Friz Freleng
Friz Freleng | |
---|---|
Born | Isadore Freleng August 21, 1905 Kansas City, Missouri, U.S. |
Died | May 26, 1995 Los Angeles, California, U.S. | (aged 89)
Resting place | Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery |
Other names | I. Freleng Congressman Frizby |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1920–1995[2] |
Employer(s) | Laugh-O-Gram Studio (1920-1923) Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio/Walt Disney Studio (1923–1928) Screen Gems (1928-1930) Harman-Ising (1929–1933) Warner Bros. Cartoons (1933–1937, 1939–1964) MGM (1937–1940) Warner Bros. Animation (1981-1986) |
Spouse |
Lily Schoenfeld Freleng
(m. 1932) |
Children | 2 |
Isadore "Friz" Freleng (August 21, 1905[a] – May 26, 1995[4]), often credited as I. Freleng, was an American animator, cartoonist, director, producer, and composer known for his work at Warner Bros. Cartoons on the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of cartoons.
He introduced and/or developed several of the studio's biggest stars, including Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Tweety, Sylvester, Yosemite Sam (to whom he was said to bear more than a passing resemblance), and Speedy Gonzales. The senior director at Warners' Termite Terrace studio, Freleng directed more cartoons than any other director in the studio (a total of 266), and is also the most honored of the Warner directors, having won five Academy Awards and three Emmy Awards. After Warner closed down the animation studio in 1963, Freleng and business partner David H. DePatie founded DePatie–Freleng Enterprises, which produced cartoons (including The Pink Panther Show), feature film title sequences, and Saturday-morning cartoons through the early 1980s.
The nickname "Friz" came from his friend, Hugh Harman, who initially nicknamed him "Congressman Frizby" after a fictional senator who appeared in satirical pieces in the Los Angeles Examiner. Over time, this shortened to "Friz".[6]
Early career
Freleng was born to a Jewish family[7] in Kansas City, Missouri, where he began his career in animation at United Film Ad Service.[6][8] There, he made the acquaintance of fellow animators Hugh Harman and Ub Iwerks. In 1923, Iwerks' friend, Walt Disney, moved to Hollywood and put out a call for his Kansas City colleagues to join him. Freleng, however, held out until January 1927, when he finally moved to California and joined the Walt Disney studio. He worked alongside other former Kansas City animators, including Iwerks, Harman, Carman Maxwell, and Rudolph Ising. While at Disney, Freleng worked on the Alice Comedies and Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoons for producers Margaret Winkler and Charles Mintz. Friz said in an interview with Michael Barrier that Walt had patience and remorse in letters prior to joining him, but didn't show that attitude and instead Walt became abusive and he harassed him.[6][9][8][10]
Freleng soon teamed up with Harman and Ising to try to create their own studio. The trio produced a pilot film starring a new Mickey Mouse-like character named Bosko. Looking at unemployment if the cartoon failed to generate interest, Freleng moved to New York City to work on Mintz' Krazy Kat cartoons,[8][9] all the while still trying to sell the Harman-Ising Bosko picture. Freleng was very unhappy living in New York and made the best of it until another opportunity opened for him. Bosko was finally sold to Leon Schlesinger, who would produce the series for Warner Bros. At first Freleng was reluctant to return to California when Harman-Ising asked him to work on the series. At the insistence of his sister Jean, Freleng soon moved back to California to work on Looney Tunes.[8]
Freleng as director
Early Schlesinger cartoons
Harman and Ising left Schlesinger's studio over disputes about budgets in 1933. Schlesinger was left with no experienced directors and therefore lured Freleng away from Harman-Ising to successfully fix cartoons directed by Tom Palmer which Warner rejected. The young animator became Schlesinger's top director, and he introduced the studio's first true post-Bosko star, Porky Pig, in the film, I Haven't Got a Hat (1935). Porky was a distinctive character, unlike Bosko or his replacement, Buddy.[8]
As a director, Freleng gained the reputation of a tough taskmaster. His unit, however, consistently produced high-quality animated shorts under his direction.[11]
Friz Freleng directed the largest number of cartoons on the Censored Eleven, a group of Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons originally produced and released by Warner Bros. that were withheld from syndication in the United States by United Artists (UA) in 1968 because the use of ethnic stereotypes in the cartoons, specifically African stereotypes, was deemed too offensive for contemporary audiences.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
In September 1937, Freleng left Schlesinger after accepting an increase in salary to direct for the new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio headed by Fred Quimby. Freleng served as a director on The Captain and the Kids, an animated series adapted from the comic strip, The Katzenjammer Kids. In November 1938, Freleng became a "junior director" under Hugh Harman but quit after 6 months in April 1939.[12]
Back with Schlesinger and Warner Bros.
Freleng happily returned to Warner Bros. in mid-April 1939[13] when his MGM contract ended. One of the first Looney Tunes cartoon shorts directed by Freleng during his second tenure at the studio was You Ought to Be in Pictures, a cartoon short which blended animation with live-action footage of the Warner Bros. studio (and included staff such as story man Michael Maltese and Schlesinger himself). The plot, which centers around Porky Pig being tricked by Daffy Duck into terminating his contract with Schlesinger to attempt a career in features, echoes Freleng's experience in moving to MGM.
Directorial achievements
Schlesinger's hands-off attitude toward his animators allowed Freleng and his fellow directors almost complete creative control and room to experiment with cartoon comedy styles, which allowed the studio to keep pace with the Disney studio's technical superiority. Freleng's style quickly matured, and he became a master of comic timing. Often working alongside layout artist Hawley Pratt, he also introduced or redesigned a number of Warner characters, including Yosemite Sam in 1945, the cat-and-bird duo Sylvester and Tweety in 1947, and Speedy Gonzales in 1955.
Freleng and Chuck Jones would dominate the Warner Bros. studio in the years after World War II, with Freleng largely concentrating on the above-mentioned characters, as well as Bugs Bunny. Freleng continued to produce modernized versions of the musical comedies he animated in his early career, such as Three Little Bops (1957) and Pizzicato Pussycat (1955). He won four Oscars during his time at Warner Bros., for the films Tweetie Pie (1947), Speedy Gonzales (1955), Birds Anonymous (1957) and Knighty Knight Bugs (1958). Other Freleng cartoons, such as Sandy Claws (1955), Mexicali Shmoes (1959), Mouse and Garden (1960) and The Pied Piper of Guadalupe (1961) were Oscar nominees.
Freleng's cartoon, Show Biz Bugs (1957), with Daffy Duck vying with Bugs Bunny for theatre audience appreciation, was arguably a template for the successful format of The Bugs Bunny Show that premiered on television in the autumn of 1960. Further, Freleng directed the cartoons with the erudite and ever-so-polite Goofy Gophers encountering the relentless wheels of human industry, them being I Gopher You (1954) and Lumber Jerks (1955), and he also directed three cartoons (sponsored by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation) extolling the virtues of free-market capitalism: By Word of Mouse (1954), Heir-Conditioned (1955) and Yankee Dood It (1956), all three of which involved Sylvester. Freleng directed all three of the vintage Warner Brothers cartoons in which a drinking of Dr. Jekyll's potion (of The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde) induces a series of monstrous transformations: Dr. Jerkyl's Hide (1954), Hyde and Hare (1955) and Hyde and Go Tweet (1960). Other Freleng fancies were man at war with the insect world (as in Of Thee I Sting (1946) and Ant Pasted (1953)), an inebriated stork delivering the wrong baby (in A Mouse Divided (1952), Stork Naked (1955) and Apes of Wrath (1959)), and characters marrying for money and finding themselves with a shrewish wife and a troublesome step-son (His Bitter Half (1949) and Honey's Money (1962)).
Freleng was occasionally the subject of in-jokes in Warner cartoons. In Canary Row (1950), there were billboards in the background of scenes advertising various products called "Friz". The "Hotel Friz" was featured in Racketeer Rabbit (1946) and "Frizby the Magician" was one of the acts Bugs Bunny pitched in High Diving Hare (1949).
Musical knowledge and technique
Freleng was somewhat of a musical composer and a classically trained violinist who timed his cartoons on musical bar sheets. Freleng would time gags that best utilized Carl Stalling's, Milt Franklyn's or William Lava's music. He was one of a very few directors at Warner Bros. to have musical knowledge for making cartoons. Every cartoon Freleng directed from the late 1930s to 1963 was made with his creative musical technique.[1] Freleng's directorial style differed from Chuck Jones and Robert McKimson.
DePatie–Freleng Enterprises
Warner Bros. Cartoons was closed in 1964, leading Freleng to take a job at Hanna-Barbera Productions as story supervisor on their first feature, Hey There, It's Yogi Bear![14][8] Freleng rented the same space from Warners to create cartoons with his now-former boss, producer David H. DePatie (the final producer hired by Warner Bros. to oversee the cartoon division), forming DePatie–Freleng Enterprises. When Warner decided to reopen their cartoon studio in 1964, due to Freleng asking them if he can rent the studio, eventually settling for $500, they did so in name only; DePatie–Freleng produced the cartoons into 1966.[8]
The DePatie–Freleng studio's signature achievement was The Pink Panther. DePatie–Freleng was commissioned to create the opening titles for the feature film The Pink Panther (1963), for which layout artist and director Hawley Pratt and Freleng created a suave, cool cat character. The Pink Panther cartoon character became so popular that United Artists, distributors of The Pink Panther, had Freleng produce a short cartoon starring the character, The Pink Phink (1964).
After The Pink Phink won the 1965 Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Cartoons), Freleng and DePatie responded by producing a whole series of Pink Panther cartoons. Other original cartoon series, among them The Inspector, The Ant and the Aardvark, Tijuana Toads, The Dogfather, Roland and Rattfink and Crazylegs Crane, soon followed. In 1969, The Pink Panther Show, a Saturday morning anthology program featuring DePatie–Freleng cartoons, debuted on NBC. The Pink Panther and the other original DePatie–Freleng series would remain in production through 1980, with new cartoons produced for simultaneous Saturday morning broadcast and United Artists theatrical release.
Layout artist Hawley Pratt, who worked at DePatie–Freleng during the time, is credited with the creation of Frito-Lay's Chester Cheetah, on the Food Network show "Deep Fried Treats Unwrapped", though some sources say it was DDB Worldwide, while others credit Brad Morgan. The studio is also known for creating the color opening title sequence for the I Dream of Jeannie television series. DePatie–Freleng also contributed special effects to the original version of Star Wars (1977), particularly the animation of the lightsaber blades.
By 1967, DePatie and Freleng had moved their operations to the San Fernando Valley. Their studio was located on Hayvenhurst Avenue in Van Nuys. One of their projects, titled Goldilocks, featured Bing Crosby and his family, and had songs by the Sherman Brothers. At their new facilities, they continued to produce new cartoons until 1980, when they sold DePatie–Freleng to Marvel Comics, which renamed it Marvel Productions.
Later career and death
Freleng later served as an executive producer on three 1980s Looney Tunes compilation features, which linked together several of the classic shorts with new animated sequences. The Freleng-produced compilation features were The Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny Movie (1981), Bugs Bunny's 3rd Movie: 1001 Rabbit Tales (1982), and Daffy Duck's Fantastic Island (1983).
In 1986, Freleng stepped down and gave his position at Warner Bros. to his secretary at the time, Kathleen Helppie-Shipley, who ended up being the second-longest producer of the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies franchise, behind only Leon Schlesinger.
In 1994, the International Family Film Festival presented its first Lifetime Achievement of Excellence in Animation award to Freleng, and the award has since been referred to as the "Friz Award" in his honor.[15]
On May 26, 1995, Friz Freleng died of natural causes in Los Angeles, aged 89. The WB animated TV series The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries, and the Looney Tunes cartoon From Hare to Eternity (which was the last one directed by Chuck Jones), were both dedicated to his memory. After his death, Cartoon Network aired a variation of one of their station idents with the words "Friz Freleng: 1906–1995" (which the birth year is disputed) appearing and an announcer paying tribute to Freleng and his works. He is interred in Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery.[6]
Freleng is portrayed by Taylor Gray in the film Walt Before Mickey (2015).
Filmography
- Alice's Picnic (Short) (animator, 1927)
- The Banker's Daughter (Short) (animator, 1927)
- Fiery Fireman (Short) (director, 1928)
- Bosko the Talk-Ink Kid (Short) (animator – uncredited, 1929)
- Hold Anything (Short) (animator, 1930)
- Hittin' the Trail for Hallelujah Land (Short) (animator, 1931)
- Big Man from the North (Short) (animator, 1931)
- The Tree's Knees (Short) (animator, 1931)
- Battling Bosko (Short) (animator, 1932)
- Moonlight for Two (Short) (animator, 1932)
- It's Got Me Again! (Short) (animator, 1932)
- Bosko in Person (Short) (animator, 1933)
- Buddy's Day Out (Short) (story editor – uncredited; 1933)
- We're in the Money (Short) (animator, 1933)
- I Like Mountain Music (Short) (animator, 1933)
- Poultry Pirates (Short) (story – uncredited, 1938)
- The Honduras Hurricane (Short) (story – uncredited, 1938)
- Shishkabugs (Short) (director, 1962)
- The Jet Cage (Short) (writer, 1962)
- Philbert (Three's a Crowd) (Short) (animation director, 1963)
- Nuts and Volts (Short) (director, 1964)
- It's Nice to Have a Mouse Around the House (Short) (producer, 1965)
- The Wild Chase (Short) (producer, 1965)
- Tease for Two (Short) (producer, 1965)
- Cats and Bruises (Short) (director, 1965)
- The Solid Tin Coyote (Short) (producer, 1966)
- Pink Is a Many Splintered Thing (Short) (producer, 1968)
- Slink Pink (Short) (producer, 1969)
- Shot and Bothered (Short) (producer, 1969)
- The Ant and the Aardvark (Short) (producer, 1969)
- Therapeutic Pink (Short) (producer, 1977)
- Pink Press (Short) (producer, 1978)
- Pinktails for Two (Short) (producer, 1978)
- Bugs Bunny's Looney Christmas Tales (TV Short) (director of "Bugs Bunny" sequences, 1979)
Notes
References
- ^ a b "Irreverent Imagination: The Golden Age of Looney Tunes – video dailymotion". Dailymotion. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
- ^ a b "Friz Freleng". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved January 6, 2014.
- ^ Cliping from the Los Angeles Times
- ^ a b "Animator Friz Freleng dead at 89". UPI. May 26, 1995.
- ^ 1940 census
- ^ a b c d e Arnold, Mark (2015). Think Pink: The Story of DePatie-Freleng. pp. 2–8.
- ^ Silbiger, Steve (May 25, 2000). The Jewish Phenomenon: Seven Keys to the Enduring Wealth of a People. Taylor Trade Publishing. p. 166. ISBN 9781589794900.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Friz Freleng at Reg Hartt's Cineforum, Toronto, Canada, 1980".
- ^ a b "Complimentary Mintz: Krazy Kat and Toby the Pup: 1929–31". Cartoon Research. April 12, 2017. Retrieved May 29, 2020.
- ^ Barrier, Michael (1999). Hollywood cartoons : American animation in its golden age. Oxford University Press. p. 46.
- ^ Sigall (2005), p. 64
- ^ Barrier, Michael (1999). Hollywood cartoons : American animation in its golden age. Oxford University Press. pp. 288, 291–292.
- ^ The Exposure Sheet studio newsletter, Vol. 1, No. 5 https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/the-exposure-sheet-volumes-5-and-6/#prettyphoto[43649]/0/
- ^ Barrier, Michael (2003). Hollywood Cartoons American Animation in Its Golden Age. Oxford University Press. pp. 562–563. ISBN 978-0-19-516729-0.
- ^ "History". August 8, 2016. Archived from the original on February 9, 2019. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
Sources
- Sigall, Martha (2005). "The Boys of Termite Terrace". Living Life Inside the Lines Tales from the Golden Age of Animation. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781578067497.
External links
- 1906 births
- 1995 deaths
- Artists from Kansas City, Missouri
- American animated film producers
- Animators from Missouri
- Animation screenwriters
- Directors of Best Animated Short Academy Award winners
- Film directors from Missouri
- Jewish American artists
- Jewish American writers
- Primetime Emmy Award winners
- Warner Bros. Cartoons directors
- Walt Disney Animation Studios people
- Burials at Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery
- Producers who won the Best Animated Short Academy Award
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio people
- Laugh-O-Gram Studio people
- 20th-century screenwriters