A description, with screencaps, of G Man Jitters, on Cartoons of 1939.
December 7, 2012
Frankenstein Meets Gandy Goose
Here’s a standard Terrytoons presentation poster showing an
animator’s hand wielding brush and cigarette, with space at center reserved for an
image and title of the current offering.
Produced by Terrytoons in 1939 and distributed by 20th
Century Fox, G Man Jitters casts its
dimwitted hero, Gandy Goose, as Sherlock Holmes in a haunted house yarn.
Dracula and Frankenstein’s Monster turn up, only to be terrified by a mouse.
Ghost gags and wild action ensue, with the principals dangling from a
chandelier and Frankenstein’s spring-loaded heart popping out of his chest. The
whole thing turns out to be a dream — a standard plot device for Gandy Goose
stories.
Based in New Rochelle, New York, producer Paul Terry's discount cartoon studio operated with a skeleton crew and notoriously cheap budgets, churning out a new short every other week. Once-popular house
characters included Farmer Al Falfa, Puddy the Pup and Dinky Duck. Some of us
might remember Mighty Mouse, magpies Heckle and Jeckle and TV’s Deputy Dawg,
created after the studio was bought out by CBS in 1955.
Gandy Goose appeared in 48 cartoons between 1938 and 1955.
Filmgoers of the era would have immediately recognized the character’s voice
and mannerisms as an imitation of comic Ed Wynn, “the perfect fool”. Gandy’s
pal, Sourpuss the cat, talked like Jimmy Durante. Gandy Goose was also featured
in Terrytoons comic books, including his own title beginning in 1953.
The Frankenstein scenes from G Man Jitters were recycled, with added color, in another Gandy
Goose outing, Fortune Hunters
(1944). Several sources also list Dracula and Frankenstein’s Monster as
appearing in the western-themed Ghost Town (1944), but that appears to be an error.
A description, with screencaps, of G Man Jitters, on Cartoons of 1939.
A description, with screencaps, of G Man Jitters, on Cartoons of 1939.
• 10:00
Labels: • G Man Jitters (1939), Animation
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3 comments:
>Terrytoons was Hollywood’s discount cartoon studio<
"Hollywood" in distribution, but not in production: Terry kept his budget operation in New Rochelle, NY!
Happy holidays,
-Craig W.
I knew that and I can see how my phrasing is misleading. I'll rework that line. Thanks very much, Craig, and Happy Holidays to you!
Look really great, love the first pic, thanks for sharing!
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