Tom and Jerry filmography: Difference between revisions
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This is a complete listing of the 162 theatrical shorts from the ''[[Tom and Jerry]]'' series produced and released between 1940 and 2005. |
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{{Use American English|date=October 2021}} |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2021}} |
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Tom and Jerry'' filmography}} |
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This is a complete list of the 166 [[Short film|shorts]] in the [[Tom and Jerry|''Tom and Jerry'' series]] produced and released between 1940 and 2021. Of these, 162 are theatrical shorts, one is a made-for-TV short, one is a two-minute sketch shown as part of a telethon, and two are [[Tom and Jerry Special Shorts|special shorts]] released on [[HBO Max]]. |
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{{toc limit|2}} |
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== 1940–1958: Hanna–Barbera/MGM cartoons == |
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== Key == |
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<!---See the talk page for explanation about aspect ratios, thank you!---> |
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★=The spin-off of ''Tom and Jerry and Kipper'', i.e. ''[[Spike and Tyke]]'' |
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The following 114 cartoons were directed by [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]] at the [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio]] in [[Hollywood, California]]. All cartoons were released to theaters by [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]]. [[Rudolf Ising]] was the producer of ''Puss Gets the Boot''; subsequent cartoons were produced by [[Fred Quimby]] through 1955. Quimby retired in 1955 and from 1955 to 1957, Hanna and Barbera produced the shorts until MGM closed the cartoon studio in 1957, and the last cartoon was released in 1958.<ref>Leonard Maltin's book of Mice and Magic: History of American Animated Cartoons</ref> Most of these cartoons were produced in the standard [[Academy ratio]] (1.37:1). Four cartoons were produced for both Academy Ratio and [[CinemaScope]] formats (2.55:1, later 2.35:1). Finally, 19 cartoons were produced in widescreen CinemaScope format only (though reissues have the standard Academy ratio 1.37:1 instead). |
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<br> |
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{{BR}}= Was reissued |
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<br> |
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^= love interest for Tom |
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<br> |
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^^=love interest for Jerry and Kipper |
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<br> |
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♫= About Music |
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<!---See the Talk page for explanation---> |
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==1940 – 1958: Hanna and Barbera/[[MGM]] cartoons== |
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Like the other studios, MGM reissued and edited its cartoons when rereleased to theaters. Many pre-1952 cartoons were reissued with [[Perspecta|Perspecta Sound]], which was introduced in 1954. MGM also reissued its cartoons before the introduction of Perspecta Sound. Because of the [[1965 MGM vault fire]], all original film of pre-September-1951 MGM cartoons are lost, leaving only the backup prints (usually the altered reissue prints), although some production artwork relating to the missing material has survived, like pencil sketches.<ref name="cartoonresearch.com">{{Cite web | url=http://www.cartoonresearch.com/mgm.html | title=MGM Titles | access-date=September 3, 2011 | archive-date=June 1, 2010 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100601052841/http://www.cartoonresearch.com/mgm.html | url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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''The following 114 shorts were directed by [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]] at the [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio]] in [[Hollywood, California]]. All shorts were released to theaters by [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]].'' |
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=== 1940 === |
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''Puss Gets the Boot was produced by [[Rudolf Ising]]; subsequent shorts through 1955 were produced by [[Fred Quimby]]. Hanna and Barbera produced the releases from 1956 to 1958.'' |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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===1940=== |
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{| class="wikitable" border="1" |
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|- |
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!style="width:2em"| No. |
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! Episode number |
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!Summary |
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! Notes |
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| |
| 1 |
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| ''[[Puss Gets the Boot]]'' |
| ''[[Puss Gets the Boot]]'' |
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| February 10 |
| February 10, 1940 |
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| Tom and Jerry's first cartoon. Tom (here named Jasper) tries to stop the mouse Jerry (here unnamed) from breaking plates and glasses before [[Mammy Two Shoes|the maid]] can kick Jasper out. |
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| [[Tom Cat|Tom]] is known as "Jasper" in this short. [[Jerry Mouse|Jerry]] is unnamed in this short, but is officially known as Jinx.</br>First appearances of Tom, Jerry and [[Mammy Two Shoes]].</br>Nominated for [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]]. First "Hanna Barbera" Tom and Jerry cartoon |
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| First appearances of Tom (as Jasper), Jerry (as the unnamed mouse), and Mammy Two Shoes (as the maid). First ''Tom and Jerry'' cartoon nominated for an [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]]. |
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|- |
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[[Image:TomandJerryTitleCarda.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Rare ''Tom and Jerry'' title card, used in shorts directed by [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]] in 1941 and 1942. Only [[The Night Before Christmas (1941 film)|The Night Before Christmas]] keeps a similar version of this title card on television airings and home medias.]] |
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===1941=== |
=== 1941 === |
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{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
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!style="width:2em"| No. |
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! Episode number |
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! Title |
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!style="width:7em"| Date |
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!Summary |
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! Notes |
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| 2 |
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| ''[[The Midnight Snack]]'' |
| ''[[The Midnight Snack]]'' |
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| July 19 |
| July 19, 1941 |
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| Jerry attempts to outsmart Tom so he can get a snack from the refrigerator. |
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| First Tom and Jerry cartoon in which the characters are so named. {{BR}} |
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| First time Tom and Jerry are referred to by those names. Mammy Two Shoes is also given her name. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
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|- |
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| 3 |
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| ''[[The Night Before Christmas (1941 film)|The Night Before Christmas]]'' |
| ''[[The Night Before Christmas (1941 film)|The Night Before Christmas]]'' |
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| December 6 |
| December 6, 1941 |
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| Tom gets to know the spirit of giving when he begins to feel guilty after blockading the front door, trapping Jerry outside in the cold on [[Christmas Eve]]. |
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| Nominated for [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]]. It was the only Christmas related Tom and Jerry short ever made. |
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| Nominated for an [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subjects, Cartoons]]. |
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|- |
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===1942=== |
=== 1942 === |
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{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
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!style="width:2em"| No. |
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! Episode number |
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! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
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! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
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!Summary |
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! Notes |
! Notes |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 4 |
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| '' |
| ''Fraidy Cat'' |
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| January 17 |
| January 17, 1942 |
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| Jerry plays tricks to scare the fur off of Tom. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| U.S. television print cuts out Mammy Two Shoes due to racially insensitive subject matter. |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 5 |
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| '' |
| ''Dog Trouble'' |
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| April 18 |
| April 18, 1942 |
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| Tom and Jerry team up to stop the Bulldog from mauling both of them. |
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| First appearance of [[Spike (Tom and Jerry)|Spike]]. {{BR}} |
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| First appearance of [[Spike and Tyke (characters)|Spike]] as an Unnamed Bulldog. |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 6 |
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| '' |
| ''Puss n' Toots'' |
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| May 30 |
| May 30, 1942 |
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| Tom tries to woo a female cat. |
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|^ First appearance of the love interest for Tom {{BR}} |
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| First appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Toots|Toots]]. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 7 |
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| '' |
| ''The Bowling Alley-Cat'' |
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| July 18 |
| July 18, 1942 |
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| Tom and Jerry chase each other around a bowling alley. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| First cartoon featuring a sport as its theme. |
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|- |
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| 8 |
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| ''Fine Feathered Friend'' |
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| October 10, 1942 |
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| Jerry flees from Tom by hiding with a chicken family. |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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| 008 |
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| ''[[Fine Feathered Friend]]'' |
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| October 10 |
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| {{BR}} |
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|} |
|} |
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[[Image:TomandJerryTitleCardb.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Rare ''Tom and Jerry'' title card, used in shorts directed by [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]] from 1943 to 1946. It was replaced in reissue films.]] |
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===1943=== |
=== 1943 === |
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{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
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!style="width:2em"| No. |
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! Episode number |
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! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
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! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
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!Summary |
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! Notes |
! Notes |
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|- |
|- |
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| 9 |
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| '' |
| ''Sufferin' Cats!'' |
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| January 16 |
| January 16, 1943 |
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| Tom competes with an alley cat (Meathead) to see who can catch Jerry first. |
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| First appearance of [[Meathead (MGM)|Meathead]] {{BR}} |
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| First appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Meathead|Meathead]]. |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 10 |
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| ''[[The Lonesome Mouse]]'' |
| ''[[The Lonesome Mouse]]'' |
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| May 22 |
| May 22, 1943 |
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| When Mammy Two Shoes kicks Tom out of the house after Jerry frames him, the mouse enjoys his freedom without Tom until he gets lonesome. They work together to prove Tom's worth as a mouse-catcher to Mammy. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| An unusual short where Tom and Jerry speak. |
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|- |
|- |
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| 11 |
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| ''[[The Yankee Doodle Mouse]]'' |
| ''[[The Yankee Doodle Mouse]]'' |
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| June 26 |
| June 26, 1943 |
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| Jerry wages war with Tom from his "cat raid shelter" in the basement. |
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| Won an [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]] {{BR}}<ref name="IndVallanceB">{{cite news|title=Joseph Barbera: Animation pioneer whose creations with William Hanna included the Flintstones and Tom and Jerry|last=Vallance|first=Tom|date=2006-12-20|work=The Independent (London)}}</ref>{{rp|32}} |
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| First cartoon to win an [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]]. |
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|- |
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|12 |
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| ''Baby Puss'' |
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| December 25, 1943 |
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| Nancy dresses up Tom like a baby, prompting Jerry and Tom's feline friends to make fun of him. |
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| First appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Butch|Butch]] and [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Topsy|Topsy]]. |
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|- |
|- |
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| 012 |
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| ''[[Baby Puss (1943 film)|Baby Puss]]'' |
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| December 25 |
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| First appearances of [[Butch (Tom and Jerry)|Butch]] and [[Topsy (Tom and Jerry)|Topsy]] {{BR}} |
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===1944=== |
=== 1944 === |
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{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
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!style="width:2em"| No. |
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! Episode number |
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! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
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! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
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!Summary |
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! Notes |
! Notes |
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|- |
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|13 |
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| 013 |
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| ''[[The Zoot Cat]]'' |
| ''[[The Zoot Cat]]'' |
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| February 26 |
| February 26, 1944 |
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| Tom and Jerry try to impress Toots by wearing a [[zoot suit]]. |
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|^ {{BR}} |
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| Unusual for a Tom and Jerry cartoon, characters speak lengthy lines. |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 14 |
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| '' |
| ''The Million Dollar Cat'' |
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| May 6 |
| May 6, 1944 |
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| Tom inherits a million dollars on one condition: He must avoid causing harm to any animal, which Jerry uses to his advantage. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| [[Scott Bradley (composer)|Scott Bradley]] received the only music credit for this short, but examination of the archived orchestral score bears the inscription, "Adapted by Ted Duncan". As Barrier has remarked in ''Hollywood Cartoons'', this score is very unlike Bradley's other work of the period, since it "sounds like ordinary dance-band music, related only tenuously to the cartoon action". It seems plausible that Duncan adapted the score from pre-existing songs because Bradley was unavailable, and the latter received credit for contractual reasons.<ref name=Alexander2015>[https://theses.gla.ac.uk/6809/1/2015AlexanderPhd.pdf ''Happy Harmonies and Disturbing Discords: Scott Bradley's Music for MGM's Cartoons''], Helen Alexander, p. 145</ref> |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 15 |
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| '' |
| ''The Bodyguard'' |
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| July 22 |
| July 22, 1944 |
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| Jerry frees Spike the bulldog from the dog-catcher's truck. Spike promises to protect Jerry from Tom by responding to the sound of a whistle. |
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| [[Spike (Tom and Jerry)|Spike]] speaks for the first time. |
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| First regular appearance of [[Spike and Tyke (characters)|Spike]] |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 16 |
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| '' |
| ''Puttin' On the Dog'' |
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| October 28 |
| October 28, 1944 |
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| When Jerry hides in the dog pound, Tom disguises himself as a dog. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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| 17 |
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| ''[[Mouse Trouble]]'' |
| ''[[Mouse Trouble]]'' |
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| |
| November 23, 1944 |
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| Tom reads a book consisting of tips for catching mice. |
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| Won an [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]] {{BR}} |
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| Won an [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]]. |
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===1945=== |
=== 1945 === |
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{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
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!style="width:2em"| No. |
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! Episode number |
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! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
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! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
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!Summary |
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! Notes |
! Notes |
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| 18 |
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| '' |
| ''The Mouse Comes to Dinner'' |
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| May 5 |
| May 5, 1945 |
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| Tom invites Toots to a dinner party. |
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|^ {{BR}} |
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| U.S. television print cuts out Mammy Two-Shoes due to additional racist stereotyping. |
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|- |
|- |
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| 19 |
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| '' |
| ''Mouse in Manhattan'' |
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| July 7 |
| July 7, 1945 |
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| Jerry takes a trip to [[Manhattan]]. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| Tom has a cameo role in this cartoon. |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 20 |
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| ''[[Tee for Two]]'' |
| ''[[Tee for Two]]'' |
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| July 21 |
| July 21, 1945 |
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| Tom attempts to play golf, but Jerry ruins his fun. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| |
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|- |
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| 21 |
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| ''Flirty Birdy'' |
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| September 22, 1945 |
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| Tom disguises himself as a female bird to trick an [[eagle]] who also wants to eat Jerry, which works ''too'' well. |
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| |
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|- |
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| 22 |
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| '' |
| ''Quiet Please!'' |
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| |
| December 22, 1945 |
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| Spike threatens Tom to keep quiet during his nap, but Jerry is constantly making noise. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| Won an [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]].<ref name="IndVallanceB">{{cite news|title=Joseph Barbera: Animation pioneer whose creations with William Hanna included the Flintstones and Tom and Jerry|last=Vallance|first=Tom|date=December 20, 2006|work=The Independent (London)}}</ref> |
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|- |
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| 022 |
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| ''[[Quiet Please!]]'' |
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| December 22 |
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| Won an [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]] {{BR}} <ref name="IndVallanceB"/>{{rp|32}} |
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===1946=== |
=== 1946 === |
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{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
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!style="width:2em"| No. |
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! Episode number |
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! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
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! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
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!Summary |
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! Notes |
! Notes |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 23 |
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| '' |
| ''Springtime for Thomas'' |
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| March 30 |
| March 30, 1946 |
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| Tom falls in love with a new female cat, Toodles. Jerry tries to break them up by sending Tom's friend/enemy Butch to her. |
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|^ First appearance of [[Toodles Galore]] {{BR}} |
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| First appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Toodles Galore|Toodles Galore]]. |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 24 |
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| |
| ''The Milky Waif'' |
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| May 18 |
| May 18, 1946 |
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| Nibbles visits one night and wants some milk, so Jerry tries to steal some from Tom. |
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| First appearance of [[Tuffy]] {{BR}} |
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| First appearance of [[Nibbles (Tom and Jerry)|Nibbles]]. |
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|- |
|- |
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| 25 |
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| '' |
| ''Trap Happy'' |
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| June 29 |
| June 29, 1946 |
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| Tom calls a mouse exterminator (Butch) to get rid of Jerry. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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| 26 |
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| ''[[Solid Serenade]]'' |
| ''[[Solid Serenade]]'' |
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| August 31 |
| August 31, 1946 |
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| Tom sneaks up to Toodles' house to sing love songs to her at night. |
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|^ {{BR}} |
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| |
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|- |
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[[Image:TomandJerryTitleCardc.jpg|thumb|right|250px|''Tom and Jerry'' title card, used in shorts directed by [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]] from 1947 to 1952 and reissues of shorts released in 1943 and 1944.]] |
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===1947=== |
=== 1947 === |
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{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
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!style="width:2em"| No. |
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! Episode number |
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! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
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! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
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!Summary |
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! Notes |
! Notes |
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| 27 |
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| '' |
| ''Cat Fishin''' |
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| February 22 |
| February 22, 1947 |
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| Tom goes fishing using Jerry as bait and deals with watchdog Spike. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 28 |
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| '' |
| ''Part Time Pal'' |
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| March 15 |
| March 15, 1947 |
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| Mammy warns Tom to keep Jerry out of the refrigerator or she'll throw him out, but Tom accidentally becomes repeatedly drunk and befriends Jerry. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 29 |
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| ''[[The Cat Concerto]]'' |
| ''[[The Cat Concerto]]'' |
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| April 26 |
| April 26, 1947 |
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| Pianist Tom performs ''[[Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2]]'' by [[Franz Liszt]] until Jerry breaks up his act. |
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| Won an [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]] {{BR}} <ref name="IndVallanceB"/>{{rp|32}} |
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| Won an [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]].<ref name="IndVallanceB"/> In 1994, it was voted No. 42 of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time by members of the animation field, the only Tom & Jerry cartoon to make the list.<ref>Beck, Jerry (ed.) (1994). ''The 50 Greatest Cartoons: As Selected by 1,000 Animation Professionals''. Atlanta: Turner Publishing. {{ISBN|1-878685-49-X}}.</ref> |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 30 |
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| '' |
| ''Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Mouse'' |
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| June 14 |
| June 14, 1947 |
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| Tom tries to prevent Jerry from drinking his milk by poisoning it, but his plan completely backfires when the poison transforms Jerry into a monster. |
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| Nominated for [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]]. {{BR}} |
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| Nominated for an [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]]. Original titles are rarely found on a 16mm [[Agfa-Gevaert]] print with only one tiny splice at the Tom and Jerry card. |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 31 |
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| '' |
| ''Salt Water Tabby'' |
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| July 12 |
| July 12, 1947 |
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| Tom woos Toodles on the beach. |
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|^ {{BR}} |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 32 |
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| '' |
| ''A Mouse in the House'' |
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| August 30 |
| August 30, 1947 |
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| Tom and Butch compete against each other to catch Jerry on Mammy Two Shoes' orders, but she ends up kicking out all three animals. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| Rarely seen on [[Cartoon Network]] and [[Boomerang (TV network)|Boomerang]] due to perceived [[racial abuse]] occurring in the end. |
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|- |
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| 33 |
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| ''The Invisible Mouse'' |
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| September 27, 1947 |
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| Jerry uses "invisible ink" to turn invisible and outsmart Tom. |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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| 033 |
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| ''[[The Invisible Mouse]]'' |
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| September 27 |
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| {{BR}} |
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|} |
|} |
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===1948=== |
=== 1948 === |
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{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
|- |
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!style="width:2em"| No. |
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! Episode number |
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! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
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! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
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!Summary |
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! Notes |
! Notes |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 34 |
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| '' |
| ''Kitty Foiled'' |
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| June 1 |
| June 1, 1948 |
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| [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Cuckoo|Cuckoo]] saves Jerry from Tom. |
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| {{BR}} First appearance of the Canary |
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| First appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Cuckoo|Cuckoo]]. |
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|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 35 |
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| '' |
| ''The Truce Hurts'' |
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| July 17 |
| July 17, 1948 |
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| Tom, Jerry, and Spike (here called Butch) are fed up of fighting each other and call a truce, but the peace falls apart when they fight over a steak. |
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| {{BR}} |
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| |
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|- |
|- |
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| |
| 36 |
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| '' |
| ''Old Rockin' Chair Tom'' |
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| September 18 |
| September 18, 1948 |
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| |
| Tom is briefly replaced by another cat, Lightning. |
||
| First appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Lightning|Lightning]]. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 37 |
||
| '' |
| ''Professor Tom'' |
||
| October 30 |
| October 30, 1948 |
||
| Tom tries to teach his kitten student (Topsy) how to catch mice. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 38 |
||
| ''[[Mouse Cleaning]]'' |
| ''[[Mouse Cleaning]]'' |
||
| December 11 |
| December 11, 1948 |
||
| After a muddy Tom chases Jerry through the house, Mammy Two Shoes forces the cat to clean the house. While she is gone, Jerry sabotages Tom's efforts. |
|||
| {{BR}} This was one of 2 "Tom and Jerry" cartoons to be omitted from the final [[Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection]] due to politically incorrect content.</br>Availabile on the UK DVD set entitled Tom and Jerry - The Complete Classic Collection |
|||
| Blackface gag removed from television and omitted from DVD due to racial stereotyping.<ref name="tvshowsondvd.com">{{cite web|last=Lacey|first=Gord|title=Tom and Jerry - Two shorts missing - Statement from Warner Bros|url=http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Tom-Jerry-Missing-Shorts/8048|publisher=TVShowsOnDVD.com|accessdate=September 10, 2007|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070915171022/http://tvshowsondvd.com/news/Tom-Jerry-Missing-Shorts/8048|archivedate=September 15, 2007}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
===1949=== |
=== 1949 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 39 |
||
| '' |
| ''Polka-Dot Puss'' |
||
| February 26 |
| February 26, 1949 |
||
| Tom convinces Mammy Two Shoes that he is too sick to go outside. He stays in the house until Jerry paints red dots all over Tom's face to trick him into thinking he has caught the [[measles]]. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 40 |
||
| ''[[The Little Orphan]]'' |
| ''[[The Little Orphan]]'' |
||
| April |
| April 30, 1949 |
||
| In this [[Thanksgiving]] short, Jerry and Nibbles dine on Thanksgiving treats until Tom tries to stop them. |
|||
| Won an [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]] |
|||
| Won an [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]]. |
|||
|- |
|||
| 41 |
|||
| ''Hatch Up Your Troubles'' |
|||
| May 14, 1949 |
|||
| Jerry protects a baby [[woodpecker]] from Tom until it finds its mother. |
|||
| First appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Baby Woodpecker|the Baby Woodpecker]]. Nominated for an [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]]. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 42 |
||
| '' |
| ''Heavenly Puss'' |
||
| |
| July 9, 1949 |
||
| After a piano flattens Tom while he attempts to catch Jerry, Tom is refused entry to cat [[heaven]] due to his record of trying to harm Jerry. To save himself from [[Hell]], Tom must have Jerry sign a certificate of forgiveness within one hour. |
|||
| Nominated for [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]]. |
|||
| Rarely airs in [[Brazil]]<ref name=judao>{{cite web|url= http://www.judao.com.br/televisao/cartoon-network-confirma-censurou-episodios-tom-jerry/|title= Cartoon Network confirma que tirou do ar "apenas" DOIS episódios de Tom & Jerry|date= September 26, 2013|access-date= September 26, 2013|publisher= Judão|language= pt|url-status=dead|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130928063124/http://www.judao.com.br/televisao/cartoon-network-confirma-censurou-episodios-tom-jerry/|archive-date= September 28, 2013|df= mdy-all}}</ref> and the [[Middle East]] due to subplots involving [[damnation]] in [[Hell]]. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1956. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 43 |
||
| ''The Cat and the Mermouse'' |
|||
| ''[[Heavenly Puss]]'' |
|||
| September 3, 1949 |
|||
| July 9 |
|||
| Tom chases a mermaid mouse who looks like Jerry. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 44 |
||
| '' |
| ''Love That Pup'' |
||
| October 1, 1949 |
|||
| September 3 |
|||
| Jerry hides with [[Spike and Tyke (characters)|Spike]] and [[Spike and Tyke (characters)|Tyke]] so Tom will get in trouble if he tries to catch him. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| First appearance of [[Spike and Tyke (characters)|Tyke]] and [[Daws Butler]]'s first time voicing Spike. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 45 |
||
| ''[[ |
| ''[[Jerry's Diary (1949 film)|Jerry's Diary]]'' |
||
| October |
| October 22, 1949 |
||
| Tom reads through Jerry's diary. |
|||
| First appearance of [[Tyke (Tom and Jerry)|Tyke]]<br/> First use of Scott Bradley's ''Tom and Jerry'' theme music over the opening credits |
|||
| Compilation short; contains footage from ''[[Tee for Two]]'', ''[[Mouse Trouble]]'', ''[[Solid Serenade]]'', and ''[[The Yankee Doodle Mouse]]''. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 46 |
||
| '' |
| ''Tennis Chumps'' |
||
| December 10, 1949 |
|||
| October 22 |
|||
| Tom and Butch compete against each other in a game of tennis. |
|||
| Compilation film, contains footage from ''[[Tee for Two]]'', ''[[Mouse Trouble]]'', ''[[Solid Serenade]]'' and ''[[The Yankee Doodle Mouse]]''. |
|||
| Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 046 |
|||
| ''[[Tennis Chumps]]'' |
|||
| December 10 |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
===1950=== |
=== 1950 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 47 |
||
| '' |
| ''Little Quacker'' |
||
| January 7 |
| January 7, 1950 |
||
| |
| Jerry protects a little duckling named Quacker from Tom. |
||
| First appearances of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Quacker|Quacker]], Henry, and Mama Duck. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 48 |
||
| ''[[Saturday Evening Puss]]'' |
| ''[[Saturday Evening Puss]]'' |
||
| January 14 |
| January 14, 1950 |
||
| After Mammy Two Shoes goes out with her friends, Tom invites three of his feline friends: Butch, Lightning, and Topsy over for a party with loud music, which disturbs Jerry, who is trying to sleep. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Only (albeit brief) time that the face of [[Mammy Two Shoes]] is shown. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. Rereleased to television in the mid-1960s with Mammy Two Shoes replaced by a white teenage female. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 49 |
||
| '' |
| ''Texas Tom'' |
||
| March 11 |
| March 11, 1950 |
||
| Tom tries to woo a cowgirl cat. |
|||
|^ {{BR}} |
|||
| Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 50 |
||
| '' |
| ''Jerry and the Lion'' |
||
| April 8 |
| April 8, 1950 |
||
| Jerry promises to return an escaped circus lion to the African jungle. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Only appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Lion|Lion]]. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 51 |
||
| '' |
| ''Safety Second'' |
||
| July 1 |
| July 1, 1950 |
||
| Jerry and Nibbles celebrate [[Independence Day (United States)|Independence Day]]. Nibbles wants to set off firecrackers, but Jerry would rather play it safer. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 52 |
||
| '' |
| ''Tom and Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl'' |
||
| September 16 |
| September 16, 1950 |
||
| Tom conducts the overture of [[Die Fledermaus]] by [[Johann Strauss II]] at the [[Hollywood Bowl]], but Jerry also wants to conduct. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 53 |
||
| '' |
| ''The Framed Cat'' |
||
| October 21 |
| October 21, 1950 |
||
| When Tom steals a chicken drumstick and frames Jerry, Jerry gets even by stealing Spike's bone and framing Tom. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1956. |
|||
|- |
|||
| 54 |
|||
| ''Cue Ball Cat'' |
|||
| November 25, 1950 |
|||
| Tom and Jerry duel in a [[billiard hall]]. |
|||
| Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1956. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 054 |
|||
| ''[[Cue Ball Cat]]'' |
|||
| November 25 |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
===1951=== |
=== 1951 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 55 |
||
|''[[Casanova Cat]]'' |
| ''[[Casanova Cat]]'' |
||
| January 6 |
| January 6, 1951 |
||
| Tom offers Jerry as a gift to a wealthy and attractive female cat (Toodles). Jerry attracts the attention of another cat (Butch) who also becomes interested in her, resulting in a fight between Tom and the other cat for her affection. |
|||
| {{BR}} This was one of 2 "Tom and Jerry" cartoons to be omitted from the final [[Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection]] due to politically incorrect content.</br>Availabile on the UK DVD set entitled Tom and Jerry - The Complete Classic Collection |
|||
| Blackface gag removed from television and omitted from DVD due to racial stereotyping.<ref name="tvshowsondvd.com"/> Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 56 |
||
|'' |
| ''Jerry and the Goldfish'' |
||
| March 3 |
| March 3, 1951 |
||
| Jerry must save a goldfish from Tom. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 57 |
||
|'' |
| ''Jerry's Cousin'' |
||
|April 7 |
| April 7, 1951 |
||
| Jerry enlists help from his tough cousin Muscles to deal with Tom. |
|||
| Nominated for [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]] {{BR}} |
|||
| Nominated for an [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subject, Cartoon]]. First appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Muscles|Muscles Mouse]]. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 58 |
||
|'' |
| ''Sleepy-Time Tom'' |
||
|May 26 |
| May 26, 1951 |
||
| After staying out all night with his alley cat friends, Tom attempts to catch Jerry on Mammy Two Shoes' orders, but he gets sleepy in the process. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 59 |
||
|'' |
| ''His Mouse Friday'' |
||
|July 7 |
| July 7, 1951 |
||
| Tom becomes a castaway on an island and chases Jerry to a native village, but Jerry tricks the cat by disguising himself as a blackface native. |
|||
| {{BR}} Rarely shown on US television due to politically incorrect content</br>Availabile on [[Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection]] Volume 3, Disk 1 but the print on this DVD crops out the small [[pygmy]] at the end</br>Also availabile on 'Tom and Jerry on Parade' VHS Tape but the print used on this tape mutes out all of the cannibals' dialog |
|||
|Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. This short is edited in two ways on ''Tom and Jerry on Parade'' VHS and ''[[Tom and Jerry Spotlight Collection|Spotlight Collection]]'' DVD.<ref>{{cite web|last=Corey|first=Joe|title=Tom and Jerry: The Spotlight Collection, Volume 3 – DVD Review|url=https://insidepulse.com/2007/10/15/70953/|website=Inside Pulse|publisher=Digital Grout|accessdate=June 23, 2020|date=October 15, 2007}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 60 |
||
|'' |
| ''Slicked-up Pup'' |
||
|September 8 |
| September 8, 1951 |
||
| Spike threatens Tom to keep Tyke clean while he is gone. Jerry dirties Tyke to get Tom in trouble. |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 61 |
||
|'' |
| ''Nit-Witty Kitty'' |
||
|October 6 |
| October 6, 1951 |
||
| Mammy Two Shoes accidentally knocks Tom out with a blow to the head which causes him to forget who he is and think that he is a mouse, and Jerry finds Tom more obnoxious as a fellow rodent. |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 62 |
||
|'' |
| ''Cat Napping'' |
||
|December 8 |
| December 8, 1951 |
||
| Tom and Jerry fight over who is going to sleep in the hammock. |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
===1952=== |
=== 1952 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 63 |
||
|'' |
| ''The Flying Cat'' |
||
| January 12 |
| January 12, 1952 |
||
| Tom chases Jerry and Cuckoo by devising an aerial plan of attack. |
|||
|Last appearance of the Canary |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 64 |
||
|'' |
| ''The Duck Doctor'' |
||
| February 16 |
| February 16, 1952 |
||
| Tom shoots down a wild duckling while hunting. Jerry helps him get airborne again. |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 65 |
||
|''[[The Two Mouseketeers]]'' |
| ''[[The Two Mouseketeers]]'' |
||
|March 15 |
| March 15, 1952 |
||
| Jerry and Nibbles are hungry [[The Three Musketeers|Mouseketeers]], and Tom is a guard in charge of protecting the king's banquet. |
|||
| Won [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]] <ref name="IndVallanceB"/> First "Mouseketeers" series cartoon |
|||
| Rarely airs in Brazil due to the ending in which Tom gets [[guillotine|executed]].<ref name=judao/> Won an [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]].<ref name="IndVallanceB"/> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 66 |
||
|'' |
| ''Smitten Kitten'' |
||
|April 12 |
| April 12, 1952 |
||
| When Tom falls in love, Jerry's devil recalls the times when Tom fell in love and caused problems for Jerry. |
|||
| ^ Compilation film, contains footage from ''[[Salt Water Tabby]]'', ''[[The Mouse Comes to Dinner]]'', ''[[Texas Tom]]'' and ''[[Solid Serenade]]''. |
|||
| Compilation short; contains footage from ''Salt Water Tabby'', ''The Mouse Comes to Dinner'', ''Texas Tom'', and ''[[Solid Serenade]]''. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 67 |
||
|'' |
| ''Triplet Trouble'' |
||
|April 19 |
| April 19, 1952 |
||
| Mammy Two Shoes adopts three kittens who torment Tom and Jerry, so the two team up to have their revenge. |
|||
| |
|||
| First (official) appearance of kittens Fluff, Muff, and Puff. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 68 |
||
|'' |
| ''Little Runaway'' |
||
|June 14 |
| June 14, 1952 |
||
| Tom intends to give an escaped seal pup back to the circus, but Jerry wants to help the seal pup escape. |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 69 |
||
|'' |
| ''Fit to Be Tied'' |
||
|July 26 |
| July 26, 1952 |
||
| After the passing of a new leash law, Tom torments Spike and uses the opportunity to chase Jerry, but Jerry has Spike protect him from Tom. |
|||
| |
|||
| Similar in story and spirit to ''[[The Bodyguard (1944 film)|The Bodyguard]]''. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 70 |
||
|'' |
| ''Push-Button Kitty'' |
||
|September 6 |
| September 6, 1952 |
||
| Fed up with Tom's laziness, Mammy buys a new mouse-catching robot cat. |
|||
|Last appearance of Mammy Two Shoes |
|||
| Last appearance of Mammy Two Shoes, who was retired from the cartoons. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 71 |
||
|'' |
| ''Cruise Cat'' |
||
|October 18 |
| October 18, 1952 |
||
| Tom is hired as a sailor tasked with keeping Jerry off a cruise ship. |
|||
| |
|||
| Contains footage from ''Texas Tom''. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 72 |
||
|'' |
| ''The Dog House'' |
||
|November 29 |
| November 29, 1952 |
||
| Spike decides to build his dream dog house, but Tom and Jerry's antics constantly destroy it. |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
[[Image:TomandJerryTitleCardd.jpg|thumb|right|250px|''Tom and Jerry'' title card, used in shorts directed by [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]] since 1953 and reissues of shorts released before 1943 and in 1946 - 1951. A modified version of this card was used on the CinemaScope releases in 1954 and 1955.]] |
|||
===1953=== |
=== 1953 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 73 |
||
|'' |
| ''The Missing Mouse'' |
||
| January 10 |
| January 10, 1953 |
||
| After Jerry is covered in white [[shoe polish]], he scares Tom into thinking that he is an explosive white mouse that escaped from a lab. |
|||
| |
|||
| Only ''Tom and Jerry'' cartoon scored by Edward Plumb because Scott Bradley was on vacation.<ref name=Alexander2015/> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 74 |
||
|'' |
| ''Jerry and Jumbo'' |
||
| February 21 |
| February 21, 1953 |
||
| Jerry befriends a baby elephant named Jumbo and disguises him as a large mouse to mess with Tom. |
|||
| |
|||
| First appearance of Jumbo and his mother. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 75 |
||
|''[[Johann Mouse]]'' |
| ''[[Johann Mouse]]'' |
||
| March 21 |
| March 21, 1953 |
||
| As the pet owned by [[Johann Strauss]] in [[Vienna]], Tom becomes an accomplished pianist himself after his master goes away in order to lure dancing Jerry out with piano music. |
|||
| Won an [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]] <ref name="IndVallanceB"/>{{rp|32}} ♫ |
|||
| Last cartoon in the series to win an [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subject, Cartoon]]. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 76 |
||
|'' |
| ''That's My Pup!'' |
||
| April 25 |
| April 25, 1953 |
||
| Spike strikes an agreement with Tom for the feline to act scared whenever Tyke barks at him. |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 77 |
||
|'' |
| ''Just Ducky'' |
||
|September 5 |
| September 5, 1953 |
||
| After Quacker hatches, Jerry befriends him and teaches him how to swim so he can find his family, but Jerry must also protect him from Tom. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 78 |
||
|'' |
| ''{{vanchor|Two Little Indians}}'' |
||
|October 17 |
| October 17, 1953 |
||
| Jerry is a scoutmaster who is taking two young mice (both resembling Nibbles) on a hiking trip. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 79 |
||
|'' |
| ''Life with Tom'' |
||
|November 21 |
| November 21, 1953 |
||
| Jerry writes an autobiography titled ''Life with Tom'', which Tom has mixed emotions reading. |
|||
| Compilation film, contains footage from ''[[Cat Fishin']]'', ''[[The Little Orphan]]'' and ''[[Kitty Foiled]]''. {{BR}} |
|||
| Compilation short; contains footage from ''Cat Fishin''', ''The Little Orphan'', and ''Kitty Foiled''. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
===1954=== |
=== 1954 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 80 |
||
| '' |
| ''Puppy Tale'' |
||
| January 23 |
| January 23, 1954 |
||
| A litter of puppies are thrown into a river, but Jerry saves them and has to deal with one that will not leave him and Tom alone. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 81 |
||
| '' |
| ''Posse Cat'' |
||
| January 30 |
| January 30, 1954 |
||
| Tom is a cat owned by a western rancher living near the [[La Sal Mountains]], who rules that, going forward, Tom's dinner will depend on him keeping Jerry out of the shack from stealing their food. Tom and Jerry eventually reach a truce that allows Tom to earn the meal. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Similar in story and spirit to ''Texas Tom''. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 82 |
||
| '' |
| ''Hic-cup Pup'' |
||
| April 17 |
| April 17, 1954 |
||
| Tom's usual antics of chasing Jerry wake Tyke up, and the puppy gets the hiccups. This annoys Spike, who threatens Tom to keep quiet, while Jerry tries to frame him. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| 083 |
|||
| ''[[Little School Mouse]]'' |
|||
| May 29 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 83 |
||
| '' |
| ''Little School Mouse'' |
||
| May 29, 1954 |
|||
| August 14 |
|||
| Jerry is a professor with a certified degree in outwitting cats, and tries to teach Nibbles how to do so, with very little success. |
|||
| {{BR}} |
|||
| Similar in story and spirit to ''Professor Tom''. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 84 |
||
| ''Baby Butch'' |
|||
| ''[[Mice Follies (1954 film)|Mice Follies]]'' |
|||
| August 14, 1954 |
|||
| September 4 |
|||
| Butch disguises himself as a [[baby]] to steal food from Tom and Jerry's household, aggravating both of them. |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 85 |
||
| '' |
| ''Mice Follies'' |
||
| September 4, 1954 |
|||
| October 2 |
|||
| Jerry and Nibbles flood the kitchen and freeze it, turning it into a skating rink, causing Tom to use unusual tactics to catch them. |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 86 |
||
| '' |
| ''Neapolitan Mouse'' |
||
| October 2, 1954 |
|||
| November 13 |
|||
| Tom and Jerry vacation in [[Naples]] and encounter a local mouse named Topo. |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
| 87 |
|||
| ''Downhearted Duckling'' |
|||
| November 13, 1954 |
|||
| After reading the story of "The Ugly Duckling", Quacker is persistent with the idea of his being ugly, and even resorts to being eaten by Tom rather than to live with his "ugliness". |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 88 |
||
| '' |
| ''Pet Peeve'' |
||
| November 20 |
| November 20, 1954 |
||
| After the cost of dog and cat food increase, George and Joan (Tom and Spike's owners) decide they must get rid of one of them before they are eaten out of their home. Tom and Spike must compete to catch Jerry so they can stay, but both get kicked out in the end and Jerry stays. |
|||
| Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format (1.33:1) and in widescreen CinemaScope (2.55:1)<br/>First appearances of [[Joan and George]] |
|||
| Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in widescreen CinemaScope. First appearances of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#George and Joan|George and Joan]], although their faces are not seen here. |
|||
|- |
|||
| 89 |
|||
| ''Touché, Pussy Cat!'' |
|||
| December 18, 1954 |
|||
| Captain Jerry tries to teach eager Nibbles how to become a Mouseketeer. |
|||
| Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in widescreen CinemaScope. Last cartoon to get nominated for an [[Academy Awards|Oscar]] for [[Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film|Best Short Subjects, Cartoons]]. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 089 |
|||
| ''[[Touché, Pussy Cat!]]'' |
|||
| December 18 |
|||
| Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in widescreen CinemaScope<br/>Nominated for [[Academy Award for Animated Short Film|Academy Award for Short Subjects, Cartoons]].<br/>"''Mouseketeer''" series<br/>The prequel to ''[[The Two Mouseketeers]]'' |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
===1955=== |
=== 1955 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 90 |
||
| '' |
| ''Southbound Duckling'' |
||
| March 12 |
| March 12, 1955 |
||
| Quacker is determined to fly south for the winter, which Jerry objects since farm ducks do not fly south, while Tom tries to catch the duck. |
|||
| Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in widescreen CinemaScope |
|||
| Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in CinemaScope. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 91 |
||
| '' |
| ''Pup on a Picnic'' |
||
| April 30 |
| April 30, 1955 |
||
| Spike and Tyke are having a picnic, but several inconveniences occur. |
|||
| Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in widescreen CinemaScope |
|||
| Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in CinemaScope. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 92 |
||
| '' |
| ''Mouse for Sale'' |
||
| May 21 |
| May 21, 1955 |
||
| Tom sells Jerry disguising him as a white mouse after seeing an ad in the newspaper. But his plan to get rich backfires when the house owner finds the money and buys Jerry back. |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 93 |
||
| '' |
| ''Designs on Jerry'' |
||
| September 2 |
| September 2, 1955 |
||
| [[Stick figure]] versions of Tom and Jerry come to life when Tom creates a very detailed blueprint of a mousetrap. |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 94 |
||
| '' |
| ''Tom and Chérie'' |
||
| September 9 |
| September 9, 1955 |
||
| Mouseketeer Nibbles gets frustrated when Captain Mouseketeer Jerry repeatedly asks him to deliver his love letters despite Mouseketeer Nibbles's continually encountering troubles with Tom along the way. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope<br/>"''Mouseketeer''" series |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope. This is the only Tom and Jerry episode during the Hanna-Barbera era where Tom and Jerry never come in contact with each other. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 95 |
||
| '' |
| ''Smarty Cat'' |
||
| October 14 |
| October 14, 1955 |
||
| Tom and his pals watch old footage of Spike's misery while the owners are not home. |
|||
| Compilation film, contains footage from ''[[Solid Serenade]]'', ''[[Cat Fishin']]'' and ''[[Fit to Be Tied (1952 film)|Fit to be Tied]]'' |
|||
| Compilation short; contains footage from ''[[Solid Serenade]]'', ''[[Cat Fishin']]'', and ''Fit to Be Tied''. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 96 |
||
| '' |
| ''Pecos Pest'' |
||
| November 11 |
| November 11, 1955 |
||
| Jerry's uncle Pecos comes to the city with his guitar for his television singing debut. Tom is terrified of Pecos because he keeps using Tom's whiskers as replacement guitar strings. |
|||
| |
|||
| Only appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Uncle Pecos|Uncle Pecos]]. Last ''Tom and Jerry'' cartoon released in the standard [[Academy format]]. All subsequent Hanna-Barbera cartoons were released in CinemaScope. Last ''Tom and Jerry'' cartoon released with [[Fred Quimby]] as producer. |
|||
|- |
|||
| 97 |
|||
| ''That's My Mommy'' |
|||
| November 19, 1955 |
|||
| Quacker hatches near Tom and [[Imprinting (psychology)|imprints]] on him, thinking Tom is his mother, despite Jerry's multiple pleas to show him otherwise. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope. First ''Tom and Jerry'' cartoon with [[William Hanna]] and [[Joseph Barbera]] as both producers and directors. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 097 |
|||
| ''[[That's My Mommy]]'' |
|||
| November 19 |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
[[Image:TomandJerryTitleCarde.jpg|thumb|right|250px|''Tom and Jerry'' title card for widescreen CinemaScope shorts.]] |
|||
===1956=== |
=== 1956 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 98 |
||
| '' |
| ''The Flying Sorceress'' |
||
| January 27 |
| January 27, 1956 |
||
| Tom sees an advert wanting an intelligent cat as a travel companion. He leaves his home for the new job, only to find a creepy house occupied by a witch, who wants a cat to take on broomstick rides. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope |
|||
| The first short Joan's face is seen. Produced in CinemaScope. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| 99 |
||
| '' |
| ''The Egg and Jerry'' |
||
| March 23 |
| March 23, 1956 |
||
| A mother woodpecker leaves for lunch leaving her egg behind, but the egg ends up in Jerry's home and hatches. The baby woodpecker [[Imprinting (psychology)|thinks Jerry is his mother]] and saves him from Tom. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope<br/>CinemaScope remake of ''[[Hatch Up Your Troubles]]'' |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope. CinemaScope remake of ''[[Hatch Up Your Troubles]]'' and first of the three CinemaScope remakes. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 100 |
| 100 |
||
| '' |
| ''Busy Buddies'' |
||
| May 4 |
| May 4, 1956 |
||
| When Jeannie the babysitter is too busy on the phone to look after the baby who is constantly crawling away, Tom and Jerry collaborate to make sure the baby does not get hurt. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope, First appearance of Jeannie |
|||
| First appearance of [[List of Tom and Jerry characters#Jeannie and the Baby|Jeannie and the Baby]]. Produced in CinemaScope. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 101 |
| 101 |
||
| '' |
| ''Muscle Beach Tom'' |
||
| September 7 |
| September 7, 1956 |
||
| Tom arrives at the beach with a female cat to spend some quality time. But instead, he is competing with Butch by lifting weights to impress her. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 102 |
| 102 |
||
| '' |
| ''Down Beat Bear'' |
||
| October 21 |
| October 21, 1956 |
||
| A dancing bear escapes from the zoo and arrives at Tom and Jerry's house, so Jerry keeps playing music to make him dance with Tom and prevent Tom from calling to collect the reward. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 103 |
| 103 |
||
| ''[[Blue Cat Blues]]'' |
| ''[[Blue Cat Blues]]'' |
||
| November 16 |
| November 16, 1956 |
||
| Jerry, narrating, recounts the tragic love story that led to Tom's depression. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope |
|||
| Deemed infamous for its depictions of [[alcoholism]] and [[suicide]]. This was mistaken as ''Tom and Jerry's'' last film, but it did not stop there.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Gupta|first=Abir|date=July 2, 2016|title=Do You Know What Happens To Your Favorite Tom and Jerry In The End?|url=https://www.storypick.com/tom-and-jerry/|access-date=December 11, 2023 |website=Storypick}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last1=Pall|first1=Vincent|last2=Koski|first2=Dustin|last3=Ciscell|first3=Jim|date=August 16, 2012|title=5 Old Children's Cartoons Way Darker Than Most Horror Movies|url=https://www.cracked.com/article_19979_5-old-childrens-cartoons-way-darker-than-most-horror-movies.html|access-date=December 11, 2023|website=Cracked}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 104 |
| 104 |
||
| '' |
| ''Barbecue Brawl'' |
||
| December 14 |
| December 14, 1956 |
||
| Spike shows his son Tyke how to barbecue, but they have to deal with constant interruptions. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
===1957=== |
=== 1957 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 105 |
| 105 |
||
| '' |
| ''Tops with Pops'' |
||
| February 22 |
| February 22, 1957 |
||
| Jerry hides with Spike and Tyke so Tom will get in trouble if he tries to catch him. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo</br>CinemaScope remake of ''[[Love That Pup]] |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. CinemaScope remake version of ''[[Love That Pup]]'' and second of the three Cinemascope remakes. |
|||
|- |
|||
| |
|- |
||
| ''[[Give and Tyke]]'' |
|||
| March 29 |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo</br>The spin-off of ''Tom and Jerry'', only Spike and Tyke appeared |
|||
|- |
|||
| 106 |
| 106 |
||
| |
|''Timid Tabby'' |
||
| April 19 |
| April 19, 1957 |
||
| Tom's cousin George comes to visit, and he is afraid of mice. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
|||
|- |
|||
|- |
|||
| 107 |
| 107 |
||
| '' |
| ''Feedin' the Kiddie'' |
||
| June 7 |
| June 7, 1957 |
||
| Jerry and Tuffy dine on Thanksgiving treats until Tom tries to stop them. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo</br>CinemaScope remake of ''[[The Little Orphan]]'' |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. Remake of ''[[The Little Orphan]]'' with Nibbles named as Tuffy and is Jerry's nephew. |
|||
|- |
|||
| |
|- |
||
| ''[[Scat Cats]]'' |
|||
| July 26 |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo</br>The spin-off of ''Tom and Jerry'', only Spike, Tyke, Butch, Meathead and Topsy appeared |
|||
|- |
|||
| 108 |
| 108 |
||
| '' |
| ''Mucho Mouse'' |
||
| September 6 |
| September 6, 1957 |
||
| Tom is a mouse-catching world champion and arrives in [[Spain]] to catch Jerry, known as El Magnifico, but he miserably fails to catch him. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 109 |
| 109 |
||
| '' |
| ''Tom's Photo Finish'' |
||
| November 1 |
| November 1, 1957 |
||
| When Tom eats his owner's chicken and frames Spike, Jerry takes a picture to expose him, spreading copies around the house for his owners to see them. Tom goes to extreme measures to destroy or otherwise hide the photos from his owners, but ultimately fails. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
===1958=== |
=== 1958 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 110 |
| 110 |
||
| '' |
| ''Happy Go Ducky'' |
||
| January 3 |
| January 3, 1958 |
||
| The [[Easter Bunny]] leaves an [[Easter egg]] for Tom and Jerry, which hatches into Quacker who thoroughly annoys them. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 111 |
| 111 |
||
| '' |
| ''Royal Cat Nap'' |
||
| March 7 |
| March 7, 1958 |
||
| Royal guard Tom must get rid of Mouseketeers Jerry and Tuffy without waking up the king from his nap. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo</br> Last "Mouseketeer" series cartoon |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 112 |
| 112 |
||
| '' |
| ''The Vanishing Duck'' |
||
| May 2 |
| May 2, 1958 |
||
| In a plot reminiscent of 1947's ''The Invisible Mouse'', Jerry and Quacker become invisible using vanishing cream and play pranks on Tom. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo, Last appearance of Quacker |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 113 |
| 113 |
||
| '' |
| ''Robin Hoodwinked'' |
||
| June 6 |
| June 6, 1958 |
||
| After [[Robin Hood]] gets locked up, Jerry and Tuffy attempt to save him, but first they must get past Tom. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo, Last appearance of Tuffles |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 114 |
| 114 |
||
| ''[[Tot Watchers]]'' |
| ''[[Tot Watchers]]'' |
||
| August 1 |
| August 1, 1958 |
||
| Due to Jeanine the babysitter's carelessness, Tom and Jerry must once again keep the baby from harm every time it gets loose. |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo, Last "Hanna Barbera" Tom and Jerry" cartoon, Last appearances of Joan, George, and Jeannie |
|||
| Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
== |
== 1961–1962: Gene Deitch/Rembrandt Films cartoons == |
||
The following thirteen cartoons were directed by [[Gene Deitch]], produced by [[William L. Snyder]], and animated at Snyder's Rembrandt Films in [[Prague]], [[Czechoslovakia]] (now in the [[Czech Republic]]). All cartoons were released to theaters by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. |
|||
===1961=== |
=== 1961 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:2em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:15em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!stle="width:2em"| Date |
||
!Summary |
|||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 115 |
| 115 |
||
| '' |
| ''Switchin' Kitten'' |
||
| September 7 |
| September 7, 1961 |
||
| |
|||
|First "Gene Deitch" Tom and Jerry cartoon, Last appearance of Lightning |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 116 |
| 116 |
||
| '' |
| ''Down and Outing'' |
||
| October 26 |
| October 26, 1961 |
||
| |
| |
||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 117 |
| 117 |
||
| '' |
| ''It's Greek to Me-ow!'' |
||
| December 7 |
| December 7, 1961 |
||
| |
| |
||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
===1962=== |
=== 1962 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:3em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:20em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:10em"| Date |
||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 118 |
| 118 |
||
|'' |
| ''High Steaks'' |
||
| March 23, 1962 |
|||
|January |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 119 |
| 119 |
||
|''[[Mouse |
| ''[[Mouse into Space]]'' |
||
| April 13, 1962 |
|||
|February 1 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 120 |
| 120 |
||
|'' |
| ''Landing Stripling'' |
||
| May 18, 1962 |
|||
|April 1 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
|121 |
|||
|''[[Calypso Cat]]'' |
|||
|June 1 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 121 |
|||
|122 |
|||
|''[[ |
| ''[[Calypso Cat]]'' |
||
| June 22, 1962 |
|||
|July 1 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 122 |
|||
|123 |
|||
| ''Dicky Moe'' |
|||
|''[[The Tom and Jerry Cartoon Kit]]'' |
|||
| July 20, 1962 |
|||
|August 1 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 123 |
|||
|124 |
|||
|''[[ |
| ''[[The Tom and Jerry Cartoon Kit]]'' |
||
| August 10, 1962 |
|||
|September 1 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|||
| 124 |
|||
| ''Tall in the Trap'' |
|||
| September 14, 1962 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|||
| 125 |
|||
| ''Sorry Safari'' |
|||
| October 12, 1962 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 126 |
|||
|125 |
|||
|''Buddies Thicker Than Water'' |
|||
|''[[Sorry Safari]]'' |
|||
| November 1, 1962 |
|||
|October 1 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 127 |
|||
|126 |
|||
|''Carmen Get It!'' |
|||
|''[[Buddies Thicker Than Water]]'' |
|||
| December 21, 1962 |
|||
|November 1 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|||
|127 |
|||
|''[[Carmen Get It!]]'' |
|||
|December 1 |
|||
| ♫ Last "Gene Deitch" Tom and Jerry cartoon |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
== |
== 1963–1967: Chuck Jones/Sib Tower cartoons == |
||
The following 34 cartoons were produced by [[Chuck Jones]] in Hollywood, California. Earlier cartoons were produced in conjunction with Walter Bien's "Sib Tower 12 Productions" (one or the other credited on the 1963 and 1964 productions), until it was integrated into a new animation department called [[MGM Animation/Visual Arts]]. Directors (if other than Jones) or co-directors for each short are listed. All cartoons were released to theaters by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Note: All the Chuck Jones MGM ''Tom and Jerry'' shorts were in Metrocolor. |
|||
[[File:TomandJerryTitleCardf.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''Tom and Jerry'' title card in mid-1960s.]] |
|||
The following 34 cartoons were produced by Sib Tower 12 Productions (renamed [[MGM Animation/Visual Arts]] after 1967) in Hollywood, California. All shorts were released to theaters by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and are produced by [[Chuck Jones]]. Directors for each short are listed. They were all were released on DVD in 2009 as ''[[Tom and Jerry, The Chuck Jones Collection]]''. |
|||
All were released on DVD in 2009 as part of ''[[Tom and Jerry: The Chuck Jones Collection]]''. |
|||
===1963=== |
|||
{| class="wikitable" border="1" |
|||
=== 1963 === |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:3em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:18em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 128 |
| 128 |
||
|''[[Pent-House Mouse]]'' |
| ''[[Pent-House Mouse]]'' |
||
|July 27 |
| July 27, 1963 |
||
| |
|||
|First "Chuck Jones" Tom and Jerry cartoon |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
===1964=== |
=== 1964 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:3em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|129 |
| 129 |
||
|''[[The Cat Above and the Mouse Below]]'' |
| ''[[The Cat Above and the Mouse Below]]'' |
||
| February 25, 1964 |
|||
| |
| |
||
| (Jones) ♫ |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|130 |
| 130 |
||
|'' |
| ''Is There a Doctor in the Mouse?'' |
||
| March 24, 1964 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, [[Maurice Noble]]) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|131 |
| 131 |
||
|'' |
| ''Much Ado About Mousing'' |
||
| April 14, 1964 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|132 |
| 132 |
||
|'' |
| ''Snowbody Loves Me'' |
||
| May 12, 1964 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|133 |
| 133 |
||
|'' |
| ''The Unshrinkable Jerry Mouse'' |
||
| December 8, 1964 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
===1965=== |
=== 1965 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:3em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|134 |
| 134 |
||
|'' |
| ''Ah, Sweet Mouse-Story of Life'' |
||
| January 20, 1965 |
|||
| |
| |
||
| (Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|135 |
| 135 |
||
|'' |
| ''Tom-ic Energy'' |
||
| January 27, 1965 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|136 |
| 136 |
||
|'' |
| ''Bad Day at Cat Rock'' |
||
| February 10, 1965 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|137 |
| 137 |
||
|''[[The Brothers Carry-Mouse-Off]]'' |
| ''[[The Brothers Carry-Mouse-Off]]'' |
||
| March 3, 1965 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Directed by [[Jim Pabian]]. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|138 |
| 138 |
||
|'' |
| ''Haunted Mouse'' |
||
| March 24, 1965 |
|||
| |
| |
||
| (Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|139 |
| 139 |
||
|'' |
| ''I'm Just Wild About Jerry'' |
||
| April 7, 1965 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|140 |
| 140 |
||
|'' |
| ''Of Feline Bondage'' |
||
| May 19, 1965 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|141 |
| 141 |
||
|''[[The Year of the Mouse]]'' |
| ''[[The Year of the Mouse]]'' |
||
| June 9, 1965 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|142 |
| 142 |
||
|'' |
| ''The Cat's Me-Ouch!'' |
||
| December 22, 1965 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
===1966=== |
=== 1966 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:3em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|143 |
| 143 |
||
|'' |
| ''Duel Personality'' |
||
| January 20, 1966 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
|||
| (Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|144 |
| 144 |
||
|'' |
| ''Jerry, Jerry, Quite Contrary'' |
||
| February 17, 1966 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|145 |
| 145 |
||
|'' |
| ''Jerry-Go-Round'' |
||
| March 3, 1966 |
|||
| |
|||
| Directed by Abe Levitow. |
|||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|146 |
| 146 |
||
|'' |
| ''Love Me, Love My Mouse'' |
||
| April 28, 1966 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Directed by [[Chuck Jones]] and [[Ben Washam]]. Last appearance of Toodles. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|147 |
| 147 |
||
|''[[Puss 'n' Boats]]'' |
| ''[[Puss 'n' Boats]]'' |
||
| May 5, 1966 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Directed by [[Abe Levitow]]. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|148 |
| 148 |
||
|'' |
| ''Filet Meow'' |
||
| June 30, 1966 |
|||
| |
|||
| Directed by Abe Levitow. |
|||
| (Levitow) ^^ First appearance of the love interest for Jerry |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|149 |
| 149 |
||
|'' |
| ''Matinee Mouse'' |
||
| July 14, 1966 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Direction credited to William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, with story and supervision by [[Tom Ray]]. Compilation short; contains footage from ''The Flying Cat'', ''Professor Tom'', ''The Missing Mouse'', ''Jerry and the Lion'', ''Love That Pup'', ''The Flying Sorceress'', ''[[Jerry's Diary (1949 film)|Jerry's Diary]]'', and ''The Truce Hurts''. Tom and Jerry watch themselves in a theater. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|150 |
| 150 |
||
|''[[The A-Tom- |
| ''[[The A-Tom-inable Snowman]]'' |
||
| August 4, 1966 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Directed by Abe Levitow. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|151 |
| 151 |
||
|'' |
| ''Catty-Cornered'' |
||
| September 8, 1966 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Directed by Abe Levitow. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
===1967=== |
=== 1967 === |
||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:3em"| No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:12em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|152 |
| 152 |
||
|'' |
| ''Cat and Dupli-cat'' |
||
| January 20, 1967 |
|||
| |
| |
||
| (Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|153 |
| 153 |
||
|'' |
| ''O-Solar-Meow'' |
||
| February 24, 1967 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Directed by Abe Levitow. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|154 |
| 154 |
||
|'' |
| ''Guided Mouse-ille'' |
||
| March 10, 1967 |
|||
| |
|||
| Directed by Abe Levitow. Followup to ''O-Solar-Meow''. |
|||
| (Levitow) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|155 |
| 155 |
||
|'' |
| ''Rock 'n' Rodent'' |
||
| April 7, 1967 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Directed by Abe Levitow. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|156 |
| 156 |
||
|'' |
| ''Cannery Rodent'' |
||
| April 14, 1967 |
|||
| |
| |
||
|(Jones, Noble) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|157 |
| 157 |
||
|'' |
| ''The Mouse from H.U.N.G.E.R.'' |
||
| April 21, 1967 |
|||
| |
|||
| Directed by Abe Levitow. |
|||
| (Levitow) ^^ Last appearance of the love interest for Jerry |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|158 |
| 158 |
||
|'' |
|''Surf-Bored Cat'' |
||
| May 5, 1967 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Directed by Abe Levitow. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|159 |
| 159 |
||
|'' |
|''Shutter Bugged Cat'' |
||
| June 23, 1967 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| Direction credited to William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, with story and supervision by Tom Ray. Compilation short; Contains footage from ''Part Time Pal'', ''[[The Yankee Doodle Mouse]]'', ''Nit-Witty Kitty'', ''[[Johann Mouse]]'', ''Heavenly Puss'', and ''Designs on Jerry''. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|160 |
| 160 |
||
|'' |
|''Advance and Be Mechanized'' |
||
| August 25, 1967 |
|||
| |
|||
| Directed by Ben Washam. Followup to ''O-Solar-Meow''. |
|||
|(Washam) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|161 |
| 161 |
||
|'' |
|''Purr-Chance to Dream'' |
||
| September 8, 1967 |
|||
| |
|||
| Directed by Ben Washam. Followup to ''The Cat's Me-Ouch''. |
|||
|(Washam) Last "Chuck Jones" Tom and Jerry cartoon |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
== |
== 2001–present: Warner Bros. cartoons == |
||
=== 2001: Hanna-Barbera Productions/Turner Entertainment cartoon === |
|||
===2005=== |
|||
{| class="wikitable |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!style="width:7em" | No. |
|||
! Episode number |
|||
! Title |
!style="width:18em"| Title |
||
! Date |
!style="width:7em"| Date |
||
! Notes |
! Notes |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 162 |
| 162 |
||
| ''[[The Mansion Cat]]'' |
|||
|April 8, 2001 |
|||
| Only made-for-TV short.<br>Directed by Karl Toerge. Contains footage from ''[[Muscle Beach Tom]]''. |
|||
|} |
|||
=== 2005, 2014, 2021: Warner Bros. Animation cartoons === |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
!style="width:7em" | No. |
|||
!style="width:18em"| Title |
|||
!style="width:7em"| Date |
|||
!style="width:18em"| Summary |
|||
! Notes |
|||
|- |
|||
|163 |
|||
| ''[[The Karate Guard]]'' |
| ''[[The Karate Guard]]'' |
||
| September 27 |
| September 27, 2005 |
||
| Spike saves Jerry from Tom. |
|||
| Directed by [[Joseph Barbera]] and Spike Brandt, Last appearances of Tom, Jerry, and Spike |
|||
| Directed by [[Joseph Barbera]] and [[Spike Brandt]].<br> |
|||
|- |
|||
|164 |
|||
| ''A Fundraising Adventure'' |
|||
| November 14, 2014 |
|||
| Tom and Jerry had been asked by Pudsey to raise money for BBC's Children in Need. |
|||
| [[Children in Need]] special |
|||
|- |
|||
|165 |
|||
| ''On a Roll'' |
|||
| February 20, 2021 |
|||
| In Japan, the local sushi chef with his cat Tom notice a mouse known as Jerry scurrying around the Chef's restaurant. In order to earn Chef's keep, Tom determines to catch the sushi-stealing mouse. |
|||
| Directed by Kenny Pittenger.<br> |
|||
|- |
|||
|166 |
|||
| ''The House That Cat Built'' |
|||
| February 20, 2021 |
|||
| Following Tom's extra-deluxe, extra-large cat castle destroying a "Hole Sweet Hole" portrait in Jerry's house, Jerry invades the castle. Tom becomes determined to get Jerry out of his own luxury. |
|||
| Directed by David Gemmill.<br> |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
== Spin-offs and other appearances == |
|||
==See also== |
|||
* ''[[The Alley Cat (1941 film)|The Alley Cat]]'' (1941 film, [[List of one-shot Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animated shorts|MGM one-shot]] cartoon) with Butch and Toodles |
|||
*''[[Tom and Jerry: The Movie]]'' ([[1992]] feature movie) |
|||
* ''[[War Dogs (1943 film)|War Dogs]]'' (1943 film, [[List of one-shot Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animated shorts|MGM one-shot]] cartoon) with Spike cameo |
|||
* ''[[Anchors Aweigh (film)|Anchors Aweigh]]'' (1945 film) with Tom and Jerry cameo |
|||
* ''[[Dangerous When Wet]]'' (1953 film) with Tom and Jerry cameo |
|||
* ''The Three Little Pups'' (1953 film, ''[[Droopy]]'' cartoon) with Spike cameo |
|||
* ''[[Spike and Tyke]]'' (1957 [[List of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio films|MGM]] cartoon series) with Spike and Tyke |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: The Movie]]'' (1992 feature film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom & Jerry (2021 American film)|Tom & Jerry]]'' (2021 feature film)<ref>{{cite tweet|number=1266102388424716290|user=WarnerMedia|author=WarnerMedia|author-link=WarnerMedia|title=#HBOMax is here! 🥳 Our groundbreaking...|date=May 28, 2020}}</ref> |
|||
* ''[[The Tom and Jerry Show (1975 TV series)|The Tom and Jerry Show]]'' (1975 TV series, 16 episodes) |
|||
* ''[[The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show]]'' (1980 TV series, 15 episodes) |
|||
* ''[[Tom & Jerry Kids]]'' (1990 TV series, [[List of Tom & Jerry Kids episodes|65 episodes]]) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry Tales]]'' (2006 TV series, [[List of Tom and Jerry Tales episodes|26 episodes]]) |
|||
* ''[[The Tom and Jerry Show (2014 TV series)|The Tom and Jerry Show]]'' (2014 TV series, [[List of The Tom and Jerry Show (2014 TV series) episodes|71 episodes]]) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry in New York]]'' (2021 TV series) |
|||
* ''Tom and Jerry'' (2022 TV series) |
|||
* ''Tom and Jerry'' (2023 TV series) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: The Magic Ring]]'' (2002 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars]]'' (2005 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: The Fast and the Furry]]'' (2005 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: Shiver Me Whiskers]]'' (2006 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: A Nutcracker Tale]]'' (2007 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry Meet Sherlock Holmes]]'' (2010 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz]]'' (2011 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: Robin Hood and His Merry Mouse]]'' (2012 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry's Giant Adventure]]'' (2013 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: The Lost Dragon]]'' (2014 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: Spy Quest]]'' (2015 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz]]'' (2016 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory]]'' (2017 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: Cowboy Up!]]'' (2022 film) |
|||
* ''[[Tom and Jerry: Snowman's Land]]'' (2022 film) |
|||
==Notes== |
== Notes == |
||
<references /> |
<references /> |
||
==External links== |
== External links == |
||
* [ |
* [https://www.tomandjerryonline.com/episodes.cfm?era=hb Tom and Jerry episode guide: The Hanna–Barbera era (1940–1958)] |
||
* [ |
* [https://www.tomandjerryonline.com/episodes.cfm?era=gd Tom and Jerry episode guide: The Gene Deitch era (1960–1962)] |
||
* [ |
* [https://www.tomandjerryonline.com/episodes.cfm?era=cj Tom and Jerry episode guide: The Chuck Jones era (1963–1967)] |
||
* [ |
* [https://www.tomandjerryonline.com/episodes.cfm?era=wb Tom and Jerry episode guide: Warner Bros. Animation (2000–present)] |
||
{{Tom and Jerry}} |
{{Tom and Jerry}} |
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{{Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoons}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tom And Jerry Cartoons, List Of}} |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Film series introduced in 1940]] |
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[[Category:Lists of animated films by character]] |
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[[Category:Children's film series]] |
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[[cs:Seznam epizod Toma a Jerryho]] |
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[[Category:Slapstick films| ]] |
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[[es:Anexo:Episodios de Tom y Jerry]] |
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[[Category:Tom and Jerry short films| ]] |
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[[ko:톰과 제리 만화 목록]] |
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[[Category:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animated short films]] |
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[[id:Daftar episode Tom and Jerry]] |
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[[Category:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animated films]] |
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[[ja:トムとジェリーの短編作品一覧]] |
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[[Category:Lists of American animated films]] |
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[[pt:Anexo:Lista de curtas-metragens de Tom e Jerry]] |
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[[ru:Список серий мультсериала «Том и Джерри»]] |
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[[simple:List of Tom and Jerry episodes]] |
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[[sr:Списак цртаних филмова о Тому и Џерију]] |
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[[fi:Tom & Jerry (lyhytanimaatiot)]] |
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[[th:รายชื่อตอน ทอม กับ เจอร์รี่]] |
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[[vi:Danh sách tập phim Tom và Jerry]] |
Latest revision as of 02:16, 26 December 2024
This is a complete list of the 166 shorts in the Tom and Jerry series produced and released between 1940 and 2021. Of these, 162 are theatrical shorts, one is a made-for-TV short, one is a two-minute sketch shown as part of a telethon, and two are special shorts released on HBO Max.
1940–1958: Hanna–Barbera/MGM cartoons
The following 114 cartoons were directed by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio in Hollywood, California. All cartoons were released to theaters by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Rudolf Ising was the producer of Puss Gets the Boot; subsequent cartoons were produced by Fred Quimby through 1955. Quimby retired in 1955 and from 1955 to 1957, Hanna and Barbera produced the shorts until MGM closed the cartoon studio in 1957, and the last cartoon was released in 1958.[1] Most of these cartoons were produced in the standard Academy ratio (1.37:1). Four cartoons were produced for both Academy Ratio and CinemaScope formats (2.55:1, later 2.35:1). Finally, 19 cartoons were produced in widescreen CinemaScope format only (though reissues have the standard Academy ratio 1.37:1 instead).
Like the other studios, MGM reissued and edited its cartoons when rereleased to theaters. Many pre-1952 cartoons were reissued with Perspecta Sound, which was introduced in 1954. MGM also reissued its cartoons before the introduction of Perspecta Sound. Because of the 1965 MGM vault fire, all original film of pre-September-1951 MGM cartoons are lost, leaving only the backup prints (usually the altered reissue prints), although some production artwork relating to the missing material has survived, like pencil sketches.[2]
1940
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Puss Gets the Boot | February 10, 1940 | Tom and Jerry's first cartoon. Tom (here named Jasper) tries to stop the mouse Jerry (here unnamed) from breaking plates and glasses before the maid can kick Jasper out. | First appearances of Tom (as Jasper), Jerry (as the unnamed mouse), and Mammy Two Shoes (as the maid). First Tom and Jerry cartoon nominated for an Academy Award for Best Short Subject, Cartoon. |
1941
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 | The Midnight Snack | July 19, 1941 | Jerry attempts to outsmart Tom so he can get a snack from the refrigerator. | First time Tom and Jerry are referred to by those names. Mammy Two Shoes is also given her name. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
3 | The Night Before Christmas | December 6, 1941 | Tom gets to know the spirit of giving when he begins to feel guilty after blockading the front door, trapping Jerry outside in the cold on Christmas Eve. | Nominated for an Academy Award for Best Short Subjects, Cartoons. |
1942
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
4 | Fraidy Cat | January 17, 1942 | Jerry plays tricks to scare the fur off of Tom. | U.S. television print cuts out Mammy Two Shoes due to racially insensitive subject matter. |
5 | Dog Trouble | April 18, 1942 | Tom and Jerry team up to stop the Bulldog from mauling both of them. | First appearance of Spike as an Unnamed Bulldog. |
6 | Puss n' Toots | May 30, 1942 | Tom tries to woo a female cat. | First appearance of Toots. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
7 | The Bowling Alley-Cat | July 18, 1942 | Tom and Jerry chase each other around a bowling alley. | First cartoon featuring a sport as its theme. |
8 | Fine Feathered Friend | October 10, 1942 | Jerry flees from Tom by hiding with a chicken family. |
1943
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
9 | Sufferin' Cats! | January 16, 1943 | Tom competes with an alley cat (Meathead) to see who can catch Jerry first. | First appearance of Meathead. |
10 | The Lonesome Mouse | May 22, 1943 | When Mammy Two Shoes kicks Tom out of the house after Jerry frames him, the mouse enjoys his freedom without Tom until he gets lonesome. They work together to prove Tom's worth as a mouse-catcher to Mammy. | An unusual short where Tom and Jerry speak. |
11 | The Yankee Doodle Mouse | June 26, 1943 | Jerry wages war with Tom from his "cat raid shelter" in the basement. | First cartoon to win an Academy Award for Best Short Subject, Cartoon. |
12 | Baby Puss | December 25, 1943 | Nancy dresses up Tom like a baby, prompting Jerry and Tom's feline friends to make fun of him. | First appearance of Butch and Topsy. |
1944
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
13 | The Zoot Cat | February 26, 1944 | Tom and Jerry try to impress Toots by wearing a zoot suit. | Unusual for a Tom and Jerry cartoon, characters speak lengthy lines. |
14 | The Million Dollar Cat | May 6, 1944 | Tom inherits a million dollars on one condition: He must avoid causing harm to any animal, which Jerry uses to his advantage. | Scott Bradley received the only music credit for this short, but examination of the archived orchestral score bears the inscription, "Adapted by Ted Duncan". As Barrier has remarked in Hollywood Cartoons, this score is very unlike Bradley's other work of the period, since it "sounds like ordinary dance-band music, related only tenuously to the cartoon action". It seems plausible that Duncan adapted the score from pre-existing songs because Bradley was unavailable, and the latter received credit for contractual reasons.[3] |
15 | The Bodyguard | July 22, 1944 | Jerry frees Spike the bulldog from the dog-catcher's truck. Spike promises to protect Jerry from Tom by responding to the sound of a whistle. | First regular appearance of Spike |
16 | Puttin' On the Dog | October 28, 1944 | When Jerry hides in the dog pound, Tom disguises himself as a dog. | |
17 | Mouse Trouble | November 23, 1944 | Tom reads a book consisting of tips for catching mice. | Won an Academy Award for Best Short Subject, Cartoon. |
1945
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
18 | The Mouse Comes to Dinner | May 5, 1945 | Tom invites Toots to a dinner party. | U.S. television print cuts out Mammy Two-Shoes due to additional racist stereotyping. |
19 | Mouse in Manhattan | July 7, 1945 | Jerry takes a trip to Manhattan. | Tom has a cameo role in this cartoon. |
20 | Tee for Two | July 21, 1945 | Tom attempts to play golf, but Jerry ruins his fun. | |
21 | Flirty Birdy | September 22, 1945 | Tom disguises himself as a female bird to trick an eagle who also wants to eat Jerry, which works too well. | |
22 | Quiet Please! | December 22, 1945 | Spike threatens Tom to keep quiet during his nap, but Jerry is constantly making noise. | Won an Academy Award for Best Short Subject, Cartoon.[4] |
1946
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
23 | Springtime for Thomas | March 30, 1946 | Tom falls in love with a new female cat, Toodles. Jerry tries to break them up by sending Tom's friend/enemy Butch to her. | First appearance of Toodles Galore. |
24 | The Milky Waif | May 18, 1946 | Nibbles visits one night and wants some milk, so Jerry tries to steal some from Tom. | First appearance of Nibbles. |
25 | Trap Happy | June 29, 1946 | Tom calls a mouse exterminator (Butch) to get rid of Jerry. | |
26 | Solid Serenade | August 31, 1946 | Tom sneaks up to Toodles' house to sing love songs to her at night. |
1947
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
27 | Cat Fishin' | February 22, 1947 | Tom goes fishing using Jerry as bait and deals with watchdog Spike. | |
28 | Part Time Pal | March 15, 1947 | Mammy warns Tom to keep Jerry out of the refrigerator or she'll throw him out, but Tom accidentally becomes repeatedly drunk and befriends Jerry. | |
29 | The Cat Concerto | April 26, 1947 | Pianist Tom performs Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 by Franz Liszt until Jerry breaks up his act. | Won an Oscar for Best Short Subject, Cartoon.[4] In 1994, it was voted No. 42 of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time by members of the animation field, the only Tom & Jerry cartoon to make the list.[5] |
30 | Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Mouse | June 14, 1947 | Tom tries to prevent Jerry from drinking his milk by poisoning it, but his plan completely backfires when the poison transforms Jerry into a monster. | Nominated for an Oscar for Best Short Subject, Cartoon. Original titles are rarely found on a 16mm Agfa-Gevaert print with only one tiny splice at the Tom and Jerry card. |
31 | Salt Water Tabby | July 12, 1947 | Tom woos Toodles on the beach. | |
32 | A Mouse in the House | August 30, 1947 | Tom and Butch compete against each other to catch Jerry on Mammy Two Shoes' orders, but she ends up kicking out all three animals. | Rarely seen on Cartoon Network and Boomerang due to perceived racial abuse occurring in the end. |
33 | The Invisible Mouse | September 27, 1947 | Jerry uses "invisible ink" to turn invisible and outsmart Tom. |
1948
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
34 | Kitty Foiled | June 1, 1948 | Cuckoo saves Jerry from Tom. | First appearance of Cuckoo. |
35 | The Truce Hurts | July 17, 1948 | Tom, Jerry, and Spike (here called Butch) are fed up of fighting each other and call a truce, but the peace falls apart when they fight over a steak. | |
36 | Old Rockin' Chair Tom | September 18, 1948 | Tom is briefly replaced by another cat, Lightning. | First appearance of Lightning. |
37 | Professor Tom | October 30, 1948 | Tom tries to teach his kitten student (Topsy) how to catch mice. | |
38 | Mouse Cleaning | December 11, 1948 | After a muddy Tom chases Jerry through the house, Mammy Two Shoes forces the cat to clean the house. While she is gone, Jerry sabotages Tom's efforts. | Blackface gag removed from television and omitted from DVD due to racial stereotyping.[6] |
1949
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
39 | Polka-Dot Puss | February 26, 1949 | Tom convinces Mammy Two Shoes that he is too sick to go outside. He stays in the house until Jerry paints red dots all over Tom's face to trick him into thinking he has caught the measles. | |
40 | The Little Orphan | April 30, 1949 | In this Thanksgiving short, Jerry and Nibbles dine on Thanksgiving treats until Tom tries to stop them. | Won an Oscar for Best Short Subject, Cartoon. |
41 | Hatch Up Your Troubles | May 14, 1949 | Jerry protects a baby woodpecker from Tom until it finds its mother. | First appearance of the Baby Woodpecker. Nominated for an Oscar for Best Short Subject, Cartoon. |
42 | Heavenly Puss | July 9, 1949 | After a piano flattens Tom while he attempts to catch Jerry, Tom is refused entry to cat heaven due to his record of trying to harm Jerry. To save himself from Hell, Tom must have Jerry sign a certificate of forgiveness within one hour. | Rarely airs in Brazil[7] and the Middle East due to subplots involving damnation in Hell. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1956. |
43 | The Cat and the Mermouse | September 3, 1949 | Tom chases a mermaid mouse who looks like Jerry. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
44 | Love That Pup | October 1, 1949 | Jerry hides with Spike and Tyke so Tom will get in trouble if he tries to catch him. | First appearance of Tyke and Daws Butler's first time voicing Spike. |
45 | Jerry's Diary | October 22, 1949 | Tom reads through Jerry's diary. | Compilation short; contains footage from Tee for Two, Mouse Trouble, Solid Serenade, and The Yankee Doodle Mouse. |
46 | Tennis Chumps | December 10, 1949 | Tom and Butch compete against each other in a game of tennis. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
1950
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
47 | Little Quacker | January 7, 1950 | Jerry protects a little duckling named Quacker from Tom. | First appearances of Quacker, Henry, and Mama Duck. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
48 | Saturday Evening Puss | January 14, 1950 | After Mammy Two Shoes goes out with her friends, Tom invites three of his feline friends: Butch, Lightning, and Topsy over for a party with loud music, which disturbs Jerry, who is trying to sleep. | Only (albeit brief) time that the face of Mammy Two Shoes is shown. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. Rereleased to television in the mid-1960s with Mammy Two Shoes replaced by a white teenage female. |
49 | Texas Tom | March 11, 1950 | Tom tries to woo a cowgirl cat. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
50 | Jerry and the Lion | April 8, 1950 | Jerry promises to return an escaped circus lion to the African jungle. | Only appearance of Lion. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
51 | Safety Second | July 1, 1950 | Jerry and Nibbles celebrate Independence Day. Nibbles wants to set off firecrackers, but Jerry would rather play it safer. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
52 | Tom and Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl | September 16, 1950 | Tom conducts the overture of Die Fledermaus by Johann Strauss II at the Hollywood Bowl, but Jerry also wants to conduct. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1957. |
53 | The Framed Cat | October 21, 1950 | When Tom steals a chicken drumstick and frames Jerry, Jerry gets even by stealing Spike's bone and framing Tom. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1956. |
54 | Cue Ball Cat | November 25, 1950 | Tom and Jerry duel in a billiard hall. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1956. |
1951
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
55 | Casanova Cat | January 6, 1951 | Tom offers Jerry as a gift to a wealthy and attractive female cat (Toodles). Jerry attracts the attention of another cat (Butch) who also becomes interested in her, resulting in a fight between Tom and the other cat for her affection. | Blackface gag removed from television and omitted from DVD due to racial stereotyping.[6] Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
56 | Jerry and the Goldfish | March 3, 1951 | Jerry must save a goldfish from Tom. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
57 | Jerry's Cousin | April 7, 1951 | Jerry enlists help from his tough cousin Muscles to deal with Tom. | Nominated for an Oscar for Academy Award for Short Subject, Cartoon. First appearance of Muscles Mouse. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
58 | Sleepy-Time Tom | May 26, 1951 | After staying out all night with his alley cat friends, Tom attempts to catch Jerry on Mammy Two Shoes' orders, but he gets sleepy in the process. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
59 | His Mouse Friday | July 7, 1951 | Tom becomes a castaway on an island and chases Jerry to a native village, but Jerry tricks the cat by disguising himself as a blackface native. | Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. This short is edited in two ways on Tom and Jerry on Parade VHS and Spotlight Collection DVD.[8] |
60 | Slicked-up Pup | September 8, 1951 | Spike threatens Tom to keep Tyke clean while he is gone. Jerry dirties Tyke to get Tom in trouble. | |
61 | Nit-Witty Kitty | October 6, 1951 | Mammy Two Shoes accidentally knocks Tom out with a blow to the head which causes him to forget who he is and think that he is a mouse, and Jerry finds Tom more obnoxious as a fellow rodent. | |
62 | Cat Napping | December 8, 1951 | Tom and Jerry fight over who is going to sleep in the hammock. |
1952
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
63 | The Flying Cat | January 12, 1952 | Tom chases Jerry and Cuckoo by devising an aerial plan of attack. | |
64 | The Duck Doctor | February 16, 1952 | Tom shoots down a wild duckling while hunting. Jerry helps him get airborne again. | |
65 | The Two Mouseketeers | March 15, 1952 | Jerry and Nibbles are hungry Mouseketeers, and Tom is a guard in charge of protecting the king's banquet. | Rarely airs in Brazil due to the ending in which Tom gets executed.[7] Won an Oscar for Best Short Subject, Cartoon.[4] |
66 | Smitten Kitten | April 12, 1952 | When Tom falls in love, Jerry's devil recalls the times when Tom fell in love and caused problems for Jerry. | Compilation short; contains footage from Salt Water Tabby, The Mouse Comes to Dinner, Texas Tom, and Solid Serenade. |
67 | Triplet Trouble | April 19, 1952 | Mammy Two Shoes adopts three kittens who torment Tom and Jerry, so the two team up to have their revenge. | First (official) appearance of kittens Fluff, Muff, and Puff. |
68 | Little Runaway | June 14, 1952 | Tom intends to give an escaped seal pup back to the circus, but Jerry wants to help the seal pup escape. | |
69 | Fit to Be Tied | July 26, 1952 | After the passing of a new leash law, Tom torments Spike and uses the opportunity to chase Jerry, but Jerry has Spike protect him from Tom. | Similar in story and spirit to The Bodyguard. |
70 | Push-Button Kitty | September 6, 1952 | Fed up with Tom's laziness, Mammy buys a new mouse-catching robot cat. | Last appearance of Mammy Two Shoes, who was retired from the cartoons. |
71 | Cruise Cat | October 18, 1952 | Tom is hired as a sailor tasked with keeping Jerry off a cruise ship. | Contains footage from Texas Tom. Rereleased in Perspecta Stereo in 1958. |
72 | The Dog House | November 29, 1952 | Spike decides to build his dream dog house, but Tom and Jerry's antics constantly destroy it. |
1953
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
73 | The Missing Mouse | January 10, 1953 | After Jerry is covered in white shoe polish, he scares Tom into thinking that he is an explosive white mouse that escaped from a lab. | Only Tom and Jerry cartoon scored by Edward Plumb because Scott Bradley was on vacation.[3] |
74 | Jerry and Jumbo | February 21, 1953 | Jerry befriends a baby elephant named Jumbo and disguises him as a large mouse to mess with Tom. | First appearance of Jumbo and his mother. |
75 | Johann Mouse | March 21, 1953 | As the pet owned by Johann Strauss in Vienna, Tom becomes an accomplished pianist himself after his master goes away in order to lure dancing Jerry out with piano music. | Last cartoon in the series to win an Oscar for Best Short Subject, Cartoon. |
76 | That's My Pup! | April 25, 1953 | Spike strikes an agreement with Tom for the feline to act scared whenever Tyke barks at him. | |
77 | Just Ducky | September 5, 1953 | After Quacker hatches, Jerry befriends him and teaches him how to swim so he can find his family, but Jerry must also protect him from Tom. | |
78 | Two Little Indians | October 17, 1953 | Jerry is a scoutmaster who is taking two young mice (both resembling Nibbles) on a hiking trip. | |
79 | Life with Tom | November 21, 1953 | Jerry writes an autobiography titled Life with Tom, which Tom has mixed emotions reading. | Compilation short; contains footage from Cat Fishin', The Little Orphan, and Kitty Foiled. |
1954
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
80 | Puppy Tale | January 23, 1954 | A litter of puppies are thrown into a river, but Jerry saves them and has to deal with one that will not leave him and Tom alone. | |
81 | Posse Cat | January 30, 1954 | Tom is a cat owned by a western rancher living near the La Sal Mountains, who rules that, going forward, Tom's dinner will depend on him keeping Jerry out of the shack from stealing their food. Tom and Jerry eventually reach a truce that allows Tom to earn the meal. | Similar in story and spirit to Texas Tom. |
82 | Hic-cup Pup | April 17, 1954 | Tom's usual antics of chasing Jerry wake Tyke up, and the puppy gets the hiccups. This annoys Spike, who threatens Tom to keep quiet, while Jerry tries to frame him. | |
83 | Little School Mouse | May 29, 1954 | Jerry is a professor with a certified degree in outwitting cats, and tries to teach Nibbles how to do so, with very little success. | Similar in story and spirit to Professor Tom. |
84 | Baby Butch | August 14, 1954 | Butch disguises himself as a baby to steal food from Tom and Jerry's household, aggravating both of them. | |
85 | Mice Follies | September 4, 1954 | Jerry and Nibbles flood the kitchen and freeze it, turning it into a skating rink, causing Tom to use unusual tactics to catch them. | |
86 | Neapolitan Mouse | October 2, 1954 | Tom and Jerry vacation in Naples and encounter a local mouse named Topo. | |
87 | Downhearted Duckling | November 13, 1954 | After reading the story of "The Ugly Duckling", Quacker is persistent with the idea of his being ugly, and even resorts to being eaten by Tom rather than to live with his "ugliness". | |
88 | Pet Peeve | November 20, 1954 | After the cost of dog and cat food increase, George and Joan (Tom and Spike's owners) decide they must get rid of one of them before they are eaten out of their home. Tom and Spike must compete to catch Jerry so they can stay, but both get kicked out in the end and Jerry stays. | Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in widescreen CinemaScope. First appearances of George and Joan, although their faces are not seen here. |
89 | Touché, Pussy Cat! | December 18, 1954 | Captain Jerry tries to teach eager Nibbles how to become a Mouseketeer. | Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in widescreen CinemaScope. Last cartoon to get nominated for an Oscar for Best Short Subjects, Cartoons. |
1955
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
90 | Southbound Duckling | March 12, 1955 | Quacker is determined to fly south for the winter, which Jerry objects since farm ducks do not fly south, while Tom tries to catch the duck. | Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in CinemaScope. |
91 | Pup on a Picnic | April 30, 1955 | Spike and Tyke are having a picnic, but several inconveniences occur. | Produced simultaneously in both the standard Academy format and in CinemaScope. |
92 | Mouse for Sale | May 21, 1955 | Tom sells Jerry disguising him as a white mouse after seeing an ad in the newspaper. But his plan to get rich backfires when the house owner finds the money and buys Jerry back. | |
93 | Designs on Jerry | September 2, 1955 | Stick figure versions of Tom and Jerry come to life when Tom creates a very detailed blueprint of a mousetrap. | |
94 | Tom and Chérie | September 9, 1955 | Mouseketeer Nibbles gets frustrated when Captain Mouseketeer Jerry repeatedly asks him to deliver his love letters despite Mouseketeer Nibbles's continually encountering troubles with Tom along the way. | Produced in CinemaScope. This is the only Tom and Jerry episode during the Hanna-Barbera era where Tom and Jerry never come in contact with each other. |
95 | Smarty Cat | October 14, 1955 | Tom and his pals watch old footage of Spike's misery while the owners are not home. | Compilation short; contains footage from Solid Serenade, Cat Fishin', and Fit to Be Tied. |
96 | Pecos Pest | November 11, 1955 | Jerry's uncle Pecos comes to the city with his guitar for his television singing debut. Tom is terrified of Pecos because he keeps using Tom's whiskers as replacement guitar strings. | Only appearance of Uncle Pecos. Last Tom and Jerry cartoon released in the standard Academy format. All subsequent Hanna-Barbera cartoons were released in CinemaScope. Last Tom and Jerry cartoon released with Fred Quimby as producer. |
97 | That's My Mommy | November 19, 1955 | Quacker hatches near Tom and imprints on him, thinking Tom is his mother, despite Jerry's multiple pleas to show him otherwise. | Produced in CinemaScope. First Tom and Jerry cartoon with William Hanna and Joseph Barbera as both producers and directors. |
1956
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
98 | The Flying Sorceress | January 27, 1956 | Tom sees an advert wanting an intelligent cat as a travel companion. He leaves his home for the new job, only to find a creepy house occupied by a witch, who wants a cat to take on broomstick rides. | The first short Joan's face is seen. Produced in CinemaScope. |
99 | The Egg and Jerry | March 23, 1956 | A mother woodpecker leaves for lunch leaving her egg behind, but the egg ends up in Jerry's home and hatches. The baby woodpecker thinks Jerry is his mother and saves him from Tom. | Produced in CinemaScope. CinemaScope remake of Hatch Up Your Troubles and first of the three CinemaScope remakes. |
100 | Busy Buddies | May 4, 1956 | When Jeannie the babysitter is too busy on the phone to look after the baby who is constantly crawling away, Tom and Jerry collaborate to make sure the baby does not get hurt. | First appearance of Jeannie and the Baby. Produced in CinemaScope. |
101 | Muscle Beach Tom | September 7, 1956 | Tom arrives at the beach with a female cat to spend some quality time. But instead, he is competing with Butch by lifting weights to impress her. | Produced in CinemaScope. |
102 | Down Beat Bear | October 21, 1956 | A dancing bear escapes from the zoo and arrives at Tom and Jerry's house, so Jerry keeps playing music to make him dance with Tom and prevent Tom from calling to collect the reward. | Produced in CinemaScope. |
103 | Blue Cat Blues | November 16, 1956 | Jerry, narrating, recounts the tragic love story that led to Tom's depression. | Deemed infamous for its depictions of alcoholism and suicide. This was mistaken as Tom and Jerry's last film, but it did not stop there.[9][10] |
104 | Barbecue Brawl | December 14, 1956 | Spike shows his son Tyke how to barbecue, but they have to deal with constant interruptions. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
1957
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
105 | Tops with Pops | February 22, 1957 | Jerry hides with Spike and Tyke so Tom will get in trouble if he tries to catch him. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. CinemaScope remake version of Love That Pup and second of the three Cinemascope remakes. |
106 | Timid Tabby | April 19, 1957 | Tom's cousin George comes to visit, and he is afraid of mice. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
107 | Feedin' the Kiddie | June 7, 1957 | Jerry and Tuffy dine on Thanksgiving treats until Tom tries to stop them. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. Remake of The Little Orphan with Nibbles named as Tuffy and is Jerry's nephew. |
108 | Mucho Mouse | September 6, 1957 | Tom is a mouse-catching world champion and arrives in Spain to catch Jerry, known as El Magnifico, but he miserably fails to catch him. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
109 | Tom's Photo Finish | November 1, 1957 | When Tom eats his owner's chicken and frames Spike, Jerry takes a picture to expose him, spreading copies around the house for his owners to see them. Tom goes to extreme measures to destroy or otherwise hide the photos from his owners, but ultimately fails. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
1958
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
110 | Happy Go Ducky | January 3, 1958 | The Easter Bunny leaves an Easter egg for Tom and Jerry, which hatches into Quacker who thoroughly annoys them. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
111 | Royal Cat Nap | March 7, 1958 | Royal guard Tom must get rid of Mouseketeers Jerry and Tuffy without waking up the king from his nap. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
112 | The Vanishing Duck | May 2, 1958 | In a plot reminiscent of 1947's The Invisible Mouse, Jerry and Quacker become invisible using vanishing cream and play pranks on Tom. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
113 | Robin Hoodwinked | June 6, 1958 | After Robin Hood gets locked up, Jerry and Tuffy attempt to save him, but first they must get past Tom. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
114 | Tot Watchers | August 1, 1958 | Due to Jeanine the babysitter's carelessness, Tom and Jerry must once again keep the baby from harm every time it gets loose. | Produced in CinemaScope and Perspecta Stereo. |
1961–1962: Gene Deitch/Rembrandt Films cartoons
The following thirteen cartoons were directed by Gene Deitch, produced by William L. Snyder, and animated at Snyder's Rembrandt Films in Prague, Czechoslovakia (now in the Czech Republic). All cartoons were released to theaters by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
1961
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
115 | Switchin' Kitten | September 7, 1961 | ||
116 | Down and Outing | October 26, 1961 | ||
117 | It's Greek to Me-ow! | December 7, 1961 |
1962
No. | Title | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
118 | High Steaks | March 23, 1962 | |
119 | Mouse into Space | April 13, 1962 | |
120 | Landing Stripling | May 18, 1962 | |
121 | Calypso Cat | June 22, 1962 | |
122 | Dicky Moe | July 20, 1962 | |
123 | The Tom and Jerry Cartoon Kit | August 10, 1962 | |
124 | Tall in the Trap | September 14, 1962 | |
125 | Sorry Safari | October 12, 1962 | |
126 | Buddies Thicker Than Water | November 1, 1962 | |
127 | Carmen Get It! | December 21, 1962 |
1963–1967: Chuck Jones/Sib Tower cartoons
The following 34 cartoons were produced by Chuck Jones in Hollywood, California. Earlier cartoons were produced in conjunction with Walter Bien's "Sib Tower 12 Productions" (one or the other credited on the 1963 and 1964 productions), until it was integrated into a new animation department called MGM Animation/Visual Arts. Directors (if other than Jones) or co-directors for each short are listed. All cartoons were released to theaters by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Note: All the Chuck Jones MGM Tom and Jerry shorts were in Metrocolor.
All were released on DVD in 2009 as part of Tom and Jerry: The Chuck Jones Collection.
1963
No. | Title | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
128 | Pent-House Mouse | July 27, 1963 |
1964
No. | Title | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
129 | The Cat Above and the Mouse Below | February 25, 1964 | |
130 | Is There a Doctor in the Mouse? | March 24, 1964 | |
131 | Much Ado About Mousing | April 14, 1964 | |
132 | Snowbody Loves Me | May 12, 1964 | |
133 | The Unshrinkable Jerry Mouse | December 8, 1964 |
1965
No. | Title | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
134 | Ah, Sweet Mouse-Story of Life | January 20, 1965 | |
135 | Tom-ic Energy | January 27, 1965 | |
136 | Bad Day at Cat Rock | February 10, 1965 | |
137 | The Brothers Carry-Mouse-Off | March 3, 1965 | Directed by Jim Pabian. |
138 | Haunted Mouse | March 24, 1965 | |
139 | I'm Just Wild About Jerry | April 7, 1965 | |
140 | Of Feline Bondage | May 19, 1965 | |
141 | The Year of the Mouse | June 9, 1965 | |
142 | The Cat's Me-Ouch! | December 22, 1965 |
1966
No. | Title | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
143 | Duel Personality | January 20, 1966 | |
144 | Jerry, Jerry, Quite Contrary | February 17, 1966 | |
145 | Jerry-Go-Round | March 3, 1966 | Directed by Abe Levitow. |
146 | Love Me, Love My Mouse | April 28, 1966 | Directed by Chuck Jones and Ben Washam. Last appearance of Toodles. |
147 | Puss 'n' Boats | May 5, 1966 | Directed by Abe Levitow. |
148 | Filet Meow | June 30, 1966 | Directed by Abe Levitow. |
149 | Matinee Mouse | July 14, 1966 | Direction credited to William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, with story and supervision by Tom Ray. Compilation short; contains footage from The Flying Cat, Professor Tom, The Missing Mouse, Jerry and the Lion, Love That Pup, The Flying Sorceress, Jerry's Diary, and The Truce Hurts. Tom and Jerry watch themselves in a theater. |
150 | The A-Tom-inable Snowman | August 4, 1966 | Directed by Abe Levitow. |
151 | Catty-Cornered | September 8, 1966 | Directed by Abe Levitow. |
1967
No. | Title | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
152 | Cat and Dupli-cat | January 20, 1967 | |
153 | O-Solar-Meow | February 24, 1967 | Directed by Abe Levitow. |
154 | Guided Mouse-ille | March 10, 1967 | Directed by Abe Levitow. Followup to O-Solar-Meow. |
155 | Rock 'n' Rodent | April 7, 1967 | Directed by Abe Levitow. |
156 | Cannery Rodent | April 14, 1967 | |
157 | The Mouse from H.U.N.G.E.R. | April 21, 1967 | Directed by Abe Levitow. |
158 | Surf-Bored Cat | May 5, 1967 | Directed by Abe Levitow. |
159 | Shutter Bugged Cat | June 23, 1967 | Direction credited to William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, with story and supervision by Tom Ray. Compilation short; Contains footage from Part Time Pal, The Yankee Doodle Mouse, Nit-Witty Kitty, Johann Mouse, Heavenly Puss, and Designs on Jerry. |
160 | Advance and Be Mechanized | August 25, 1967 | Directed by Ben Washam. Followup to O-Solar-Meow. |
161 | Purr-Chance to Dream | September 8, 1967 | Directed by Ben Washam. Followup to The Cat's Me-Ouch. |
2001–present: Warner Bros. cartoons
2001: Hanna-Barbera Productions/Turner Entertainment cartoon
No. | Title | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
162 | The Mansion Cat | April 8, 2001 | Only made-for-TV short. Directed by Karl Toerge. Contains footage from Muscle Beach Tom. |
2005, 2014, 2021: Warner Bros. Animation cartoons
No. | Title | Date | Summary | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
163 | The Karate Guard | September 27, 2005 | Spike saves Jerry from Tom. | Directed by Joseph Barbera and Spike Brandt. |
164 | A Fundraising Adventure | November 14, 2014 | Tom and Jerry had been asked by Pudsey to raise money for BBC's Children in Need. | Children in Need special |
165 | On a Roll | February 20, 2021 | In Japan, the local sushi chef with his cat Tom notice a mouse known as Jerry scurrying around the Chef's restaurant. In order to earn Chef's keep, Tom determines to catch the sushi-stealing mouse. | Directed by Kenny Pittenger. |
166 | The House That Cat Built | February 20, 2021 | Following Tom's extra-deluxe, extra-large cat castle destroying a "Hole Sweet Hole" portrait in Jerry's house, Jerry invades the castle. Tom becomes determined to get Jerry out of his own luxury. | Directed by David Gemmill. |
Spin-offs and other appearances
- The Alley Cat (1941 film, MGM one-shot cartoon) with Butch and Toodles
- War Dogs (1943 film, MGM one-shot cartoon) with Spike cameo
- Anchors Aweigh (1945 film) with Tom and Jerry cameo
- Dangerous When Wet (1953 film) with Tom and Jerry cameo
- The Three Little Pups (1953 film, Droopy cartoon) with Spike cameo
- Spike and Tyke (1957 MGM cartoon series) with Spike and Tyke
- Tom and Jerry: The Movie (1992 feature film)
- Tom & Jerry (2021 feature film)[11]
- The Tom and Jerry Show (1975 TV series, 16 episodes)
- The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show (1980 TV series, 15 episodes)
- Tom & Jerry Kids (1990 TV series, 65 episodes)
- Tom and Jerry Tales (2006 TV series, 26 episodes)
- The Tom and Jerry Show (2014 TV series, 71 episodes)
- Tom and Jerry in New York (2021 TV series)
- Tom and Jerry (2022 TV series)
- Tom and Jerry (2023 TV series)
- Tom and Jerry: The Magic Ring (2002 film)
- Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars (2005 film)
- Tom and Jerry: The Fast and the Furry (2005 film)
- Tom and Jerry: Shiver Me Whiskers (2006 film)
- Tom and Jerry: A Nutcracker Tale (2007 film)
- Tom and Jerry Meet Sherlock Holmes (2010 film)
- Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz (2011 film)
- Tom and Jerry: Robin Hood and His Merry Mouse (2012 film)
- Tom and Jerry's Giant Adventure (2013 film)
- Tom and Jerry: The Lost Dragon (2014 film)
- Tom and Jerry: Spy Quest (2015 film)
- Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz (2016 film)
- Tom and Jerry: Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (2017 film)
- Tom and Jerry: Cowboy Up! (2022 film)
- Tom and Jerry: Snowman's Land (2022 film)
Notes
- ^ Leonard Maltin's book of Mice and Magic: History of American Animated Cartoons
- ^ "MGM Titles". Archived from the original on June 1, 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2011.
- ^ a b Happy Harmonies and Disturbing Discords: Scott Bradley's Music for MGM's Cartoons, Helen Alexander, p. 145
- ^ a b c Vallance, Tom (December 20, 2006). "Joseph Barbera: Animation pioneer whose creations with William Hanna included the Flintstones and Tom and Jerry". The Independent (London).
- ^ Beck, Jerry (ed.) (1994). The 50 Greatest Cartoons: As Selected by 1,000 Animation Professionals. Atlanta: Turner Publishing. ISBN 1-878685-49-X.
- ^ a b Lacey, Gord. "Tom and Jerry - Two shorts missing - Statement from Warner Bros". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on September 15, 2007. Retrieved September 10, 2007.
- ^ a b "Cartoon Network confirma que tirou do ar "apenas" DOIS episódios de Tom & Jerry" (in Portuguese). Judão. September 26, 2013. Archived from the original on September 28, 2013. Retrieved September 26, 2013.
- ^ Corey, Joe (October 15, 2007). "Tom and Jerry: The Spotlight Collection, Volume 3 – DVD Review". Inside Pulse. Digital Grout. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
- ^ Gupta, Abir (July 2, 2016). "Do You Know What Happens To Your Favorite Tom and Jerry In The End?". Storypick. Retrieved December 11, 2023.
- ^ Pall, Vincent; Koski, Dustin; Ciscell, Jim (August 16, 2012). "5 Old Children's Cartoons Way Darker Than Most Horror Movies". Cracked. Retrieved December 11, 2023.
- ^ WarnerMedia [@WarnerMedia] (May 28, 2020). "#HBOMax is here! 🥳 Our groundbreaking..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.