
But just not the same Hollywood Studios you may have been thinking of.
Nearly seven decades ago, Walt Disney and his talented staff of animators created a place called Hollywood Studios that served as the setting for the 1939 Donald Duck cartoon, The Autograph Hound. I have frequently noted that many of Disney’s animated shorts are windows to the popular culture of bygone days, and The Autograph Hound is very distinctly a snapshot in time of Hollywood during its golden era.The hallmarks of this Donald Duck vignette are the numerous celebrity-inspired characters that were created to populate the fictional movie studio that Donald gate-crashes in search of autographs.
The first “celebrity” that Donald encounters within the walls of Hollywood Studios is the then well known character actor Henry Armetta. Famous for his ethnic-Italian personas, he was an almost constant presence in films during the era, appearing in thirteen films over the course of 1938-1939 alone. Next Donald encounters a mischievous Mickey Rooney who, unlike Armetta, achieved enormous fame and still enjoys a film career, now some seventy years later.
The cartoon’s only other surviving caricature is Shirley Temple. A precocious child actress, Temple was one of the brightest stars in Hollywood when The Autograph Hound was produced and released. Temple’s scene in the short plays homage to two significant moments from her film career. Her sailor outfit relates to her signature song “On the Good Ship Lollipop” that she originally performed in the 1934 film Bright Eyes. In the 1935 movie The Little Colonel, her dancing skills were showcased when she and costar Bill “Bojangles” Robinson famously tap dance up and down a staircase. Temple is similarly dancing on stairs when Donald collides with her in The Autograph Hound.
While Shirley Temple’s fame extended far, far beyond the end of her film career, the Ritz Brothers and Sonja Henie have somewhat faded into Hollywood obscurity and are little remembered now in the 21st century. Like Temple, they were featured prominently in the short, sharing extended interactions with Donald Duck.
Al, Jimmy and Harry Ritz were a trio of brothers famous for their synchronized dancing, slapstick comedy and celebrity impersonations. They made the leap from stage and vaudeville productions to movies in the mid-1930s. They were reaching the peak of their fame at the time Autograph Hound was in production. 20th Century Fox headlined them in a number of films, starting with Life Begins in College in 1937.Henie catapulted to fame in the late 1920s when she took the figure skating sport by storm. From her Wikipedia entry:
Henie won the first of an unprecedented ten World Figure Skating Championships in 1927 at the age of fifteen, and her first Olympic gold medal the following year. She also won six consecutive European championships. She is credited with being the first figure skater to adopt the short skirt costume in figure skating, and make use of dance choreography. Her innovative skating techniques and glamorous demeanor transformed the sport permanently and confirmed its acceptance as a legitimate sport in the Winter Olympics.
Henie signed with Fox in 1936 and starred in a string of successful films through the mid-1940s. The Autograph Hound was actually the second time that Henie was paid homage to in a Disney Cartoon. Released earlier in 1939, The Hockey Champ features an ice skating Donald Duck doing a brief impersonation of the star, complete with her trademark curly hair and long, dark eyelashes.While these stars were featured in extended sequences with Donald, the bulk of the cartoon’s celebrity cameos are found in a fast paced montage near the end of the film. In a little more than thirty seconds, there is a total of twenty star caricatures that flash across the screen:
Screen legends Greta Garbo and Clark Gable share a passionate embrace, despite their well known and often public statements that expressed a very clear and mutual animosity.
Mischa Auer, Joan Crawford, Groucho Marx and brother Harpo, and ventriloquist dummy Charlie McCarthy, although his right hand man Edger Bergen is noticeably absent. The pair would eventually appear in Disney's feature film Fun and Fancy Free.
Eddie Cantor, Katherine Hepburn, Slim Summerville, Irvin S. Cobb and Edward Arnold.
Hugh Herbert, Roland Young, the long-censored Stepin Fetchit, and big mouths Joe E. Brown and Martha Raye.
Three appearances are notable in the fact that the personalities are featured in roles they were famous for when the cartoon was released in 1939. Bette Davis is garbed as her character from the 1938 film Jezebel, for which she was awarded a Best Actress Oscar. Lionel Barrymore appears as his character of Dr. Gillespie from the series of Dr. Kildare movies that were then just getting underway. Lastly, Charles Boyer is in his role of Napoleon Bonaparte from the 1937 film Conquest.
One final odd and interesting detail from the cartoon--when Donald collides with a painted backdrop that ultimately bounces him toward his collision with Shirley Temple, the set is identified with a sign that reads The Road to Mandalay. This was at one time the working title of what would become the first of the famous "Road" pictures that starred Bing Crosby, Bob Hope and Dorothy Lamour. Originally offered to George Burns and Gracie Allen, and then to Fred MacMurray and Jack Oakie, it eventually evolved into The Road to Singapore and arrived in theaters in March of 1940, some six months after The Autograph Hound premiered.Images © Walt Disney Company







13 comments:
Great job at identifying all those stars. Thought hey were all considered popular in their day, it's interesting to see which ones are still popular enough to be easily recognized all these years later.
Terrific post, Jeff. It's always fun when the stars of the day get animated. One of my favorites is Mickey's Polo Team which pits the Movie Stars vs. the Mickey Mousers. As always, I'm looking forward to more!
Being a fan of vintage films even I was at a loss as to who the Ritz brothers were for a while - still haven't seen any of their work, although Fox has just released their supposed best work, The Three Musketeers, on DVD.
Irvin S. Cobb you think would be more recognizable today but he appeared in a surprisingly small number of films. I mostly think of him and Stepin Fetchit as appearing in John Ford's charming little fantasy Steamboat 'Round the Bend, Will Rogers' last film. It'd be what would happen if riding the Liberty Belle were 90 minutes long and had a plot. ;)
And of course almost everyone knows of Joe E. Brown as the crazy millionaire after Jack Lemmon in Some Like It Hot, even if they don't know him by name.
Thank you so much for your post! It must have been difficult getting all the archival photos to match with the animated shots, but it was really informative to see them side by side.
I used to love the cartoons that simulated old Hollywood stars--I suppose the cultural amnesia that robs them of most of their recognition today is also why they're moving the Studios away from its "Glamour Days" theme to its new "AMC Cinema" theme.
Great post - love Groucho & Harpo!
Interesting stuff. Seemed like the message behind The Autograph Hound that by 1939, Donald Duck had become equal, if not bigger than the Hollywood mainstream.
It's really bizarre how there are all those great celebrity caricatures, and then Stephen Fetchit is just a stereotype.
Excellent post. However, one little item needs correcting: Shirley Temple's sailor outfit evokes her role in "Captain January" (1936), in which she sang "At the Codfish Ball" while dancing with Buddy Ebsen. In "Bright Eyes," Shirley sings "On the Good Ship Lollipop" aboard an airplane... and she's gone on record that the song refers to a plane, not a boat.
Michael--
Thanks for the clarification and corrections. My Shirley Temple research was not quite as thorough as it needed to be--too much Mickey on the brain!
Thanks for posting, these! There were a few I was at a loss to identify when I watched the cartoon, and I'm glad that there's somebody out there who can match up the caricatures to the real people. It's the only time I can remember seeing Charlie McCarthy in a cartoon. I wonder if Burt Wheeler and Robert Woosley were ever animated, along with George and Gracie? Great post, nonetheless.
Woooow!!! Thank you so much for posting these! It must have been a ton of work but it's going to help a lot of people to appreciate this extremely interesting film!
Great article as usual, Jeff.
One question, though: aren't the 3 girls that are seen leaving Charlie McCarthy to get Donald's autograph the Andrews Sisters? Those 3 were seldom, if ever, seen apart on screen and their looks/designs make me think that it's them.
I could be wrong, though.
I've got a bunch of cartoon caricatures posted up here!
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