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[[Category:Films featuring anthropomorphic characters]]
[[Category:Films featuring anthropomorphic characters]]
[[Category:Merrie Melodies shorts]]
[[Category:Merrie Melodies shorts]]
[[Category:American films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Hugh Harman]]
[[Category:Films directed by Hugh Harman]]
[[Category:Films directed by Rudolf Ising]]
[[Category:Films directed by Rudolf Ising]]

Revision as of 05:56, 12 June 2015

Goopy Geer
Goopy Geer playing the piano.
Directed byRudolf Ising
Produced byHugh Harman
Rudolf Ising
Leon Schlesinger
Animation byIsadore Freleng
Rollin Hamilton
Layouts byIsadore Freleng (uncredited)
Backgrounds byArt Loomer (uncredited)
Color processBlack-and-white
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros.
The Vitaphone Corporation
Running time
7 minutes

Goopy Geer is a 1932 Merrie Melodies cartoon short, featuring the first appearance of the title character.

Synopsis

The customers in a nightclub clamor for Goopy Geer, who then comes out on the stage and entertains them by playing the piano, first with his fingers and his ears, later with his animated gloves. He's soon accompanied by a girl who tells a joke and sings a song.

Meanwhile, the customers eat and carry on in slapstick ways, and two coat racks dance together.

Toward the end, a drunken horse breathes fire and destroys the piano, but Goopy keeps right on playing.

Notes

  • Two scenes—one involving a waiter, the other the drunken horse—are reused from the earlier Foxy short Lady, Play Your Mandolin! Also, one of the customers, a fat lady hippo, had also appeared in a Foxy short, Smile, Darn Ya, Smile!
  • Goopy bears some resemblance to Disney's (unnamed at the time) Goofy who first came along 39 days later.

References

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