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* As opposed to "[[Lovelorn Leghorn]]" (1951) and "[[Of Rice and Hen]]" (1953) which Foghorn had no interest in Prissy at all, this is the first cartoon where Foghorn pursues Prissy for selfish reasons. This would happen again in "[[A Broken Leghorn]]" (1959) and "[[Strangled Eggs]]" (1961).
 
* As opposed to "[[Lovelorn Leghorn]]" (1951) and "[[Of Rice and Hen]]" (1953) which Foghorn had no interest in Prissy at all, this is the first cartoon where Foghorn pursues Prissy for selfish reasons. This would happen again in "[[A Broken Leghorn]]" (1959) and "[[Strangled Eggs]]" (1961).
 
* This cartoon marks the first featherless scene of Foghorn Leghorn, before "[[The High and the Flighty]] and "[[Crockett-Doodle-Do]]".
 
* This cartoon marks the first featherless scene of Foghorn Leghorn, before "[[The High and the Flighty]] and "[[Crockett-Doodle-Do]]".
  +
* The "Looney Tunes" Logo fade-in was slow at the beginning but the video continued
   
 
==Censorship==
 
==Censorship==
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[[Category:Cartoons animated by Herman Cohen]]
 
[[Category:Cartoons animated by Herman Cohen]]
 
[[Category:Cartoons animated by Charles McKimson]]
 
[[Category:Cartoons animated by Charles McKimson]]
[[Category:Cartoons animated by Rod Scribner]]
 
 
[[Category:Cartoons with music by Carl W. Stalling]]
 
[[Category:Cartoons with music by Carl W. Stalling]]
 
[[Category:Cartoons with layouts by Robert Givens]]
 
[[Category:Cartoons with layouts by Robert Givens]]

Revision as of 04:28, 18 January 2020

Deprecated

We have moved to portable infoboxes using the new Template:Shorts

Please do not use this template anymore. It is left here for reference purposes.

Little Boy Boo
Little Boy Boo
Directed By: Robert McKimson
Produced By: Eddie Selzer (uncredited)
Released: June 5, 1954
Series: Looney Tunes
Story: Tedd Pierce
Animation: Rod Scribner
Charles McKimson
Phil DeLara
Herman Cohen
Layouts: Robert Givens
Backgrounds: Richard H. Thomas
Film Editor: Treg Brown (uncredited)
Voiced By: Mel Blanc
Bea Benaderet (uncredited)
Music: Carl Stalling
Starring: Foghorn Leghorn
Miss Prissy
Egghead Jr.
Preceded By: Claws for Alarm
Succeeded By: Devil May Hare

Little Boy Boo is a 1954 Looney Tunes short directed by Robert McKimson and starring Foghorn Leghorn, Miss Prissy and Egghead Jr.

Plot

Foghorn reads a newspaper story in the Barnyard News predicting a cold winter. To avoid freezing in his shack, he decides to woo Miss Prissy ("I need your love to keep me warm."), who lives in a warm, cozy cottage across the way. Miss Prissy is flattered by Foghorn's two-second courtship, but tells him that, in order to prove his worthiness as her mate, he needs to show that he can be a worthy father to her bookish-looking son.

The little boy - Egghead Jr., a chick similar in appearance to Tweety, dressed in a stocking cap and oversized glasses - would rather read about "Splitting the Fourth Dimension" than engage in typical little boy games. Foghorn immediately catches on to this and sets out to win his audition by showing Egghead Jr. how to play various sports games.

Although he apparently has never participated in any of the below-listed events before, Egghead Jr. effortlessly masters them all, as depicted in the cartoon's gags:

  • Baseball. After Egghead Jr. swallows the ball whole and clonks Foghorn over the head with the bat, the rooster has Egghead Jr. properly use both items. Egghead goes to bat and smashes a line drive down Foghorn's throat, and later fires a fast-pitch offering that slices through Foghorn's bat and a row of trees in the grove. When asked to explain, Egghead produces a series of scientific formulas.
  • Making paper airplanes. Foghorn makes a conventional one, but Egghead Jr. creates a fighter that not only floats sleekly through the air, it shoots Foggy's plane down in flames. Foghorn is handed another scientific explanation.
  • Hide and seek. Foghorn hides in the feedbox, but using a slide rule and a shovel, Egghead Jr. finds the rooster elsewhere. Flabbergasted at how the chick accomplished this, Foghorn decides not to look in the feedbox, declaring "I just might be in there."

Later, Foghorn tries to take an interest in Egghead Jr.'s interests. The chick is experimenting with formulas in his Tiny Tot Chemical Set (marked "harmless"). Foghorn assumes Egghead Jr. is making soda and tries to make it fizz - but causes an explosion instead, blowing off his feathers.

Foghorn returns Egghead Jr. home and cancels the engagement. "I've got my bandages to keep me warm!" he scowls as he walks off on crutches and in a full-body bandage.

Notes

  • This cartoon marks the debut of Egghead Jr., who would reappear two more times; "Feather Dusted" (1955) and "Crockett-Doodle-Do" (1960).
  • This is the first cartoon which Miss Prissy had a more extensive vocabulary than her trademark "Yeeeesss". Only one more cartoon has Miss Prissy speaking this way; "Feather Dusted" (1955).
  • As opposed to "Lovelorn Leghorn" (1951) and "Of Rice and Hen" (1953) which Foghorn had no interest in Prissy at all, this is the first cartoon where Foghorn pursues Prissy for selfish reasons. This would happen again in "A Broken Leghorn" (1959) and "Strangled Eggs" (1961).
  • This cartoon marks the first featherless scene of Foghorn Leghorn, before "The High and the Flighty and "Crockett-Doodle-Do".
  • The "Looney Tunes" Logo fade-in was slow at the beginning but the video continued

Censorship

  • On the ABC and FOX airings of this cartoon, the part where Egghead hits Foghorn Leghorn with a baseball bat after Foghorn asks him what a baseball bat is used for is cut.[1]
  • On the CBS version of this cartoon, the part where Foghorn Leghorn shakes up the contents in Egghead's test tube like a soda pop (and the explosion that follows) was cut (yet the end where Foghorn Leghorn was bandaged up from the explosion was not edited at all).[1]

Availability

References

  • Friedwald, Will and Jerry Beck. "The Warner Brothers Cartoons." Scarecrow Press Inc., Metuchen, N.J., 1981. ISBN 0-8108-1396-3.

External links

Preceded by
Of Rice and Hen
Foghorn Leghorn cartoons
1954
Succeeded by
Feather Dusted
Foghorn Leghorn Cartoons
1946 Walky Talky Hawky
1947 Crowing Pains
1948 The Foghorn Leghorn
1949 Henhouse Henery
1950 The Leghorn Blows at MidnightA Fractured Leghorn
1951 Leghorn SwoggledLovelorn Leghorn
1952 Sock a Doodle DoThe EGGcited Rooster
1953 Plop Goes the Weasel!Of Rice and Hen
1954 Little Boy Boo
1955 Feather DustedAll Fowled Up
1956 Weasel StopThe High and the FlightyRaw! Raw! Rooster!
1957 Fox-Terror
1958 Feather BlusterWeasel While You Work
1959 A Broken Leghorn
1960 Crockett-Doodle-DoThe Dixie Fryer
1961 Strangled Eggs
1962 The Slick ChickMother Was a Rooster
1963 Banty Raids
1964 False Hare
1980 The Yolks on You
1996 Superior Duck
1997 Pullet Surprise
2004 Cock-a-Doodle Duel