Life Begins for Andy Panda

Life Begins for Andy Panda
Andy Panda series
Directed by Alex Lovy
Produced by Walter Lantz
Story by Ben Hardaway
L.E. Elliott
Voices by Mel Blanc
Bernice Hansen
Margaret Hill-Talbot
Music by Frank Marsales
Animation by Alex Lovy
Frank Tipper
Studio Walter Lantz Productions
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) September 9, 1939 (USA)
Color process Technicolor
Running time 7 min (one reel)
Language English
Preceded by N/A
Followed by Andy Panda Goes Fishing (1940)

Life Begins for Andy Panda (originally titled Pygmy Trouble) is a 1939 American short subject cartoon created by Walter Lantz, as the very first Andy Panda film.[1][2][3]

Contents

Background

Rreleased originally as Pygmy Trouble, the film was retitled in parody of the Andy Hardy film Life Begins for Andy Hardy.[3] The short capitalized on public interest surrounding the United States' first captive panda, Su Lin, who had been donated to the Brookfield Zoo in Chicago three years earlier[2] and whose arrival created a consumer desire for panda-related products.[3] The film was the first Andy Panda film, introducing Andy as a baby.[2][1] Papa Panda was voiced by Mel Blanc, Mama Panda by Sara Berner, and Andy Panda by Margaret Hill-Talbot. In Andy Panda's fourth film,Knock Knock Walter Lantz's more famous character, Woody Woodpecker, was first introduced[4]

Plot synopsis

The story begins with Finchell Broadcasting Station telling the news that the panda family had their first baby. All of the forest animals rushed to see the new baby. All the animals were excited to see him and shouted to name the cub. Mama Panda made the decision, to named him Andy. The arrival of a skunk caused them all to run away. 6 months later, Papa Panda was talking with Andy about to appreciate Mother Nature, until Andy looked under a tree with his slingshot and hit an opossum and the opossum stamp on Papa Panda's foot. After Papa opines that Mother Nature has no place to live, Andy starts to cry. While they're talking, they start to leave the forest and enter a barren area. Papa warns Andy about the savage Pygmy hunters that live in the wasteland. Andy runs away from his dad into the wasteland and Papa runs after him and lands in a trap, presumably made by the hunters. The hunters spot Andy and begin to chase him. Finchell announces their plight to the animals and they gather to form a rescue mission. Mr. Whippletree, a turtle, was the first animal to attempt to rescue Andy but he failed because a hunter had his shell. Mama Panda joins the action and fights off some pygmies. A kangaroo successfully put Andy in his pouch but he was distracted by a pygmy while another one slapped the kangaroo's behind with a plank. The skunk, who had six months earlier scared the animals chases the pygmies away and the animals cheer and Andy is rewarded by Papa. Andy wishes that the events would be put in a Newsreel and Papa, about to spank him, istead decides to snuggle Andy. As the cartoon ends, Mr. Whippletree the turtle, is seen chasing the pygmy who took his shell.[1]

Style

The animation used in this film when the pygmies were climbing out the rock was used again in Andy Panda Goes Fishing and again in 100 Pygmies and Andy Panda. The Pygmies' design changed from human-like, having yellow grass skirts and light brown skin to ape-like, having orange grass skirts and have darker skin in later cartoons. The cartoon wasn't seen in US television for a number of years due to concerns with the 1939 film's use of inappropriate sterotyping of Blacks through the pygmy's appearance, but it was seen in countries like Brazil.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Henry T. Sampson (1998). That's enough, folks: Black images in animated cartoons, 1900-1960. Scarecrow Press. pp. 120-121. ISBN 081083250X. 
  2. ^ a b c Glenn Collins (March 23, 1994). "Walter Lantz, 93, the Creator Of Woody Woodpecker, Is Dead". The New York Times: pp. 2. http://www.nytimes.com/1994/03/23/obituaries/walter-lantz-93-the-creator-of-woody-woodpecker-is-dead.html?pagewanted=2&src=pm. Retrieved November 22, 2011. 
  3. ^ a b c Charles Solomon (1989). Enchanted drawings: the history of animation. Knopf. pp. 90. ISBN 0394546849. 
  4. ^ Stefan Kanfer (2000). Serious business: the art and commerce of animation in America from Betty Boop to Toy story. Da Capo Press. pp. 113. ISBN 0306809184. 

External links