Category Archives: MOVIES
Brother Theodore Wednesdays #1
“I’ve gazed into the abyss and the abyss gazed into me, and neither of us liked what we saw.” ~Brother Theodore
The Dancing Pig
Don’t miss the big finish. It’s kind of like Jan Svenkmajer crossed with Georges Méliès crossed with Sid and Marty Krofft.
Thanks much to Johnny Uma at the PCL LinkDump blog for horrifying me with this.
Foxy Grandpa and Polly in a Little Hilarity (1902)
Here’s the other Foxy Grandpa short film still in existence and on the internet.
Husband and wife team of Joseph J. Hart and Carrie DeMar perform a vaudeville-style dance as cartoon characters Foxy Grandpa and Polly.
From the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company.
The Boys Think They Have One on Foxy Grandpa, but He Fools Them (1902)
Foxy Grandpa was popular enough in 1902 to be in a series of short films (1902 AMB mutoscopes, preserved by the Library of Congress). I imagine this is very likely to be the first adaptation of a comic strip to the screen… hard to say, though, since old film has fared even worse than old newsprint. Beats the hell out of the Garfield movies.
The Original Boop-A-Doop Girl… Helen Kane
Betty Boop’s character was actually based by animator Grim Natwick on vaudeville performer Helen Kane. Miss Kane wasn’t pleased… here’s what Wikipedia says about it…
In 1930, Fleischer Studios animator Grim Natwick introduced a caricature of Helen Kane, with droopy dog ears and a squeaky singing voice, in the Talkartoons cartoon Dizzy Dishes. “Betty Boop”, as the character was later dubbed, soon became popular and the star of her own cartoons. In 1932, she was changed into a human from a dog, her long ears turning into hoop earrings.
In 1932, Kane filed an unsuccessful $250,000 suit against Paramount and Max Fleischer, charging unfair competition and wrongful appropriation in the Betty Boop cartoons. The trial opened in April 1934 with Helen Kane and Betty Boop films being screened by Judge McGoldrick (no jury was called). Margy Hines, Bonnie Poe, and, most notably, Betty Boop voice-over talent Mae Questel, were all summoned to testify. McGoldrick ruled against Kane in 1934, claiming that Kane’s testimony could not prove that her singing style was unique or not an imitation itself (a little-known black singer known as “Baby Esther” was cited by the defence as “booping” in song).
Surprisingly, there are a lot of Helen Kane videos on the web… here are a few of them.
Here’s Helen Kane in “Dangerous Nan McGrew” (the name being a take off of the Robert Service poem The Shooting of Dan McGrew)
Here she is performing “I Love Myself Because You Love Me”
Here she is performing “He’s So Unusual” and “The Prep Step”
I can’t find any films or recordings of “Baby Esther,” unfortunately… it sounds like she may have been the original original Boop-A-Doop girl.
Musical Doctor (1932)
Ever wonder what Mae Questel (the voice of Betty Boop) looked like in real life? It seems strange that Betty’s wonderful voice could have emitted from anything human. Here are a couple films featuring Miss Questel.
Silver-throated Rudy Vallee (another utterly unique voice) stars with her in this short, Musical Doctor, from 1932.
Here’s another short film with Mae Questel and Bela Lugosi!
Slim Gaillard Trio 1946 – Lagunaoroonie
Louis Jordan – Buzz Me
Alan Moore Tribute to Robert Anton Wilson
Here’s a lovely tribute by Alan Moore to the late, great Robert Anton Wilson, read at the Robert Anton Wilson Memorial night at Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, March 2007.
More videos from the event (including this one with Alan Moore doing a wonderful reading of an excerpt from Wilson’s Masks of the Illuminati) can be found here.