17 October 2009

October Original Titles

Wak! It's been forever since I've updated around here. Sadly, I'm still under the gun with one project or another. But the least I can do is return briefly to a topic everyone's been asking for: the hunt for original titles. Like Ozzie of the Mounted (1928), my fellow scholars and I will get our men—even if we lose our heads!

It's not a new discovery, of course, that many theatrical cartoons had their original title cards replaced for later reissue. The actual revelations are the original titles themselves—often because the cartoons' corporate owners dumped their originals, but sometimes because originals perished in spite of the studios' best efforts. Luckily (see my lengthier discussion here), in-depth research has brought back stragglers of all stripes.

The Moose Hunt (1931) is a Mickey Mouse short for which Disney's original titles elements went missing at some point in the past. Here we see a faux-original title card recreated for a recent DVD set...


...and here is an actual original I more recently got the chance to see. In this case, the recreation attempt was about as close as could be imagined; the positioning of the words is different, but the proper card style was chosen and even the title font is similar.


Alas, sometimes the re-creator can't be quite as prescient. In the case of Fiddlin' Around (1930), it's new knowledge that the cartoon was called that from the start. Studio records suggested that Mickey's violin-recital short was titled "Just Mickey" in its first release, and the faux title for DVD reflected this conventional wisdom:


But the CW isn't always right. The late Denis Gifford was the first to show me theatrical materials that suggested Fiddlin' Around as the 1930 release title, and now we get a look at the original title card as well:


Interestingly, this shows that the first and second seasons of Columbia Mickeys had slightly different card styles. The background is darker on this 1930 episode (as with a few more that I'll share later on); much of the white lettering lacks a black outline; and most critically there's an effort to make the text on the chalkboard look like it's Mickey's own work. Better take some handwriting courses there, Mick.

Hm, and maybe you ought to get some plastic surgery while you're at it:


Thanks to research buddy Cole Johnson and collector Ralph Celentano, above we have an item I'd never seen before—the 1930 Columbia reissue card for a Celebrity-era (1928-29) Mickey cartoon. While I'm not aware of an original Celebrity card surviving for When the Cat's Away (1929), others hold out from the period:


With no extended knowledge on the matter just yet, I'll make an educated guess that Columbia staffers—rather than anyone at Disney—drew up that new title card for Cat's Away (and, presumably, other Celebrity Mickey shorts). It's hard to imagine anyone on Uncle Walt's per diem transforming the studio stars into possums.

Of course, sometimes you didn't change species when your title card was remade. You just went from professionally drawn to fourth-grade level. Here's Dick Huemer's Toby the Pup as seen on reissues...


...and here's the hound as viewed by cinemagoers in 1931:


Should I be disturbed that Toby's feet look as much like hands on the original card as on the fake? I'm just not sure why he had to wear shoes with toes. Maybe Pervis the Goat ate all the normal shoes in the area—in Circus Time (1931), he eats one of Toby's gloves.

Gotta dash back to meeting deadlines, but I'd be a boob if I didn't go without delivering another item I'd promised for awhile—one more early Tom and Jerry title card. Most of us know The Zoot Cat (1944) as looking like this reissue print:


But here's what audiences saw in 1944. Dig that color, squares. Go man, go go go:


For completeness' sake, here also is Fraidy Cat (1942), with a rare intro card that we've already seen on the earlier Midnight Snack (1941).


That's it for now—but there are more discoveries being made all the time. Sometimes, as my friend Tom Stathes is always showing me, certain reissues are interesting, too:


Yes, that's a Columbia-era short with the United Artists title design. But some things are worth the wait...

Update, October 18: I'd formerly pictured an MGM lion card for The Zoot Cat that understandably misled some of you—the lion was a circa 1940 card, while the cartoon is from 1944. Thad K, who has looked at this print as well, remembered that its lion opening had in fact been spliced on from a different source.
Zoot Cat almost certainly had a standard 1944-era opening as seen on this print of Screwball Squirrel (1944).

10 comments:

  1. Wow, an original Toby card! Thankfully somebody saved this thing!

    Also, Pervis was not a goat.

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  2. What's this shit about Pervis not being a goat?

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  3. David,

    the DVD of When the Cat's Away says the original title card music has been lost to the ages. Does the Columbia rerelease have any music at the beginning?

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  4. It was jibba jibbah ... but now that you mention it

    http://thadkomorowski.com/2008/10/29/bowl-of-wtf-halloween-edition-featuring-toby-the-pup/#comments

    (third comment down) - I'm kinda confused myself ...

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  5. Kevin: The Columbia rerelease has no music at the beginning. The impression I get is that as with a handful of other early Disney sound shorts (including THE SKELETON DANCE and THE JAZZ FOOL), this one was actually silent under the titles until the action started.

    There was no way to be sure of this three years ago, though, when Disney was putting its DVD together and no prewar element on CAT'S AWAY had yet turned up.

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  6. Another good post!

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  7. I think I'm beginning to repeat myself here, but the only thing I can think of saying is: Another great post! :) By the way, have you got the "Produced by Fred Quimby" card for Zoot Cat as well? Would be nice to have them complete, as these early Tom and Jerry titles are real treasures! Gotta love that beautifully painted Tom with the tongue out of his mouth:)

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  8. Mesterius, when initiating this research, Thad and I discovered that Quimby didn't get a produced-by card in the original versions of Tom and Jerry cartoons from this period. His credit was added later for the reissues.

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  9. I'm guessing that where the reissues have the Quimby card, the original prints had the MPPDA number, etc. appearing below Scott Bradly's name; like, for instance, in War Dogs here: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x7bkz_19431009-mgm-war-dogs_fun

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Moderated comments... too bad, huh? Critiques of lousy old cartoons and comics are welcome. Critiques of people's private lives aren't (in part because I have none).