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Felix the Cat
Félix origins remain disputed. Australian cartoonist / film entrepreneur Pat Sullivan, owner of the character Felix said during his life and his creator. American animator Otto Messmer, the head of Sullivan, was assigned most often in credit in recent decades. Some historians argue Messmer ghost Sullivan. What is certain is that Felix emerged from Sullivan's studio, and drawings with the animated character known success and popularity in the 1920s.
In early 1920 Felix enjoys huge popularity in popular culture. He got his own comic strip (drawn by Messmer) 1923, and his image soon adorned all kinds of goods such as pottery, toys and postcards. Several manufacturers made stuffed Felix. jazz groups such as the songs of Paul Whiteman played on it (1923 Felix walked "and others).
In the late 1920s with the arrival of sound cartoons Felix's success was fading. The new Disney short Mickey Mouse, the offerings of Sullivan and Messmer silence, which were then wants to advance in the production of sound, has become obsolete. By 1929, Sullivan decided to make the transition and began distributing the cartoon images of Felix Copley. The sound Felix shorts proved a failure and the operation ended in 1930. Sullivan died in 1933. Felix saw a brief three cartoon resurrection in 1936 by the Van Beuren studios.
Felix began broadcasting cartoons on American television in 1953. During this time, Joe Oriolo, who was the direction the comic Felix presented a revised version of "legs long "Felix in a new animated series for television. Oriolo also added new characters, and gave Felix a" Magic Bag of Tricks " could assume an infinite variety of forms, at the request of Felix. The cat has been involved in other television programs and two feature films. Felix is being offered in a wide variety of products, from clothes to toys. Oriolo's son, Don Oriolo, now controls creative work on Felix movies.
Creation
Feline Follies of Pat Sullivan, silence, 1919. Length 4min44s, 501kbps
A scene of Felix "laffing" Felix in Hollywood "(1923).
Pat Sullivan work
Felix and share with Charlie Chaplin on the screen in a memorable moment from "Felix Hollywood" (1923).
The famous Felix pace "as in "Oceantics" (1930)
On November 9, 1919, Master Tom, a prototype Felix, debuted in a Paramount Pictures short entitled Feline Follies. Produced by the animation studio in the City of New York, owned by Pat Sullivan, the cartoon was directed by animator Otto Messmer. It has been a successful and rapidly Sullivan study went to work in the production of another film with Master Tom, a Felix the Cat in the prototype Musical Mews (Published November 16, 1919). It also showed public. Otto Messmer gave two different versions of how he got his name Felix, one on his official website ejoining Sullivan with a great idea for a new character, Felix the Cat and second R. (John) Paramount King Magazine suggested the name "Felix", after the Latin words felis (cat) and Felix (lucky), which was used for the third film, The Adventures of Felix (released December 14, 1919.) Pat Sullivan, said Felix, after Australia's Felix history Australia and the literature. In 1924, animator Bill Nolan redesigned the fledgling feline, making it round and cute. Felix's new looks, along with character animation Messmer, Felix, of glory.
The question of exactly who has created Felix remains controversial. Sullivan said in interviews that many newspapers Felix created and made the key drawings for the character. During a visit to Australia in 1925, Sullivan told the Argus that "The idea was given to me by the sight of a cat that my wife brought to the store one day. "Other times, said Felix was inspired by Rudyard Kipling" The cat that walked by himself " or his wife's love for dogs. Members of the Australian cartoonist showed that the characters used in writing Feline Follies Sullivan parties. Pat Sullivan also noted in his drawings that has been a major contradiction Messmer applications. Sullivan application is also supported by the March 18, 1917, leaving a short sketches Animated entitled The Tail of Thomas Kat, more than two years before Feline Follies. Both an ABC-TV documentary Australian screen in 2004 and the curators of the exhibition at the Library State of New South Wales 2005 South Thomas suggested that Kat was a prototype or precursor of Felix. However, few details have survived Thomas. The skin color has not been established definitely, and the copyright for the survivor brief synopsis suggests that significant differences between Thomas and Felix side. For example, while the later, Felix tail magically transformed into tools and other objects, Thomas is an anthropomorphic cat that lost its tail in a fight with a rooster, never to recover.
Sullivan was the owner of the studio and, as is the case with almost all movies that had contractors copyright any creative work of its employees. Like many leaders of the time, Pierre Messmer was not credited. After Sullivan's death in 1933, his estate in Australia has assumed the character.
It was not until many years later Sullivan's death, Sullivan Staffers as Hal Walker, Al Eugster, and Sullivan's lawyer, Harry Kopp, credited Messmer with the creation of Felix. They said that Felix was based on an animated Charlie Chaplin that Messmer had animated for Sullivan previous study. The personality and movements down and out of the feline cat Follies reflect the main Chaplin attributes, although the last blockier Felix, the black-body pet is already there (Messmer is solid shapes easier to animate). Messmer said their own version of the creation of chat in an interview with animation historian John Canemaker:
Sullivan Studio have been very busy, and Paramount, They fell behind schedule and needed to fill in. Additional services and Sullivan, which is very busy, said: "If you want to do in hand, you can do any little thing to satisfy them. "So I am a cat would be the simplest order. Do it all in black, you know you would not have to worry about the edges. And one gag after another, you know? Cute. And everyone laughed. So Paramount liked if they have ordered a series.
Many animation historians (mostly American and English) endorsed the statements Messmer. Among them, Michael Barrier, Jerry Beck, Colin and Timothy Cowles, Donald Crafton, David Gerstein, Milt Gray Kausler, Mark Leonard Maltin, and Charles Solomon.
Regardless of who created Felix cat Sullivan market without rest, while Messmer continued to produce a prodigious volume Cartoon Felix. Messmer is a paper animation directly with white ink drawings traced directly. The facilitators have a history in pieces of film, which were then placed on top of drawings to be photographed. All terms of employment shall be encouraged to hand as studio cameras were unable to perform pans or trucks. Messmer began in 1923 a comic strip distributed by King Features Syndicate.
Popularity and distribution
The comic Felix Daily Sketch Cat debuted in England on August 1, 1923 and entered syndication in the U.S. on 19 August of that year. This band was particularly the second coming (August 26). Although this work has been Messmer, it was necessary to sign his name to Sullivan. The video includes a remarkable number 1920 slang as "buzz of a job" and "If you hear a swell me crazy.
Click to enlarge.
Supreme distributed the first films from 1919 to 1921. Margaret J. Winkler has been distributed short films from 1922 to 1925, Education More photos taken at the distribution of short films. Sullivan has promised a new leaves every two weeks Felix. The combination of solid entertainment, business promotion, and its wide distribution in Felix's popularity to new heights.
References to alcoholism and prohibition were also common in many short Felix, Felix discovers including (1924), how and why others (1927), Felix Woos Whoopee (1930) to name a few. Felix is coated in output (1924), Felix tries to help his friend Hobo is grappling with a red nose. At the end of the short, the cat state is cure "continue to drink, and it turns blue."
In addition, Felix was one of first images broadcast on television when RCA chose a doll Felix mch paper W2XBS experience 1928 through New York in Van Cortlandt Park. The Doll has been chosen for its contrast of tones and their ability to withstand the intense lights necessary. He was placed on a phonograph turntable and photographed for about two hours each day. After a gain of Sullivan, the doll remained on the platform RCA for almost a decade refining the definition of the image.
Felix success also generated a lot of imitators. Cat appearances and personalities 1920 other comedy stars as Walt Disney Alice waffles July Aesop's Film Fables of Paul Terry, and in particular the draft Bill 1925 adaptation of Krazy Nolan Kat (distributed by Winkler avoided) appear to have been directly copied from Felix.
Felix cartoons were also popular among critics. They were cited as examples of Surrealism in the imagination of cinema.
Felix cartoons color the goose that lays the golden eggs (1936)
Felix, who is said to represent children a sense of wonder, the creation of the fantastic, when it is not, not good when it is. His famous paceands back, head down, thoughtecame deep a mark which has been analyzed by critics around the world. expression of the tail of Felix, which could be a shovel one moment, an exclamation point or a pen next, serves to emphasize that anything can happen in their world. Aldous Huxley wrote that the Felix shorts proved that "what cinema can do best literature and spoken theater should be fantastic. "
By 1923 the figure was at the height of his career. Felix in Hollywood, has published short this year, plays on the popularity of Felix, when he met fellow celebrities like Douglas Fairbanks, Cecil B. DeMille, Charlie Chaplin, Ben Turpin, and censorship even Will H. Hays. Your image can be seen on clocks, ornaments, and the giant ball made for the first Macy's Thanksgiving Parade Day. Felix also became the subject of several popular songs of the era as "Felix walked" by Paul Whiteman. Sullivan made an estimated $ 100,000 a single year toy license. With the success of the character also appeared a handful of new co-stars. These include Felix master Willie Brown, a film called mouse leave, nephew of Felix Inky, Dinky, and Winky, and his girlfriend Kitty.
Most of the early Felix cartoons reflects attitudes American Roaring Twenties. Ethnic stereotypes appeared in these short Felix Hunger (1924). Recent events such as the Russian Civil War have been represented short in all puzzled as Felix (1924). The valves have been caricatured in Felix strikes Rico (also 1924). He was also involved in binding riots with Felix (1923). In some short, Felix same process for the return of Charleston.
In 1928, education has continued to release Felix and bullets were reproduced by several First National Pictures. Copley Pictures distributed them from 1929 to 1930. He saw a brief revival in 1936 by three comics studies Van Beuren (The Chicken the golden eggs, and King Neptune Nonsense bold Cole). Sullivan did most of the marketing of the character in the 1920s, these shorts, spoke of a child as sharp as the voice was provided by Mae Questel, the voice of Betty Boop and Olive Olivia.
Felix as a mascot
The insignia of the United States Navy squadron VF-31 1948
Given the unprecedented popularity of nature and the fact that its name is derived partly from the Latin word that means "luck", some very important and organizations have adopted Felix as a mascot. The first was a Chevrolet dealer in Los Angeles and a friend of Pat Sullivan named Winslow B. Felix, who has opened a showroom in 1921. The neon sign on three sides of Felix Chevrolet, with its giant, smiling images of the character, is now one of the most famous Los Angeles, making the watch both Highway and Figueroa Street Seaport. People who have taken Felix included the 1922 New York Yankees and the aviator Charles Lindbergh, who took a Felix doll with him on his historic flight in the Atlantic Ocean.
This popularity has persisted. In late 1920, the U.S. bombing Navy Squadron Two (VB-2B) adopted a unit insignia consisting of Felix happily carrying a bomb with a lit fuse. They retained the insignia in 1930 when they became a fighter squadron under the designations VF-6B and, later, VF-3, whose members Edward John O'Hare and Thach became famous drivers Of the Navy in World War II. After the Second World War a fighter squadron of the United States Navy currently designated VFA-31 has been replaced logo meat knife with wings with the same insignia, after the original squad Felix has been dissolved. The company night fighter squadron, nicknamed the "Tomcatters" was active under different names in the pursuit of our days and Felix still appears on the patches of both the square cloth jacket and aircraft, leading your pump with its burning fuse.
Felix is also the former school mascot in the State of Indiana elected in 1926 after a player from Logansport High School Felix made his pile in a basketball game. When the team came from behind to win tonight, Felix became the pet of all high school sports teams Logansport.
The pop punk band The Queers Felix also use as a pet, often fixed in terms of punk sensibility and attributes such as frowning, smoking or touching guitar. Felix adorns the covers of Surf Goddess EP and two albums Movement Back Home. Felix also appears in the video for the single "No retreat." Also appearing on the covers and notes of various albums emblematic of cat also appears in products such as T-shirts and buttons. In an interview with bassist B-Face says Lookout! Records is responsible for the use of Felix as a mascot.
Felix appeared in a Japanese announcement of the 1991 Daihatsu Mira as "Felix Mira."
From silent to sound
Felix and Inky and Winky on "April Maze" (1930)
With the advent of The Jazz Singer in 1927, Educational Pictures, who distributed the Felix shorts at the time, urged Pat Sullivan to make the leap to "talkie" cartoons, but Sullivan refused. Other conflicts have led to a split between education and Sullivan. Only when Walt Disney Steamboat Willie made history as the first cartoon film to speak with a synchronized soundtrack did Sullivan see the possibilities of sound. She managed to get a contract with First National Pictures in 1928. However, for unknown reasons, this does not last long, so Jacques Kopfstein that Sullivan sought and Copley boxes to distribute their new sound Felix cartoons. On October 16, 1929, an advertisement appeared in the Journal of Film with Felix announcing, Jolson-like, "You're not hearing anything!"
Unfortunately, nothing good was heard from Felix's transition to sound. Sullivan did not carefully prepare the transition to Felix, adding sound effects cartoon animation sound like a post-processing. The results were disastrous. More than ever, it seemed Disney's mouse that is observed until the moment of silent film star Sullivan. Even the entries as the off-beat "Felix Woo Whoopee" or "Silly Symphony-esque April Maze (two 1930) could regain the franchise's audience. Kopfstein Sullivan eventually canceled the contract. Subsequently announced its intention launch a new studio in California, but these ideas never materialized. Things went from bad to worse when Sullivan's wife, Marjorie, died in March 1932. After of this, Sullivan completely fell apart. He sank into an alcoholic depression, his health declined rapidly, and his memory begins to fade. I could not cash a paycheck, but Messmer, and that his firm has been reduced to mere scribbles. He died in 1933. Messmer noted,
He has left a mess, no books, no nothing. So when he died, the place has been closed at the height of popularity, when the whole world, RKO and each of them, for over the years has tried to seize Felix. . . . I had no permission [Continue with the character], because he had legal ownership of them.
In 1935, J. Amadee Van Beuren Studios called Messmer Van Beuren and asked if he could return Felix to the screen. Van Beuren even stated that Messmer would be equipped with a full staff and all necessary utilities. However, Messmer declined his offer and instead recommended Burt Gillett, a former employee who Sullivan was now heading for the Van Beuren staff. In 1936, Van Beuren obtained approval Sullivan's brother Felix to leave for study, with the intention of producing new shorts in color and sound. With Gillett at the top now strongly influenced by Disney, Felix deleted character set and made him a fun character of the animals of the type popular in the days. The new shorts were not successful, then only three exits Van Beuren discontinued the series.
Renaissance
In 1953, Official Films bought the Sullivan-Messmer shorts, added Soundtrack to them, and distributes film and television markets. Messmer Felix Sunday comics pursued until its abolition in 1943, when he began eleven years of writing and drawing comic books monthly Félix Dell Comics. In 1954, Messmer retired from the Felix daily newspaper strips, and assistant Joe Oriolo (the creator of Casper the Friendly Ghost) has resumed. Oriolo an agreement with Felix's new owner, Pat Sullivan's nephew, to begin a new cartoon series on TV Felix. Oriolo then Felix stars animated television 260 Trans-Lux distributed beginning in 1958. Like the Van Beuren studio before, Oriolo gave Felix a personality more domesticated and pedestrian oriented more toward children, and introduces elements now known as Felix Magic bag of tricks, a notebook which could take the shape and characteristics of anything Felix wanted. The program is also remembered for his characteristic theme, written by Winston Sharples and executed in 1950, Big Band singer Ann Bennett
Felix the cat
The cat wonderful, wonderful!
Each time a patch
Reaches its bag of tricks!
Felix the Cat
The cat wonderful, wonderful
You will have fun both sides are wrong
Her heart Pitter Pat
Watch Felix the wonderful cat!
Felix the Cat
The cat wonderful, wonderful
You never know what to do next
So do not try to make a proposal
Felix the Cat
The cat wonderful, wonderful
It's so fun for all the world
No one can ask
Because Felix the wonderful cat!
Felix The show has eliminated previous roles and has introduced many new characters, all of which were made by the voice of actor Jack Mercer:
Professor, a sinister villain, mustachioed Felix was the head of the leaf
Poindexter, professor smart bookish nephew still (with an IQ of 222) that sometimes working with his uncle Felix cons, but often presents as a friend of Felix and work against his uncle
Rock Bottom, Professor bulldog-faced, clumsy-mate
Master cylinder, an evil, cylindrical robot and the self-proclaimed "King of the Moon"
Vavoom, a small, cozy little Inuit, whose only vocalization is a (literally) shattering has its own name (but was powerless when you registered your mouth closed).
Oriolo plots revolve around the unsuccessful attempts The Felix steal antagonists Magic Bag, though in an unusual twist, these antagonists are sometimes presented as Felix's friends as well. Cartoons have been very popular, but critics have dismissed as pale in comparison to previous work Sullivan-Messmer, especially Oriolo that cartoons aimed at children. Animation Limited (required story lines due to budget constraints) and simplistic did nothing to decrease popular series.
Today Oriolo son, Don, continues to market the cat. In 1988, Felix played in his first feature, Felix Cat: The Movie, in which he, the Professor and Poindexter visit an alternate reality. The film was a failure at the box office. In addition, it has not been released the same until 1991. In 1995, Felix appeared on television again, in a staggered series called the dark stories of Felix the Cat. Baby Felix followed in 2000 for the Japanese market, the direct-to-video Felix the Cat saves Christmas. Felix has also co-starred along with Betty Boop in Betty Boop and Felix comics (1984-1987). Oriolo has also led to a new wave of merchandising Felix, all of Wendy's kids toys Food in a video game for the Nintendo Entertainment System.
Felix in her first screen appearance "Feline Follies" (1919)
Since the publication John Canemaker Felix: The Twisted Tale of the world's most famous cat in 1991, has been a renewed interest in shorts-Sullivan Home Messmer. In recent years, the movies have seen a lot of VHS and DVD exposure, including the presentation of Felix the Cat video compilations Bosko, Felix! Felix Lumivision The Cat: Collector's Edition Delta Entertainment, before Mickey Inkwell Images Ink, the recent Felix the Cat and Rarities 1920 Thunderbird animation. Messmer compilations Felix books have also begun to emerge, including nine lives to live: Classic Felix Celebration by David Gerstein and, more recently, the adventures Felix the Cat comic Determined Productions.
According to Don Oriolo Felix the Cat blog in September 2008 it is planned to develop a new television series. Page biography of Don also mentions a cartoon series of 52 episodes in the works.
Filmography
Main article: List of drawings Felix the Cat
Voice
Mae Questel (1936)
Jack Mercer (1958-1961)
Chris Phillips (1988)
Carlos Alazraqui (current)
Thom Adcox-Hernandez & Charlie Adler (1995-1997)
Grey DeLisle (2000-2001)
Wayne Allwine (2004)
cultural heritage
Felix made an appearance in the film Disney and Amblin Entertainment Who Framed Roger Rabbit in the final film with the Toons. First, the image appears as RK Maroon in the hands with RK Maroon in Office, and later, it seems that the masks of tragedy and comedy in the cornerstone of the entry Toontown.
Felix the Cat was presented at the Town goalkeeper Felix Potvin when he played for the Boston Bruins
It is thought that Shima Naoto tried Felix the Cat as a source of inspiration for the design of Sonic the Hedgehog.
In Japan, two points for the 1991 Daihatsu Mira Highlights Felix. There was a special cutting package called "Felix Mira available at the time.
The cartoon My Life as a teenager Robot has a dinner called "de Mezmer" (named after Otto Messmer), and the door of the restaurant is a giant Felix cat's head.
In an episode of the Simpsons, Dean Scungio Course "The Encyclopedia of Cartoons" in the history of Felix: "A doll Felix became the wife of Charles Lindbergh in his famous flight across the Atlantic. "In another episode of The Simpsons, in which the origin of cartoon characters Itchy & Scratchy are explored, certain parallels the creation story challenged Felix said, and includes a parody film called Manhattan Madness, presented as the first cartoon Itchy & Scratchy 1919 which is supposedly similar to style "Felix in Hollywood" and other animations from Felix.
Felix the cat appears in the Macy's Thanksgiving 1927 Day Parade, which he, the first balloon to float in the parade.
Felix appeared in episodes of Futurama Generic How Hermes requisitioned his back groove, the lesser of two evils East and the H-Word War
See also
Animation in the United States during the silence
Kit-Cat Klock
Winsor McCay
Dan Voiculescu
The golden age of American animation
Baby Felix
Notes
^ Goldenagecartoons.com
^ Solomon, 34 years, said the character was "Felix is no name.
^ Http: / / www.ottomessmer.com/
Solomon ^ abcde 34.
^] [Broken Link
^ AB "all means and legends … An overview covered with tar. Vixenmagazine.com. Retrieved on 09/28/2008. Http: / / www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www. vixenmagazine.com / news.html & date = 2008 -09 To 28. Retrieved on 14/09/2008.
^ Barrier Solomon 29 and 34.
^ Barrier 30.
Solomon ^ abc 37.
^ For example, Solomon, 34 years, Marcel Brion points on these courses.
Solomon ^ 36.
↑ Quoted in Solomon 34.
^ "The Queers – Interviews. Thequeersrock.com. Retrieved on 09/28/2008. http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.thequeersrock.com/interviewsbface.html&date=2008-09-28. Retrieved on 14/09/2008.
^ Http: / / Findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_g1epc/is_tov/ai_2419100434
↑ Quoted in Solomon 37.
^ Http: / / www.donsfelixblog.com/
^ Http: / / Www.donsfelixblog.com / bio.html
References
Barrera, Michael (1999) Hollywood Cartoons. Oxford University Press.
Beck, Jerry (1998): The 50 Greatest Cartoons. JG Press.
Canemaker, John (1991): Felix: The Twisted Tale of the world's most famous cat. Pantheon, New York.
Crafton, Donald (1993): Before Mickey: the animated film, 18,981,928. University of Chicago Press.
Culhane, Shamus (1986): talking animals and other people. St. Martin Press.
Gerstein, David (1996): Nine lives to live. Fantagraphics Books.
Gifford, Denis (1990): the cartoons: the silent era, 18,971,929. McFarland & Company.
Maltin, Leonard (1987): Of Mice and Magic: A History of American cartoons. Penguin Books.
Charles Solomon (1994): History of Animation: Enchanted Drawings. Released Books Company.
Further reading
Patricia Vettel Tom (1996): Trickster Felix modern cats. Art America, vol. 10, No. 1 (Spring 1996), pp. 6487
References
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations from Felix the Cat
Wikimedia Commons Retrieved on Felix the Cat
The Felix the Cat Official Website
Felix the Cat Page Cartoons Golden Age classics
Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2004, Rewind "Felix the Cat" (As for the dispute about who created this character.)
State Library of New South Wales, 2005, "The recovery of Felix the Cat "PDF (768 KB). Guide to the exhibition, including many photos.
vd, e
Felix the Cat
Key People
Pat Sullivan, Otto Messmer Joe Don Oriolo Oriolo
Film and TV
Cartoons Theater (1919-1936) Felix the Cat (TV series) (1958-1961) Félix the Cat: The Movie (1991) the twisted tales of Felix the Cat (1995-1997) Baby Felix (2000-2001) Felix the Cat saves Christmas (2004)
Software
Felix the Cat (1992 video game) cartoon Felix the Cat toolbox
v, d, e
BD King Features Syndicate
Current
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Historical
Abie the Agent Betty Boop and Felix Betty Boop Boner's Ark Bringing Buz Sawyer Up Father Franklin Etta Kett Fiber flapper happy grandmother Philosophy Hejji Hooligan Jungle Jim King in the Royal Canadian Mounted Krazy Kat Little Annie Rooney little iodine little Jimmy The Little Bergen Mister Pete King Norb The standard Tramp Radio Patrol Red Barry Redeye Strip cutters Rusty Riley Rip Kirby Sam's Reg'lar Secret Agent X-9 Steve Roper and Mike Nomad They are lucky Every Time Tim Tyler Triple Take Trudy Tillie the Toots and Casper Tumbleweeds toilet
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