| Felix
the Cat is a cartoon character. Created in 1919,
the black body, white eyes and giant grin of
the animated cat, coupled with the surrealism
of the situations in which his cartoons placed
him, combined to make him one of the most recognizable
cartoon characters in the world. Felix was the
first cartoon character to attain a level of
popularity sufficient to draw movie audiences
based solely on his star power. The "wonderful,
wonderful cat" was also the "very
first television star" — the first
image ever broadcast by any television transmitter. |
Felix
the Cat in a 1936 Technicolor video capture from
one of the three Van Beuren Studios outings. |
Felix in
cinema
According to an Australian ABC-TV documentary screened
in 2004, Felix the Cat had his origins in a character
named Thomas Kat, who appeared in a half-reel picture
called "The Tail of Thomas Kat" in 1917.[1]
(http://www.abc.net.au/tv/rewind/txt/s1229985.htm) The
movie was produced in New York City, by the animation
studio of an Australian émigré named Pat
Sullivan.
Master Tom, a character resembling
Felix, appeared in the Paramount Pictures short Feline
Follies in 1919. Feline Follies was a success, and
Paramount ordered more shorts starring Tom. Paramount
producer John King renamed the cat "Felix",
after the Latin words felis (cat) and felix (luck)
and animator Bill Nolan helped Otto Messmer redesign
the fledgling character in 1922, making him both rounder
and cuter. Felix's new looks coupled with Messmer's
mastery of character animation, learned largely from
his work on Charles Chaplin pictures, would soon rocket
Felix to international fame.
Creation
disputed
It remains a matter of dispute whether Felix was created
by cartoon producer Pat Sullivan or his employee, a
cartoonist and animator named Otto Messmer.
Sullivan claimed in numerous newspaper
interviews that it was he who created Felix and did
the key drawings for the character.
However, many years after Sullivan's
death, Messmer and other Sullivan employees stated
that Felix was based on an animated Charlie Chaplin
that Messmer created while working at Sullivan's studio.
Messmer subsequently took on freelance animation work
for Paramount Pictures following World War I, and
on November 9, 1919, the short Feline Follies debuted.
The cartoon does star a black, grinning cat who moves
and dances like Chaplin. This nascent creature was
blockier and longer-snouted than today's Felix, but
the familiar black body was already established because
Messmer found solid shapes easier to animate.
Pat Sullivan marketed the cat relentlessly,
making up all sorts of tall tales about the character's
origins and even taking credit for being the character's
sole creator.
Meanwhile, the uncredited Messmer
continued to produce Felix cartoons on a nearly mass-produced
scale. He even began a comic strip in 1923 distributed
by King Features Syndicate, which added significantly
to his workload.
The
first Felix the Cat comic strip, which debuted
in Britain's Daily Sketch on August 1, 1923
and in the US on August 26 through 31 that same
year. Though this was Messmer's work, note Sullivan's
signature. The strip includes a notable amount
of 1920s slang that seems unusual today, such
as "buzz this guy for a job" and "if
you want a swell feed just foller me". |
Unprecedented
fame
At the height of his fame in 1925, Felix's image could
be seen on clocks, Christmas ornaments, and as the
first giant balloon ever made for Macy's Thanksgiving
Day Parade.
Felix was even the first image ever
broadcast by television, when RCA chose a papier-mâché
Felix doll for a 1928 experiment via W2XBS New York
in Van Cortlandt Park. The image was chosen for its
tonal contrast and its ability to withstand the intense
lights needed. The doll was placed on a rotating phonograph
turntable and photographed for approximately two hours
each day. After a one-time payoff to Sullivan, the
doll remained on the turntable for nearly a decade
as RCA fine-tuned the picture's definition.
Felix's great success also spawned
a host of imitators. Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, Bosko,
and even Mickey Mouse were all designed to look much
like Felix.
The cartoons were a hit with the critics
as well. They have been cited as wonderfully imaginative
examples of surrealism in filmmaking. Felix has been
said to represent a child's sense of wonder, creating
the fantastic when it is not there, and taking it
in stride when it is. His famous walk—hands
behind his back, head down, deep in thought—became
a trademark that was analyzed and re-analyzed by critics
around the world. Felix's expressive tail, which could
be a shovel one moment, or an exclamation mark or
pencil the next, serves to emphasize that anything
can happen in his world.
Felix as a mascot
Given the character's unprecedented popularity and
the fact that his name was derived from the Latin
word for "luck", some rather notable individuals
and organizations adopted Felix as a mascot. The first
of these was a Los Angeles Chevrolet dealer and friend
of Pat Sullivan named Winslow B. Felix who first opened
his showroom in 1921. The three-sided neon sign of
Felix Chevrolet (http://www.laokay.com/lathumb/laphoto/Felix27.jpg)
with its giant, smiling images of the character is
today one of LA's best-known landmarks, standing watch
over both Figueroa Street and the Harbor Freeway.
Others who adopted Felix included the 1922 New York
Yankees and aviator Charles Lindbergh, who took a
Felix doll with him on his historic flight across
the Atlantic Ocean.
The
US Navy insignia for VF-31 squadron, the fighting
"Tomcatters" from 1948. The squadron
motto is "We get ours at night" |
This popularity persisted. In the
late 1920s, the U.S. Navy's Bombing Squadron Two (VB-2B)
adopted a unit insignia consisting of Felix happily
carrying a bomb with a burning fuse. They retained
the insignia through the 1930s when they became a
fighter squadron under the designations VF-6B and,
later, VF-3. Early in World War II, a U.S. Navy fighter
squadron currently designated VF-31 replaced its winged
meat cleaver logo with the same insignia, after the
original Felix squadron had been disbanded. The carrier-based
night fighter squadron, nicknamed the "Tomcatters,"
remained active under various designations through
the present day and Felix still appears on both the
squadron's cloth jacket patches and aircraft, still
carrying his bomb with its fuse that still hasn't
burned down. The squadron, having adopted the insignia,
heritage, and traditions of the original Felix squadron,
now claims to be the second oldest fighter squadron
in the Navy.
From 'silent film' to sound
In 1928, Walt Disney's Steamboat Willie made cinematic
history as the first talking cartoon with a synchronized
soundtrack. In response, Felix's distributors urged
Pat Sullivan to make the leap to "talkie"
cartoons but Sullivan refused. Other characters, particularly
Disney's, drew audiences away from Sullivan's silent
star. Not even the addition of new characters by 1930,
namely Felix's nephews Inky and Winky, girlfriend
Kitty, and friendly foil Skiddoo the Mouse, could
regain the franchise's audience, and Sullivan's distributors
eventually cancelled their contract. Sullivan made
preparations to start a new studio in California that
would produce sound cartoons but he died in 1933,
leaving his studio in shambles.
Sullivan's brother licensed Felix
to the Van Beuren Studios in 1936 with the intention
of producing Felix shorts both in color and with sound.
The studio did away with Felix's established personality
and made him just another funny animal character of
the type popular in the day. The new shorts were unsuccessful,
and after only three outings Van Beuren's distributor
dropped him.
Felix on television
In
1953, Felix's earlier shorts entered syndication on
television, now with musical soundtracks. Messmer
retired from drawing the Felix comic strip in 1954
and his assistant Joe Oriolo (creator of Casper the
Friendly Ghost) took over. Oriolo struck a deal with
Felix's new owner, Pat Sullivan's nephew, to begin
a new series of Felix cartoons on television. Oriolo
went on to star Felix in 260 television cartoons distributed
by Trans-Lux starting in 1958. Like the Van Buren
studio before, Oriolo gave Felix a more domesticated
and pedestrian personality geared more toward children
and introduced now-familiar elements such as Felix's
Magic Bag of Tricks, a satchel that could assume the
shape and characteristics of anything Felix wanted.
The program is also remembered for its distinctive
theme song (http://felixthecat.com/multimedia/mp3s/Felix%20the%20Cat%20theme(old).mp3)
written by Winston Sharples:
Felix the Cat,
The wonderful, wonderful cat!
Whenever he gets in a fix
He reaches into his bag of tricks!
The
show did away with Felix's previous supporting cast
and introduced many new characters. These include
the sinister, mustachioed Professor; his intelligent
but bookish nephew Poindexter (with an IQ of 222);
the Professor's bulldog-faced, bumbling sidekick Rock
Bottom; an evil, cylindrical robot and "King
of the Moon" named The Master Cylinder; and a
small, unassuming and friendly Eskimo named Vavoom,
whose only vocalization was a literally earth-shattering
shout of his own name. These characters were performed
by voice actor Jack Mercer.
Oriolo's plots revolved around the
unsuccessful attempts of the antagonists to steal
Felix's Magic Bag, though in an unusual twist, these
antagonists were occasionally depicted as Felix's
friends as well. The cartoons (and those of Oriolo's
son, Don) proved popular but critics have dismissed
them as paling in comparison to the earlier works
by Messmer, especially since Oriolo aimed the cartoons
at children. Limited animation (required due to budgetary
restraints) and simplistic storylines did nothing
to diminish the series' popularity. Don Oriolo continues
to market Felix today in projects such as Felix the
Cat: The Movie (1991), and the television series Twisted
Tales of Felix the Cat (1995–1997) and Baby
Felix (2000).
References
John Canemaker, Felix, The Twisted Tale of the World's
Most Famous Cat, 1991, Pantheon, New York, ISBN 0-679-40127-X.
John Cawley, Jim Korkis, The Encyclopedia of Cartoon
Superstars, 1990, Pioneer Books.
Jeff Lenburg, The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons
(2nd ed.), 1999, Facts on File.
Charles Solomon, The History of Animation: Enchanted
Drawings, 1994, Outlet Books Company.
source from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki
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