Jerky Turkey
Jerky Turkey | |
---|---|
Directed by | Tex Avery |
Produced by | Fred Quimby (uncredited) |
Story by | Heck Allen |
Voices by |
Harry Lang (uncredited) Bill Thompson (uncredited) |
Music by | Scott Bradley |
Animation by |
Preston Blair Ed Love Ray Abrams |
Studio | MGM Cartoons |
Distributed by | MGM |
Release date(s) | April 7, 1945 |
Color process | Technicolor |
Language | English |
Jerky Turkey is an animated theatrical short, directed by Tex Avery, released on April 7, 1945 by MGM. The story for this cartoon was written by Heck Allen, the music by Scott Bradley, and the animation was done by Preston Blair, Ed Love and Ray Abrams. Voices were provided by radio actors Harry Lang, who appeared on the Cisco Kid, and Leone LeDoux,[1] who specialised in baby cries. Internet sources claiming Daws Butler provided a voice are incorrect, as he did not arrive in Hollywood until after World War II.[2]
Plot
In 1620 7⁄8, Pilgrims, riding a caricatured Mayflower with a number of World War II-era anachronisms (such as a navy gunnery deck, a Henry J. Kaiser nameplate and a fuel rationing card) land at Plymouth Rock and establish a colony, where they quickly separate into "Ye Democrats" and "Ye Republicans." The Pilgrims all stand in line for cigarettes (some are caricatures of Avery's animation crew), while the town crier bemoans that he has been made eligible for the draft {"1-A"}.
A Pilgrim, who speaks with the milquetoast mannerisms of Bill Thompson (who was unavailable and had to be impersonated because of his being inducted into war service), goes hunting for a turkey for a Thanksgiving dinner. The turkey, seeing an easy mark and speaking in an impersonation of Jimmy Durante, offers himself to the pilgrim, only to use this as the start of a series of rapid-fire gags that stretch the limits of even cartoon physics, with the turkey consistently getting the best of his increasingly befuddled and frustrated opponent. Eventually the two make up and decide to "eat at Joe's," following the advice of a clapboard-wearing bear advertising his steakhouse that appears throughout the film. When they reach Joe's steakhouse, the door closes, loud thuds are heard, and the bear is seen grinning and picking his teeth, as the swallowed-whole turkey and pilgrim sulk in the bear's stomach. The pilgrim closes the cartoon holding up a sign of his own: "DON'T eat at Joe's."
Copyright status
This is one of three MGM cartoons in the public domain. The others are To Spring (1936) and Doggone Tired (1949).
References
- ↑ The Animated Film Encyclopedia, Graham Webb, McFarland Publishers, 2000.
- ↑ Daws Butler Characters Actor, Joe Bevilacqua and Ben Ohmart, Bear Manor Media.