The CooCoo Nut Grove
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The CooCoo Nut Grove | |
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Directed by | Friz Freleng |
Produced by | Leon Schlesinger Productions |
Animation by | Robert McKimson Sandy Walker |
Color process | Technicolor |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Running time | 6:43 |
The Coo-Coo Nut Grove (released November 28, 1936) is a Warner Brothers Merrie Melodies short animated film, set in the famed Cocoanut Grove of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. The cartoon was supervised (directed) by Friz Freleng, with animation by Robert McKimson and Sandy Walker and musical score by Carl Stalling.[1]
Master of ceremonies Ben Birdie (bandleader Ben Bernie) is accosted in the opening scene by Walter Windpipe (Walter Winchell). The short then proceeds to showcase a large number of Hollywood stars in the form of caricatures, including Katharine Hepburn (as a horse named Miss Heartburn), Jean Harlow, Bette Davis, Ned Sparks, Hugh Herbert, W.C. Fields, Clark Gable, Groucho and Harpo Marx, Johnny Weissmuller (in character as Tarzan) and Lupe Vélez, Mae West, Lionel and John Barrymore, Laurel and Hardy, Edward G. Robinson, Fred Astaire, and George Raft. Musical entertainments are provided by Dame Edna May Oliver as "The Lady in Red", the Dionne quintuplets (who were in reality only two years old at the time) and Helen Morgan, sitting on the piano, turning on the tears with a torch song causing most of the guests to cry (except Ben Birdie and a few of the guests) and flooding the Grove in the process.
Notes
- The title is sometimes misspelled as The Coo-Coo Nut Groove. This cartoon was followed by The Woods Are Full Of Cuckoos (1937) and Have You Got Any Castles? (1938), both parodying Hollywood personalities.
Home video
References
External links
- 1936 animated films
- Merrie Melodies shorts
- American films
- Animated cartoons based on real people
- Films directed by Friz Freleng
- 1930s comedy films
- 1930s American animated films
- Cultural depictions of Mae West
- Cultural depictions of The Marx Brothers
- Cultural depictions of Laurel & Hardy
- Cultural depictions of W. C. Fields
- Film scores by Carl Stalling
- Merrie Melodies stubs