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{{Infobox Hollywood cartoon
{{Infobox Hollywood cartoon
|cartoon_name=Let It Be Me
|cartoon_name=Let It Be Me
|series=Merrie Melodies
|series=[[Merrie Melodies]] (Emily)
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[[Category:Short films directed by Friz Freleng]]
[[Category:Short films directed by Friz Freleng]]
[[Category:Merrie Melodies shorts]]
[[Category:Merrie Melodies shorts]]
[[Category:Films about animals]]

[[Category:Animated films about animals]]
[[Category:Films about chickens]]
{{MerrieMelodies-stub}}
{{MerrieMelodies-stub}}

Revision as of 02:19, 15 June 2018

Let It Be Me
Directed byI. Freleng
Produced byLeon Schlesinger
Animation byBob McKimson
Don Williams
Paul J. Smith
Cal Dalton
Sandy Walker
Phil Monroe
Charles McKimson (assistant)
Color processTechnicolor
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Running time
7 min (one reel)

Let It Be Me is a 1936 Merrie Melodies cartoon short directed by Friz Freleng.

Plot

The plot revolves around an anthropomorphic hen named Emily (a prototype Miss Prissy), whose boyfriend rooster is just about to propose marriage to her when she gets infatuated with a passing rooster motorist, the radio crooner Mr. Bingo (a caricature of Bing Crosby). She goes with Mr. Bingo instead. Bingo, while dating Emily in a nightclub, gets infatuated with a singing hen, and after Emily cries that Bingo no longer loves him, has a waiter throw her out into the street. Crying, she then fends for herself selling violets on a winter day. The jilted boyfriend meanwhile overhears Mr. Bingo on the radio. He grabs the radio and smashes it on the ground, with the "boo boo boo boo" sounding as if the radio is in its death throes. He eventually makes his way to the city, goes to the radio station and gives Bingo his just due in the middle of a broadcast. He then finds Emily selling violets, forgives her and marries her, and sires her brood.

In the concluding scene, both were lounging in the living room when the scene is cut to one of her brood of chicks singing at the piano the song that Emily first heard when she dated Mr. Bingo. A book is hurled and hits the poor chick, silencing the singing.

This cartoon, along with Bingo Crosbyana were the two Warner Bros. cartoons which Bing Crosby initiated lawsuits to suppress because they portrayed him in what Crosby considered a defamatory light. In this case, he objected to his portrayal as unfaithful to women and to the imitation of his voice.[1]

Availability

Available on the 2005 DVD release of Follow the Fleet (1936) starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers.

References

  1. ^ Cohen (2004), p. 39-40