Sneha Girap (Editor)

I Love to Singa

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Genre
  
Family, Animation, Short

Music director
  
Bernard B. Brown

Duration
  

7.8/10
IMDb

Director
  
Film series
  
Merrie Melodies

Producer
  
Language
  
English

I Love to Singa movie poster

Release date
  
July 18, 1936 (original release)November 18, 1944 (Blue Ribbon reissue)

Cast
  
(Father (voice)), (Owl Jolson (voice)),
Johnnie Davis
(Owl Jolson (singing voice)),
Joe Dougherty
(Stuttering Bird (voice)), (Fat Chicken Singer (voice)), (Mother (voice))

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I love to singa owl jolson 1936


I Love to Singa is a Merrie Melodies animated cartoon directed by Tex Avery, produced by Leon Schlesinger, and released to theaters on July 18, 1936, by Warner Bros. and Vitaphone. As with many early Warners cartoons, it is in a sense a music video designed to push a song from the Warners library.

Contents

I Love to Singa movie scenes

The song in question, "I Love to Singa", was first written by Harold Arlen and E.Y. Harburg for the 1936 Warner Bros. feature-length film The Singing Kid. It is performed three times in the film: first by Al Jolson and Cab Calloway, then by the Yacht Club Boys and Jolson, and finally again by Calloway and Jolson. During this period, it was customary for Warners to have their animation production partner, Leon Schlesinger Productions, make Merrie Melodies cartoons based upon songs from their features.

I Love to Singa movie scenes

The cartoon has, in recent years, taken on something of a cult following, with a pervasive impact on popular culture. The short, one of the earliest Merrie Melodies produced in Technicolor's 3-strip process, is recognized as one of Avery's early masterpieces.

I Love to Singa movie scenes

I love to singa


Plot

I Love to Singa httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenee1IL

I Love to Singa depicts the story of a young owlet who wants to sing jazz, instead of the classical music that his German-accented parents wish him to perform. The plot is a lighthearted tribute to Al Jolson's film The Jazz Singer.

I Love to Singa I Love to Singa 1936 The Movie Database TMDb

The young owl's speaking voice is by Tommy Bond, best known as "Butch" of the Our Gang (Little Rascals) films. He is unjustly kicked out of his family's house by his disciplinarian violinist father, Professor Fritz Owl (voiced by Billy Bletcher), after he is caught singing jazz instead of "Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes" to the reed (pump) organ accompaniment of his mother (voiced by Martha Wentworth). While wandering, he comes across a radio amateur contest (clearly a takeoff of the Major Bowes Amateur Hour), hosted by "Jack Bunny" (a pun on Jack Benny and later used in Goofy Groceries), and billing himself as "Owl Jolson" (a reference on Al Jolson). He wins the contest, but not before his father has finally seen his son's potential and allows him to freely sing jazz. His singing voice is by Johnnie Davis.

I Love to Singa Saturday Morning Cartoons I Love to Singa 1936

A spelling error is visible to the talent contest sign hung from Jack Bunny's desk. "Amateur" is spelled "amatuer" the first time the inside of the radio studio is shown. The sign later shows the word correctly spelled when the young owl performs for Jack Bunny.

Musical selections

I Love to Singa I Love to Singa Western Animation TV Tropes

  • The first owlet hatched sang the opening bars of "Chi mi frena in tal momento", from the opera Lucia di Lammermoor. (Papa Fritz compared him to the great opera singer Enrico Caruso.) Translated in Italian is "Who is holding me back at this time?"
  • The second owlet to hatch played the beginning of "Träumerei" by Robert Schumann on the violin. (Papa Fritz compared him to the violinist Fritz Kreisler.)
  • The third owlet, a flautist, played the first notes of "Spring Song" by Felix Mendelssohn from his work Songs without Words.
  • Owl Jolson is made to sing (badly and off key, due to his loathing of classical music) "Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes", the lyrics of which are Ben Jonson's 1616 poem "Song. To Celia." Whenever Mama had to pause playing her piano to turn the sheet music page, Jolson reverted to "I Love to Singa".
  • The first known reject in the contest played a few bars of "Listen to the Mocking Bird" on the harmonica.
  • The blackbird in the blue jacket played a few bars of "Nola", composed by Felix Arndt, on the saxophone.
  • The bird with the accordion briefly played "Turkey in the Straw".
  • The dark, operatic bird sang a line from the silent film Laugh, Clown, Laugh, even though the lyrics to the theme song don't have those actual words (this version was later used in Yankee Doodle Daffy when Porky Pig opened the door and saw Daffy Duck dressed as the clown singing, then shut the door).
  • The overweight bird (voiced by Bernice Hansen) got only a few notes of "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles" sung before being rejected.
  • The country bumpkin bird (voiced by Joe Dougherty, who was the original voice of Porky Pig) stuttered through the first and almost all of the second verse of the nursery rhyme Simple Simon before rejecting himself.
  • Legacy

    I Love to Singa I Love To Singa by GGRock70 on DeviantArt

  • In the August 13, 1997 debut episode of South Park, "Cartman Gets an Anal Probe," aliens zap Cartman with a mysterious beam that causes him to briefly dance, rosy-cheeked, while singing "I Love to Singa" (using the original 1936 audio from Merrie Melodies).
  • The May 7, 2013 episode of The Looney Tunes Show, "Gribbler's Quest," featured a new Merrie Melodies segment in which Gossamer plays the piano and sings "I Love to Singa" (with new audio sung by Kwesi Boakye). This was the first and only instance of the show's Merrie Melodies segment using a classic song rather than a new composition.
  • Availability

    I Love to Singa I Love to Singa Comet Over Hollywood

  • VHS - Cartoon Moviestars Porky!
  • LaserDisc - Cartoon Moviestars Daffy and Porky!
  • VHS - The Golden Age of Looney Tunes, Volume 1
  • LaserDisc - The Golden Age of Looney Tunes, Volume 1, Side 1
  • DVD - Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 2, Disc 4
  • Blu-Ray/DVD - Looney Tunes Platinum Collection: Volume 1, Disc 2
  • DVD - The Jazz Singer
  • DVD - Happy Feet
  • References

    I Love to Singa Wikipedia
    I Love to Singa IMDb I Love to Singa themoviedb.org


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