doesn’t want to eat her dinner, so she runs away from her “mean” parents (with Bimbo by her side) and soon encounters Calloway’s jazzy ghost and his frightening friends–but it’s nonetheless a visual and musical treat.

 

Snow White (1933)

Betty’s outing as the Fairest of Them All predates Disney’s take on the story by almost four years. Again featuring the vocal stylings of Calloway, this skewed fairy tale is delightful from start to finish. Notably, the entire cartoon was crafted from start to finish by a single animator, Fleischer stalwart Roland Crandall, over the course of six months. Snow White is considered one of the greatest animated shorts ever produced, coming in at #19 on the 1994 list of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of All Time (and the aforementioned Minnie the Moocher is right behind it, at number 20 … as is another 1931 Bimbo-Betty short, Bimbo’s Initiation, at number 37).

 

Betty in Blunderland (1934)

This was one of the last Betty Boop cartoons to be produced and released before the strict enforcement of the Production Code would take effect in July 1934. As a lifelong, inveterate Alice in Wonderland fan, I’d be remiss not to mention this funny little take on Lewis Carroll’s twisted tale.

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For the most part, the shorts produced after 1934 lack bite and verve. The humor is watered down, Betty is covered up, and the naughty appeal of the previous cartoons is lost in a haze of family-friendly blandness. When the series concluded production in 1939, Betty was largely forgotten for a time until the shorts began airing on television in the 1950s. But she has found new life over the years through widespread (some would say “over-saturated”) merchandising, and she even made a brief cameo in 1988′s Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Most of the pre-Code Betty Boop shorts have not found their way to DVD yet, but some of her later, tamer appearances–the ones that have lapsed into the public domain–have been released as part of a number of mass-market, old-school cartoon compilations (though the quality of the transfers is typically lacking). Hopefully, the day will come soon when Betty Boop’s quirky and hilarious filmography will get the DVD/Blu-ray treatment it deserves, so new generations can continue to enjoy her antics!

 

This post is our contribution to the Short Animation blogathon currently being hosted by Pussy Goes Grrr. Make sure to check out all of the animated (get it?) entries that have been posted throughout the week!