Animation &Animation Artifacts &Chuck Jones &UPA 02 Jul 2009 08:01 am

Gay Purr-ee

- I remember in 1962 going to the movies to see Gay Purr-ee, the very first showing – a late morning matinee. It was a bus ride away, but I was a fan big fan of UPA at the time. A 15 year old child who knew a bit about the impressionists and had read a lot about the early incarnation of this animation studio. The only shorts I’d seen were on the original Gerald McBoing Boing show, back in the fifties (when I was much younger.)

1001 Arabian Nights with Mr. Magoo had impressed me in some of its parts, but the notion of animating in impressionist art was more exciting to me.

I remember being impressed with the voice cast and soundtrack (which I quickly bought), some of the imagery and some bits of the animation. I loved the thick/thin outlines of the characters. I went back the next day to see the film again at a closer theater. This time I went late afternoon, which was a mistake. The kiddee matinee had brought a glob of ice cream melting down the center of the theater’s screen. It was hard to enjoy the beautiful painting with this dark, moving scar gracing the middle of the screen.

Despite seeing the film another half dozen times, since then, I didn’t really know much about the film’s production other than the credits I was able to view on screen. The Abe Levitow site offers a number of background paintings by the original designer, Victor Haboush, as well as Corny Cole and Bob Inman.


Here are two by bg’s Victor Haboush that are featured on the Levitow site.
I just earned from Tom Sito‘s blog that Mr. Haboush died on May 24th at 85.
He was a gifted designer and artist.
.

.The paragraph written on that site tells about the layoffs at Disney after Sleeping Beauty and how this brought an influx of talent to UPA. Many had worked on the Dick Tracy and Mr. Magoo tv cartoons that were produced but the feature better utilized their talents.

This isn’t much different than the story Jack Kinney tells in his book, Walt Disney and Other Assorted Characters. After he was pushed out of Disney, he ended up directing Magoo’s Arabian Nights. (He talks so little of it that he gives the impression he didn’t enjoy the experience.)


This is a Corny Cole model of the “Money Cats” from the film.
.

This is an animation drawing I have of one of them.
It’s not as angular or graceful as Corny’s drawing, but I still like it.
.

And this is an animation drawing I have of
Meowrice, the film’s villain.

.
I have lots of the press material from the period stuffed into a scrapbook I have in storage. Not much of this is available on line, but I did find these two pieces in the NYTimes:

(Click any image to enlarge.)

Here’s the review that was published in the NYTIMES

    GAY PURR-EE
    By BOSLEY CROWTHER
    December 6, 1962

    MOVING (for the second time) into the animated feature domain created by Walt Disney, U.P.A. Productions has contributed a pretty, pleasant, seasonal package for family audiences called “Gay Purr-ee.” The contents of this Warner release, which opened yesterday in neighborhood theaters, should make anybody’s mouth water, including Mr. Disney’s.

    Consider: Judy Garland, no less, and Robert Goulet providing the singing and speaking voice tracks for the leading cartoon roles in a cute fable about a little country cat who goes to Paris. Add a battery of technical wizards who create a fetching color canvas that blends some truly lovely pastels with classical works by art masters. Add also eight new tunes by Harold Arlen, including one knockout. But the picture, hélas, is not.

    At the risk of sounding like Scrooge, one U.P.A. fan feels that the film has everything but real wit. And what an opportunity, especially with Mewsette, the dainty little fugitive from Provence (Miss Garland), naïvely involved with some purring city slickers before being rescued by hel stalwart country swain, a champion mouser named Juane-Tom (Mr. Goulet).

    Now, with all due respect to the film’s good-natured tone and diverting backgrounds, the first half is rather studied and even familiar, as directed by Abe Levitow and written by Dorothy and Chuck Jones. In contrast to the pictorial wizardry—rearranged Von Gogh landscapes and a tilted, spangled City of Light flavored with Toulouse-Lautrec, Modigliani, Matisse, Cézanne and others—the characters almost pale by contrast.

    Mewsette, a nice enough little lady cat, is most interesting when Miss Garland is warbling — superbly — such ballads as “Roses Red” and “Take My Hand, Paree.” The same goes for the villainous Meowrice (Paul Frees), a fairly standard menace with a fine, jazzy theme song, “The Money Cat.” Furthermore, the snug, simple plot is needlessly stretched. Even with little Mewsette pining away in Paris, her would-be rescuer and his sassy, furry sidekick Robespierre (Red Buttons) are way off in Alaska.

    The nearest thing to spice is the heroine’s jowly, pink “chaperone,” a shady lady named Mme. Rubens-Chatte (drolly spoken by Hermione Gingold). Even with the songs and the brilliantly stylized backgrounds, one can’t help wondering what a Disney crew would have concocted in earthy slyness and spontaneity.

    In the final reel, though, things hit high gear in an old-fashioned chase scramble, against a superbly imaginative panorama of Paris, while the cats prowl the quays and the Notre Dame gargoyles toward a final, funny free-for-all. This portion also contains the film’s visual highlight, as Miss Garland sings one of Mr. Arlen’s great blues numbers written for the screen, “Paris Is a Lonely Town.”

    So who needs eggnog for Christmas? “Gay Purr-ee” is a nice, soft drink for all the family.

    ‘Gay Purr-ee’ Cartoon , screenplay by Dorothy and Chuck Jones; directed by Abe Levitow; produced by Henry G. Saperstein for U. P. A. Productions; presented by Warner Brothers.

    At neighborhood theaters. Running time: 86 minutes.
    Voice of:
    Mewsette . . . . . . . . . . . Judy Garland
    Juane-Tom . . . . . . . . . . Robert Goulet
    Meowrice . . . . . . . . . . . Paul Frees
    Robespierre . . . . . . . . . Red Buttons
    Mme. Ruben-Chatte . . . . Hermione Gingold

8 Responses to “Gay Purr-ee”

  1. on 02 Jul 2009 at 10:10 am 1.Jason said …

    I love the “Money Cats” model sheet! WOW!

  2. on 02 Jul 2009 at 10:33 am 2.Stephen Macquignon said …

    the back grounds are great

  3. on 02 Jul 2009 at 10:12 pm 3.Bill Perkins said …

    Hi Michael. Thanks for another great post and as well ( I’m assuming it was you) for getting the Abe levitow site back up and running. Gay Purr-ee was for me , like yourself a touchstone for my interest in Animation. My list would include “Gay Purr-ee,” “Mr Magoo’s Christmas Carol”, “The Incredible Mr. Limpet”, “Hey There its Yogi Bear”, and early Hanna Barbara Television animation. On the Disney side of things “The Sword and the Stone” which came out when I was a very impressionable nine years old. All these films are about a 1962 thru to 1965 timeframe and I suspect a lot of Boomers who went on too careers in animation would site the same films. Great stuff you’ve been posting.

  4. on 02 Jul 2009 at 10:47 pm 4.Will Finn said …

    Nice post. I never got to see this at a theater but tried to catch it every time it was on TV in subsequent years. I have to say that the Bosley Crowther review is very thoughtfully written, and fairly accurate to my memory of the movie. I have to admit I have not seen it once as an “adult.”

  5. on 03 Jul 2009 at 12:30 am 5.Charles Brubaker said …

    Ah yes.

    This is the film that got Chuck Jones fired for moonlighting. It was originally supposed to be released through Columbia but by then the two company severed the relationship, so they had to look for a new distributor.

    Unfortunately, that distributor ended up being Warner Bros., whom found out about Jones’ contribution to the film, which led to the firing.

  6. on 03 Jul 2009 at 8:54 am 6.Michael said …

    Bill, Matt Clinton, in my studio, set up the Abe Levitow site and we’ve been watching over it ever since. I have something of an emotional attachment to Abe Levitow’s work, so this pleased me.
    My touchstone years are probably five earlier than yours going back to Lady & the Tramp, Sleeping Beauty & 101 Dalmatians, Disneyland & Wonderful World of Color, and very early H&B (I checked out at Jonny Quest). Everything else up through Sword and the Stone fits as well.

  7. on 05 Jul 2009 at 1:37 am 7.autisticanimator said …

    I think this is the only other Judy Garland film I’ve seen along with “The Wizard of Oz.” My mom might have other films with Judy in her vhs collection, which were the only things we could watch on TV, but I can still recall this one as it is to me Judy’s best performance. The dramatic “Paris is A Lonely Town,” was the scariest moment for me when I was younger, now it’s that scene which keeps me wanting to watch the film again. Though it didn’t feel much like a kids film to me, lots of double-entendres and innuendos, though my dad picked up on the more than I did (and that was when we watched it on dvd). I also can’t get over Mewsette’s greatest compliment being an aroused whistle, it’s not really all elevating from how she starts out…

  8. on 19 Aug 2017 at 6:17 pm 8.www.rencontre1mec.eu said …

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