OK, SO HERE'S ANOTHER INSTALLMENT IN THAT "WHO'S THAT CELEBRITY IN THAT OLD CARTOON" SERIES. Yes folks, my friend Cheeks once again has been cornfused by an old 1930's cartoon containing celebrity caricatures he's unfamiliar with so I'm here to set him (and you all) straight on who they are. The cartoon is the 1939 Columbia Pictures "Color Rhapsody" MOTHER GOOSE IN SWINGTIME directed by Manny Gould who seems to have mostly specialised in Krazy Kat cartoons before this.
The cartoon opens when a little girl bounces into the room where her father is working at his desk demanding he read her a story. We then go into a fantasy world where the little girl enters the land of Mother Goose. The little girl is a caricature of Fanny Brice's radio character Baby Snooks with Hanley Stafford as Daddy; both voices here are spot on but the characters' physical appearance in the cartoon doesn't match the real actors' physiognomy; it's the voices that are immediately recognizable.
The little girl then encounters Mother Goose who tells her to run along and play. This is a perfect cariacature of Edna May Oliver who appeared in the 30's ALICE IN WONDERLAND, LITTLE WOMEN, DRUMS ALONG THE MOHAWK and the Hildregard Withers series of mystery movies.
L.G. (I'm abbreviating "little girl" from here on out) then encounters a group playing ring around the rosie and singing "A Tisket, A Tasket". Holy crap, there's a lot of them. I hate you, Cheeks! OK so first outside the ring we have a woman in purple prancing around who's about to sing "Little Boy Blue"; this is Martha Raye: famed "big mouth" of Abbott & Costello's KEEP 'EM FLYING, Chaplin's MONSIEUR VERDOUS, FOUR JILLS & A JEEP, TV's THE BUGALOOS by Sid & Marty Kroft and those 80's Polygrip commercials.
In the second picture (below) from L to R is what looks to be famous cranky actor Ned Sparks (who we've seen in previous cartoon examinations of this kind).
Ned Sparks |
Greta Garbo, a fat guy I'm not sure of but, because he speaks a bit later with a rolling RRRRRRR accent it SOUNDS like Jack Pearl (a radio comedian who played Baron Munchausen),
Jack Pearl |
a little blonde who I guess could be Shirley Temple but I really have no idea and Hugh Herbert; another popular actor to be caricatured in these types of cartoons and who appeared in movies such as the 1941 THE BLACK CAT, HELLZAPOPPIN, GOLD DIGGERS OF 1935, DAMES and FOOTLIGHT PARADE.
Hugh Herbert |
When Martha Raye starts singing "Little Boy Blue", we see the boy himself played by Cary Grant blowing his trumpet for a couple sheep.
Next we cut to Martha Raye accompanied by the 'piper' Benny Goodman on his clarinet; soon to be joined by Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum or Stan Laurel & Oliver Hardy.Next we get a better look at Hugh Herbert playing his drum.
Martha Raye is next accompanied by silent film comedian Joe E. Brown on the trombone. Not only was Brown in the phenomenal THE COMEDY OF TERRORS in a cameo as the cemetery caretaker who opens his big mouth and YELLLLLLLLLLLLS but also said the immortal final line in SOME LIKE IT HOT: "Well . . . . nobody's perfect!"
Joe E. Brown |
Spencer Tracy, Bing Crosby & William Powell |
Leopold Stokowski |
Next we cut to Ginger Rogers & Fred Astaire dancing . . .
Fred & Ginger |
then we see a grotesquely-cariacatured man dancing with an old lady. No idea, sorry.
then we have a rotund Italian-accented man I can't identify asking another man "Why you no swing? The other man is character actor Edward Everett Horton from TOP HAT, HOLIDAY and the voice of FRACTURED FAIRY TALES!
Edward Everett Horton |
Next we see Greta Garbo dancing with Leopold Stokowski . . .
We next see L.G. with "Georgie Porgie" played by Mickey Rooney.
Little Jack Horner (played by Ned Sparks) is next seen with Katharine Hepburn.
Katharine Hepburn |
Next we have the excruciating singing duo of Jeanette MacDonald & Nelson Eddy.
Jeanette MacDonald & Nelson Eddy |
and then a singing trio of women: Kay Francis (the wavishing Kay Fwancis, that is), Joan Crawford and Claudette Colbert.
Kay Francis |
Joan Crawford |
Claudette Colbert |
and then a singing trio of guys: I think (L to R) it's Tyrone Power, Edward G. Robinson and Robert Taylor.
Tyrone Power, Edward G. Robinson & Robert Taylor |
And then the whole damn thing's over with! I actually enjoyed this cartoon quite a lot; obviously because I'm very familiar with not only all the movie stars but also the radio stars of the time. Yep, this was a good one.
Sorry, never heard of it.
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