they were all narrated by Horton, the male voices were Daws Butler or sometimes Bill Scott and of course, all the female voices were the grand dame herself, June Foray.
I was blessed to work with June Foray on several occasions, including as the voice of Bullwinkle after Bill Scott's passing, and then even as the announcer after Bill Conrad passed on several STDVD Rocky and Bullwinkle box sets, and then even on adult episodes we voiced in syndicated radio comedy. She was an incredible lady, all 4'11 of her, and she worked well into her 90's before passing at 99. One of the reasons that I became the TV voice of Tony the Tiger in 2014 was because June Foray suggested me to the casting agency. I will always remember her with fondness and gratitude.
Growing up with these cartoons I was, and still am, HEAVILY influenced by the Beatnik lingo in cartoons such as this. Seems like Bugs Bunny, The Flintstones, or anything made at the time referenced the beat poet be bop lifestyle. It absolutely cracks me up. Use it on people today and they too laugh. Wonderful stuff :-)
I remember a cartoon called 'Beany and Cecil' which also had an early '60s beatnik flavor. And, hey, dad, you're a real cool cat! I mean like wi-i-i-i-l-l-l-l-d !
Brilliant. A wry spoof on a classic fairy tale. It works for adults who will get the "in" jokes and still delight children. Edward Everett Horton's narration is wonderful. These guys were way ahead of their time and these 1960s cartoons are still great today.
Always loved these cartoons and yeah, as a kid the narration was quick but kids could keep up and enjoy it. Stories really don't have to be dumbed down to be fun.
@stephenkolorac5305, most homes had a dictionary. Thus, if the parents didn’t know what the words meant, they helped their child/children look them up.
haven't seen one of these for 60years so when I got curious enough to look for them I wasn't expecting much but they're still good oddball quirky humor, but then maybe I'm further into my "second childhood" than I let myself notice
Wasn't there a version of this where he took the child until she could guess his name, but the kid was such a menace that he was telling her his name so that he could be rid of him? I think the kid was called the Duke of Dunder.
And I think there was another version where Rumple didn't know what his name was. When he found out,, he was so embarrassed, he hid out and no one ever saw him again!
“This story was made to entertain people that were so stupid, the only way they could imagine solving riddle, would be to over hear the answer ” -QuintonReviews
The little man made the Princess spin straw into gold. My favorite motto for the story of Rumplestiltskin was a warning for all the young ladies out there I heard awhile ago. It maybe OK once in a while that you may prick your finger but you should never, ever finger your prick.
Hello from the future in 2023. No one has bought a newspaper in the US for years. Now we get all of our bias tweeted at us daily by our phones. Oh what fun Jay Ward would have had with the nincompoopary we've got goin' on nowadays.
There's another Fractured Fairy Tales called Son of Rumpelstiltskin. The story is mostly the same but it's about young Rumpelstiltskin has to make a name of himself. The girl became queen from gold and has to guess his name. But the little man didn't know his name after 3 days of guesses. He tried to ask people, but later checked his mailbox and realizes how embarrassing his name was. He changed his name and becomes famous on TV.
@SarieContrary I do, and he also reveals why he wants the Queen's baby: "Dress him all in green and teach him to be a funny little man, what else?!" Which explains where these magic little men come from, at least. Hope someone posts that one!
I'm pretty sure Rumpelstiltskin possess the same voice as a certain, Smooth-talking, lie-making, logic-scrambling snide wolf from the Hanna-Barbera universe.
Wait. Phil Silvers was the voice of Rumple? Wasn't he the actor who played the con artists a few times on The Beverly Hillbillies who "sold" them the Brooklyn Bridge?@dmnemaine
Phil Silvers was often played the fast talkin', glad handed con man on TV and films. He perfected the character on "The Phil Silvers Show" where he played Sgt. Bilko. Best sitcom of the 50's and 60's.
There is another version where the deal is the little man will help the woman win contests and he wants her kid because he owns a camp for boys. The kid turns out to be too much for him to handle and he tries to return him telling her his name but she won't believe it. Finally the camp is destroyed (It burned down, Ma.) and the little man winds up in the employ of the woman taking care of the kid until he can guess HER name.
I used to love watching Rocky and Bullwinkle, fractured fairy tales and Boris and Natasha those were the good old days
We were better educated and understood the sarcastic nature
Rumpelstiltskin was voiced by Daws Butler, using his Phil Silvers impression. It was also used for Hanna-Barbera's "Hokey Wolf".
Phil Silvers...Lol
The Rocky and Bullwinkle show had the BEST voiceover actors!
I could've sworn it was Paul Lynde!
I thought it sounded like Phil Silvers
Thanks! I could tell it wasn’t Phil Silvers but it sure had a Sgt. Bilko quality I just couldn’t place.
they were all narrated by Horton, the male voices were Daws Butler or sometimes Bill Scott and of course, all the female voices were the grand dame herself, June Foray.
Are you forgetting she was the voice of Rocky?
@@lynnfisher3037 no, lots of fans already know this. my comment is for beginners who don't know about June Foray
I was blessed to work with June Foray on several occasions, including as the voice of Bullwinkle after Bill Scott's passing, and then even as the announcer after Bill Conrad passed on several STDVD Rocky and Bullwinkle box sets, and then even on adult episodes we voiced in syndicated radio comedy. She was an incredible lady, all 4'11 of her, and she worked well into her 90's before passing at 99. One of the reasons that I became the TV voice of Tony the Tiger in 2014 was because June Foray suggested me to the casting agency. I will always remember her with fondness and gratitude.
Growing up with these cartoons I was, and still am, HEAVILY influenced by the Beatnik lingo in cartoons such as this. Seems like Bugs Bunny, The Flintstones, or anything made at the time referenced the beat poet be bop lifestyle. It absolutely cracks me up. Use it on people today and they too laugh. Wonderful stuff :-)
I remember a cartoon called 'Beany and Cecil' which also had an early '60s beatnik flavor. And, hey, dad, you're a real cool cat! I mean like wi-i-i-i-l-l-l-l-d !
@@MrTruckerf lol 👍
I can't believe we got this as children. Favoright cartoons.
@@MrTruckerf "Man I'm so hep, I don't even eat a square meal!"
Remember Top Cat? A very hep vibe in the whole cartoon.
These were favorite part of the Rocky and Bulwinkle Show.
i miss rocky and bullwinkle
Me too
Loved these as a kid. This one even had prophecy.. Fake news even back then. Lol
Good catch!!
Remembered these fractured tales from when they first came out and still enjoy them now. Joe S
These are very Good cartoons !
This is possibly one of my favorite ones. I still can't say "Rumplestiltskin" without thinking, "Scoo scoo ba-doo. Ooh bop shabam" in my head.
Brilliant. A wry spoof on a classic fairy tale. It works for adults who will get the "in" jokes and still delight children. Edward Everett Horton's narration is wonderful. These guys were way ahead of their time and these 1960s cartoons are still great today.
The baby cracks me up. :-)
One of My Favorite Episode of F.F.T.
Edward added that special touch to any movie he was in.
Saturday morning cartoons on
Sunday morning ! 😃😃😃😃😃😃
The beatnik town crier is the best part. I also love the little Rumpelstiltskin song.
Rumplestillskin is my favorite movies I can't stop watching it
They didn't shy away from using Advanced vocabulary even though it was for kids
Always loved these cartoons and yeah, as a kid the narration was quick but kids could keep up and enjoy it. Stories really don't have to be dumbed down to be fun.
@stephenkolorac5305, most homes had a dictionary. Thus, if the parents didn’t know what the words meant, they helped their child/children look them up.
@@ninademci1500Parents still do that. I do it with my kid. Everyone has a dictionary in their pockets. It’s literally never been easier.
@@michaelfisher7170I think you were so busy thinking you’re clever for knowing the 7th grade vocabulary words that you missed the joke.
haven't seen one of these for 60years
so when I got curious enough to look for them I wasn't expecting much but
they're still good oddball quirky humor, but then
maybe I'm further into my "second childhood" than I let myself notice
Im gonna date this for u. My dad's 56 and he told us this cartoon(Rocky & Bullwinkle) was his favorite as a child.
It’s even older than that. The show debuted in 1959.
It’s a Boomer cartoon but Gen X watched the re-runs.
Edward Everett Horton RIP
Oh this brings back memories ❤
Top Cat!!!!!!!
Me too
Exactly.
Omg you remember Top Cat??? ❤❤❤
Loved these cartoons as a kid. But grew up and see a resemblance to our current world, except, these is no magic man at the end.
rocky and bullwinkle was an acid trip........
Haha thank you!! That was a quick sum up of the story. Ahh the nostalgic feeling
Of course, have Rocky try to hold Bullwinkle aloft instead of having Rocky himself buzz the title card.
I was watching dank memes
and this is where the internet takes me.
Same here lol
Well this is a dank meme. It's not what it was called at the time, but that's still what this is.
We just gone act like he aint wearing ballet flats trying to have serious conversations🤣🤣
❤️💚💜💙💛love these shows!!!💛💙💜💚❤️
Old Cartoons, it brings a tear to my face to know children watched shows as good and simple as this.
This is why I love the word 'Loophole'.....
Wasn't there a version of this where he took the child until she could guess his name, but the kid was such a menace that he was telling her his name so that he could be rid of him? I think the kid was called the Duke of Dunder.
I remember that one, one of my favorites. The young Duke is more than happy hanging around with Uncle Rumpel all the time.
sounds like the O Henry story "the ransom of red chief"
And I think there was another version where Rumple didn't know what his name was. When he found out,, he was so embarrassed, he hid out and no one ever saw him again!
Yes. That was "Son of Rumpelstilskin." The Jay Ward folks made lots of Fractured Fairy Tales.
I think the muppets did that one
I see all the newspapers were part of the Murdoch Press. :D
Loved it
Now i feel sorry for Rumpelstiltskin, he just wanted to have a kid by his name!
In the original fairy tale, Rumpelstiltskin wanted the child to make a stew.
So they lightened it a bit for cartoon kiddies.
@@charlie-obrien Sounds like a German Fary Tail...the originals are all very dark and bloody.
@@johndurrett3573
Yes, many kinders on the menu in the Black forest. Lol 👹
there's a much more fun way to do that
This is actually the best version I can find on UA-cam...
Love is Everything To Everyone, Nowadays!
Rumple sounds like Snagglepuss
The moose in the beginning in amazing XD
I love this episode
'I've got to hip you to some news' LOLOL
little green man=Top Cat!!
lol love it
Yes, I do...Fractured Fairy Tales often had multiple versions of the same given fairy tale!!
4:58 - my Mom always found this bit funny.
(giggles mischievously)
I'm afraid this isn't the TRUE Rumpelstiltskin, dearie
Scoot scoot bah doo. Ooo bob she bam. 4:37
@VideyoJunkei yeaaaaaaaa he does sound like top cat :)
Now isn't tjat just too coo coo?
Yeah, coo coo!
LOL!
This reminds me a orange cool aid, potato chips and Kraft singles.
LMAO this is a cute version but the real story is scary. I always knew this was about sacrificing children to Moloch for fame.
P.R. Man. Is this a reference to the music industry? I love these old shows.
scooooo scoo badoop boop boop shabap i am the rumplestilskin man
“This story was made to entertain people that were so stupid, the only way they could imagine solving riddle, would be to over hear the answer ” -QuintonReviews
"And you can't believe everything you read in the papers." Boy, is that ever true, especially today.
The cartoons loved using the Phil Silvers voice, since he had created such a famous character as a slimy conman.
I like the original Brothers Grimm story better. Rumpy was so mad she knew that he grabbed his own leg and tore himself in half.
Is that Phil Silvers' voice @ Rumplestiltskin?
It has his unique tone + cadences.
I heard it on another of these.
No, it’s Daws Butler imitating Silvers.
@@yosefdemby8792 thank you
"I understand that you spin."
Well, could have been questionable. I could hear him going: "I understand you sit and spin."
The little man made the Princess spin straw into gold. My favorite motto for the story of Rumplestiltskin was a warning for all the young ladies out there I heard awhile ago. It maybe OK once in a while that you may prick your finger but you should never, ever finger your prick.
This is really old… but classic. Now where’s OUAT Mr. Gold
1:27 to 1:40 ---- even in 1959, some things don't change....a lotta people believe what the papers say!
Hello from the future in 2023.
No one has bought a newspaper in the US for years. Now we get all of our bias tweeted at us daily by our phones.
Oh what fun Jay Ward would have had with the nincompoopary we've got goin' on nowadays.
And Top Cat was a parody of Phil Silvers, as was this particular Rumpelstiltskin.
Top Cat spoke in a higher register, but the inflections and the beatnik delivery were all Phil Silvers. My favorite TV comedian.
and the second day, went as it did the first. and as it ended.....Sound right!
"Looie." "Like, uh-uh."
There's another Fractured Fairy Tales called Son of Rumpelstiltskin. The story is mostly the same but it's about young Rumpelstiltskin has to make a name of himself. The girl became queen from gold and has to guess his name. But the little man didn't know his name after 3 days of guesses. He tried to ask people, but later checked his mailbox and realizes how embarrassing his name was. He changed his name and becomes famous on TV.
GROOVY!
4:57 Rumpelstiltkin oh crap
COOL!
Gladys:(delighted): Yeah! Coo-Coo!
There are two different Fractured Fairytales versions of Rumplestiltskin.
@SarieContrary
I do, and he also reveals why he wants the Queen's baby: "Dress him all in green and teach him to be a funny little man, what else?!" Which explains where these magic little men come from, at least.
Hope someone posts that one!
Even though a cartoon-- it’s more higher level… and you can compare the moral of the story to modern times…❤❤❤😂😂😂😂… just a thought
thanks!
What Was The Town Crier's Name?
@PatronusPokeWarrior1 Bullwinkle, Huh?
What does the narrator say from 4:06 to 4:08?
And the second day went as did the first 😉
I'm pretty sure Rumpelstiltskin possess the same voice as a certain, Smooth-talking, lie-making, logic-scrambling snide wolf from the Hanna-Barbera universe.
All the villains sounded like Phil Silvers.
Love it lol
I always wondered who did the voice for Rumplestilkskin....
didn't they already make one about him?
4:27 oh hear yeah hahaha
The Manufacturing Consent of Rumpelstiltskin - Chomsky/Herman
@brownpower2 Groovy!!!
Gladys story sounds like Kim Kardashian. Sitting at home dreaming of a way to become famous.
Well, just as I was said it.
It's a fun game
She said it in 3 52
LOL I get it and it's true.
3:52
Coral Garza bgg FCC
& ,m DC waZccvç FCC bbn my j li big inc. Cut you guv on n nick I I luv giving p
Gladys is Voiced By June Foray
Wait. Phil Silvers was the voice of Rumple? Wasn't he the actor who played the con artists a few times on The Beverly Hillbillies who "sold" them the Brooklyn Bridge?@dmnemaine
Phil Silvers was often played the fast talkin', glad handed con man on TV and films.
He perfected the character on "The Phil Silvers Show" where he played Sgt. Bilko.
Best sitcom of the 50's and 60's.
No, it was actor Daws Butler imitating Phil Silvers.
first off- who gives their baby up because they signed a paper- also lady, you are the queen- just be gown him at once!
There is another version where the deal is the little man will help the woman win contests and he wants her kid because he owns a camp for boys. The kid turns out to be too much for him to handle and he tries to return him telling her his name but she won't believe it. Finally the camp is destroyed (It burned down, Ma.) and the little man winds up in the employ of the woman taking care of the kid until he can guess HER name.
Never sign without reading! Then back out;!
@PatronusPokeWarrior1 Poor Bullwinkle
Im find this video for Jessica Ojeda
@cheemaavtar348 Long Live Edward Everett Horton!
Is the king John Lithgow?
No.
@After4th That's weird!
Poor Rocky
@1958boomergirl Daws Butler
I remember these movies when I was young,my step father would never let us watch them, HAHAHA LOOK AT ME NOW DICKHEAD CANT STOP ME NOW!!!!!!!!
Who was the narrator?
Edward Everett Horton ua-cam.com/video/BlGlTOqXId0/v-deo.html