Looney Tunes
Looney Tunes, animated short films produced by the Warner Brothers studios beginning in 1930.
Spurred by the success of Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse cartoons, Warner Brothers contracted with Leon Schlesinger to produce an animated short that incorporated music from the studio’s extensive recording library. Schlesinger subcontracted the work to animators Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising, who were using the then novel innovation of synchronized sound to create animated talkies. Their first animated film for Schlesinger, Sinkin’ in the Bathtub (1930), featured Bosko, a wide-eyed character that bore an uncanny resemblance to Otto Messmer’s Felix the Cat. Sinkin’ in the Bathtub’s bawdy humour was a hit with moviegoers, and the cartoon concluded with Bosko addressing the audience with a phrase that would become a Looney Tunes trademark—“That’s all, folks!” Warner Brothers ordered more of the shorts, and the Harman-Ising studio added a second series of animated films under the banner of Merrie Melodies. Initially, Looney Tunes was more story-driven and Merrie Melodies remained a vehicle for Warner Brothers musical properties, but over time the two names became virtually interchangeable.
Harman and Ising left Warner Brothers in 1933, but they left behind a staff that included some of the foremost directors, animators, and story men of the day. Among the residents of the “Termite Terrace”—so nicknamed for the studio’s relatively low budget and for the insect residents of the bungalow that housed the animation division—were Tex Avery, Bob Clampett, Friz Freleng, Chuck Jones, and Robert McKimson. The addition of voice actor Mel Blanc and composer Carl Stalling to the Termite Terrace crew completed a lineup that would preside over the golden age of Warner Brothers animation. Throughout the 1930s and ’40s, a parade of enduring characters debuted under the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies marquees, including Porky Pig, who stuttered his first lines in the short I Haven’t Got a Hat (1935); Daffy Duck, a manic foil who debuted in Porky’s Duck Hunt (1937); and Bugs Bunny, a “wascally wabbit” whose true personality began to emerge in A Wild Hare (1940).
In the 1950s the Warner Brothers animation studio—most notably in films directed by Jones—returned to the original Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies model of making music a fixture of the story line. Unlike the earlier shorts, however, Jones’s films were far more than promotional tools for the Warner music catalog. Rabbit of Seville (1950) reworked Gioachino Rossini’s comic opera, while One Froggy Evening (1955) explored genres ranging from opera to ragtime, eschewing spoken dialogue to tell a classic morality tale. What’s Opera, Doc? (1957) introduced generations of cartoon lovers to Richard Wagner’s Ring cycle—albeit in a greatly condensed fashion, punctuated with cries of “Kill the wabbit!”—in a masterpiece that was added to the Library of Congress’s National Film Registry in 1992.
By the time the studio released the Academy Award-nominated High Note (1960), the era of the theatrical animated short was drawing to a close. Warner Brothers shuttered the Termite Terrace in 1963, but the Looney Tunes brand remained a profitable one. The original shorts were repackaged under a variety of names and became a staple in Saturday morning cartoon lineups, and the full-length theatrical releases The Great American Chase (1979) and The Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie (1981) were compilations of classic Warner Brothers cartoons tied together with the loosest of plots.