vitanola
I'll Lock Up
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Doctor Strange said:As usual, Lizzie is right: it's commerical interests that account for attempts to cover up "embarrassing" old cartoons, not altruistic concerns for anyone's feelings.
Regarding Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs: I have owned a 16mm print of this cartoon for over thirty years, and have shown it in all kinds of contexts - always with a bit of an explanatory preface... and never with anything less than splendid results!
The racial stereotyping in Coal Black is not intended to be offensive, it's played strictly for laughs, along with everything else stuffed into this great cartoon: references to wartime rationing, army life, Citizen Kane, etc. It's very much a product of the freaky energy of the war years, filtered through Bob Clampett's unique direction.
The key comment I always mention when I show it is that the actual target of satire in this cartoon is not the African-American community, but Walt Disney's pretentions in adapting European fairy tales like Snow White in such an uncreatively traditional manner, rather than using America's own unique vernacular, i.e., jazz. Following Tex Avery's lead, Clampett just wants to jazz up these fairy tales for a contemporary audience and have some fun with them.
If you've studied Hollywood cartoons as much as I have, and have seen films that do use racial stereotypes as an end in themselves, that do intend to demean African-Americans, it's very clear that Clampett isn't out to do that in Coal Black (or the equally delightful Tin Pan Alley Cats).
Pretending that decades of comedy - in movies, radio, and vaudeville - wasn't largely based on that period's commonly accepted racial/religious comic stereotypes is a miscarriage of history. It's a lot more enlightening to see the past as it was, both good and bad, than to whitewash it...
One that I've been looking since seeing a black and white television print some twenty-five years ago was "Harlem Hep-cats", which could very well be titled "Fats Waller aux Enfers". Quite droll. I suspect that it was a Bob Clampett number, as it has Clampett's trademark manic pace.