Something interesting is that in A Star is Hatched and Porky's Five and Ten, they sing "Go on and try your luck/You might be Daffy Duck!". Of course, the original lyric is "Go out and try your luck/You might be Donald Duck!" but it's interesting since Daffy's only appeared three times up to those points and only named in one of them.
What's also interesting is that the line is "Donald Duck" and yet it was featured in the WB film _Hollywood Hotel._ I guess WB was fine with the mention of Donald in live-action, but in animation, it was a no-no to give recognition to the competition.
One of the most prominent instances of cross-promotion with WB feature films, as Hollywood Hotel came out a year before A Star is Hatched and was a prominent song in that film. "Hooray For Hollywood" also happens to have the distinction of being the very first song played in the first Tiny Toons episode that aired (after the title card, I mean). Anyway, my favorite use is What's Up, Doc?.
Ben Hardaway directed "Porky's Hare Hunt", and created that rabbit. When he became head of Lantz's story department in 1940, he and Walt created Woody.....based on that "screwy rabbit"......with essentially the same voice {Mel's}.
Mel actually used to do that laugh a lot when he was a boy, and used that laugh for "Happy Rabbit", the early version of Bugs, before using it for Woody Woodpecker.
0:00 A Star is Hatched 0:34 Porky's Five and Ten 1:22 Porky's Hare Hunt 2:23 Count Me Out 2:52 The Daffy Duckaroo 3:08 What's Cookin', Doc? 3:31 Hollywood Canine Canteen 3:47 Hollywood Daffy 5:16 A Hare Grows in Manhattan 6:12 The Scarlet Pumpernickel 6:44 What's Up, Doc? 7:42 A Star is Bored 7:57 Wideo Wabbit 8:30 Unnatural History 9:00 Wild, Wild World 9:30 Person to Bunny 9:55 The Music Mice-Tro
Something interesting is that in A Star is Hatched and Porky's Five and Ten, they sing "Go on and try your luck/You might be Daffy Duck!". Of course, the original lyric is "Go out and try your luck/You might be Donald Duck!" but it's interesting since Daffy's only appeared three times up to those points and only named in one of them.
What's also interesting is that the line is "Donald Duck" and yet it was featured in the WB film _Hollywood Hotel._ I guess WB was fine with the mention of Donald in live-action, but in animation, it was a no-no to give recognition to the competition.
Every time “William Tell Overture” was used
I second that
That's way too many times to count lol
0:24 I Wonder if Clark Gable could Fly like Dumbo the Elephant ?
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
0:03 Edward G. Robinson & Greta Garbo
One of the most prominent instances of cross-promotion with WB feature films, as Hollywood Hotel came out a year before A Star is Hatched and was a prominent song in that film.
"Hooray For Hollywood" also happens to have the distinction of being the very first song played in the first Tiny Toons episode that aired (after the title card, I mean).
Anyway, my favorite use is What's Up, Doc?.
Looks like Mel Blanc, at 2:04, was doing the Woody Woodpecker laugh long before Walter Lantz hired him!
Ben Hardaway directed "Porky's Hare Hunt", and created that rabbit. When he became head of Lantz's story department in 1940, he and Walt created Woody.....based on that "screwy rabbit"......with essentially the same voice {Mel's}.
Mel actually used to do that laugh a lot when he was a boy, and used that laugh for "Happy Rabbit", the early version of Bugs, before using it for Woody Woodpecker.
0:00 A Star is Hatched
0:34 Porky's Five and Ten
1:22 Porky's Hare Hunt
2:23 Count Me Out
2:52 The Daffy Duckaroo
3:08 What's Cookin', Doc?
3:31 Hollywood Canine Canteen
3:47 Hollywood Daffy
5:16 A Hare Grows in Manhattan
6:12 The Scarlet Pumpernickel
6:44 What's Up, Doc?
7:42 A Star is Bored
7:57 Wideo Wabbit
8:30 Unnatural History
9:00 Wild, Wild World
9:30 Person to Bunny
9:55 The Music Mice-Tro
8:14: “Have you stopped beating your wife?”
One of the first LT songs I noticed when i was a kid
Always loved the Looney Tunes caricatures of old Hollywood stars
Those fishes 🐠 look like Laurel and Hardy.
Well, its a parody
0:57 Love this part where the song is in counterpoint with the motif from You Ought to be in Pictures
They did the picture song, in commercials
OMFG!!! Those are the conditions that provail (sic)! :DDDDDD LOOOOOOOOOOOOL
1:51 Happy Hare: That's what you think! Ha-ha! Ha-ha! Ha-ha!
Pertaining to the boxing fishes, there actually is a South American cichlid called a Jack Dempsey.
And this one looks like Mae west
0:27 W.C. Fields
0:52 Greta Garbo
1:00 Mae West
8:01 Groucho Marx
I work for Monty Burns! M-m-m-Monty Burns!
Monty Burn's Nuclear Powerplant?!?
One of the themes from the Jack Benny show
You forgot the Scarlett Pumpernickle
6:12
Thanks @@looneytunessongs-xr5fs
I only know about Amy Semple because of that Kathie Lee Gifford play on her life
Who are Hollywood movies stars? Actors and actress?
The classics from the 20s-60s
You forgot You're an Education (1938)
The tune was cut out of the Blue Ribbon version of the cartoon which is the one we have available so I physically couldn't include it.
Can you do a video Why don’t fall in love with me?
This looks like Greta garbo