Show Biz Bugs

Show Biz Bugs
Looney Tunes (Bugs Bunny/Daffy Duck) series
Lobby card.
Directed by Friz Freleng
Produced by Edward Selzer
(uncredited)
Story by Warren Foster
Voices by Mel Blanc (All)
Music by Milt Franklyn
Friz Freleng
(Gag compositions)[1]
Animation by
Layouts by Hawley Pratt
Backgrounds by Boris Gorelick
Studio Warner Bros. Cartoons
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures
The Vitaphone Corporation
Release date(s) November 2, 1957 (USA)[2]
Color process Technicolor
Running time 7 minutes
Language English

Show Biz Bugs is a 1957 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes animated short directed by Friz Freleng and featuring Mel Blanc as the voices of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck.[3]

The basic setting and conflicts of this film were reprised for the linking footage for the television series The Bugs Bunny Show. Show Biz Bugs was also re-worked as the climax of The Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny Movie (1981).

Summary

Arriving at the theater where he and Bugs are appearing, Daffy is furious to discover that the rabbit's name on the marquee is above his in much larger letters. Rebuffed by the unseen manager's claim that he gives his performers billing "according to drawing power", Daffy is determined to prove that he is the star of the show.

That evening, Bugs and Daffy are performing an on-stage number to "Tea for Two". Daffy, tired of Bugs hogging up all the cheering and applause (especially after the reception Bugs gets for his "Shave and a Haircut" bit), and convinced he is more talented, decides to try numerous numbers on his own in order to impress the audience. He begins on the spot with a time step to "Jeepers Creepers". After failing to impress the audience, Daffy attempts to perform a trained Pigeon act. But the pigeons fly out causing Daffy to dance off the stage, when he looks back he is hit with a Tomato. Bugs does a sawing-in-half trick; Daffy volunteers in hopes of proving that the trick is fake, but ends up literally sawed in half. ("Good thing I got Blue Cross.") Daffy attempts to sabotage Bugs' xylophone act by rigging it to explode when a certain note is played, but Bugs avoids the trap by deliberately playing the final note wrong twice forcing Daffy to do it himself and Daffy explodes as a result (this gag was also seen with pianos in Private Snafu, Ballot Box Bunny and Rushing Roulette). In a final attempt to impress the audience while Bugs is Juggling, Daffy in a Devil's costume performs a deadly stunt (which he refers as "an act that no other performer has dared to execute!"), by drinking a portion of gasoline, some nitroglycerin, a good amount of gunpowder, and some Uranium-238, "shake well", and swallowing a lit match ("Girls, you better hold onto your boyfriends!"), causing him to explode. The audience loves the performance, an impressed Bugs says they want more, but Daffy (now a transparent ghost and ascending to heaven) "can only do it once".

Cast

Mel Blanc as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Taxi Driver, and Manager

Critical reception

In a commentary by Greg Ford, he cites that the short contains some of Warren Foster's "best gags as a writer". Ford also described it as "a definitive Bugs/Daffy showbiz rivalry cartoon".[4]

Production

  • As revealed in the audio commentary on the second Golden Collection set, the song "The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady" was intended to be used during the sequence where Daffy showcases some trained birds. A pre-score recording was produced, but was not used in the final cartoon. Other pre-score music included slightly longer versions of both "Tea for Two" and "Jeepers Creepers".[3]
  • This would be the second to last Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck cartoon Friz Freleng would direct with his musical methods and techniques (the final one would be Person to Bunny released in 1960; though Daffy did make a brief cameo in Apes of Wrath released in 1959 and was also directed by Freleng).[1]

Previous film references

The xylophone gag was previously used in the Private Snafu short Booby Traps and the Bugs/Yosemite Sam short Ballot Box Bunny (and later in Rushing Roulette), only in both cases the instrument used was a piano. The song used in each case, as in Show Biz Bugs, is "Believe Me, if All Those Endearing Young Charms".

The final act and the pigeon circus had been used in an earlier Porky Pig cartoon called Curtain Razor in which a fox does the same act Daffy does attempting to show Porky he is a star, and, much like Show Biz Bugs, the final act in Curtain Razor has been edited on Cartoon Network to remove him ingesting gasoline (the syndicated version of The Merrie Melodies Show also cuts the gasoline-drinking and edits it even further by cutting out the fox swallowing a match).

Availability

See also

References

  1. 1 2 http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xk0sxw_irreverent-imagination-the-golden-age-of-looney-tunes_shortfilms
  2. Beck, Jerry; Friedwald, Will (1989). Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies: A Complete Illustrated Guide to the Warner Bros. Cartoons. New York: Henry Holt and Company. p. 303. ISBN 0-8050-0894-2. OCLC 19671400.
  3. 1 2 "Show Biz Bugs". Big Cartoon DataBase, August 30, 2014
  4. Greg Ford (filmmaker). Show Biz Bugs (commentary) (DVD)|format= requires |url= (help). Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 2 (disc 4).
Preceded by
Bugsy and Mugsy
Bugs Bunny Cartoons
1957
Succeeded by
Rabbit Romeo
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