HANNA-BARBERA: THE ARCHITECTS OF SATURDAY MORNING
Norman Rockwell
Museum, Stockbridge, MA
Through May 29, 2017.
Remember the playground cartoon wars: Disney or Warner
Brothers? It was a false debate, as those weren't the only two choices.
"Woody Woodpecker" came from Walter Lantz Studios, Terrytoons cranked
out "Mighty Mouse" and
Heckle and Jeckle," and the first important TV 'cartoon was "Crusader
Rabbit" from Jay Ward (who morphed Crusader and Rags into "Rocky and
Bullwinkle"). Back then, I swallowed the duality and fiercely supported
the superiority of Warner Brothers (Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies) and I still insist
that Bugs, Daffy, Road Runner, and Tweety kick the collective butts of Mickey,
Donald, Goofy and other saccharine Disney offerings.
In truth, though, my childhood was shaped by Hanna-Barbera,
as a new exhibit at the Norman Rockwell Museum reminded me. It's subtitled
"The Architects of Saturday Morning" and that's fairly accurate.
Classic Disney and Warner Brothers productions were made for movies, not
television. "Crusader Rabbit first aired in 1948, but fewer than half of
American homes had a television until 1954. In 1956, Hanna-Barbera began airing
cartoons aimed at Baby Boomers and ended up fashioning the Saturday morning
experience of an entire generation.
Suggestion: Look at a few cells and then do a fast walk through of the exhibit to get a sense of the scope of the Hanna-Barbera output. Here's a short list: Auggie Doggie, Atom Ant, The Flintstones, Huckleberry Hound, the Jetsons, Johnny Quest, Lippy the Lion, Magilla Gorilla, Quick Draw McGraw, the Pink Panther, Ruff and Reddy, Scooby-Doo, the Smurfs, Snagglepuss, Snooper and Blabber, Top Cat, and the immortal Yogi Bear (and Boo-Boo too). Then spend time with your favorites and play with a cool interactive screen that gives data, short clips, and little known facts on the various characters.
Take a close look at the artwork and you'll notice deep
similarities between characters such as Yogi, Ranger Smith, George Jetson,
Huckleberry Hound, and many others. (Look closely as their jaws, muzzles,
noses, five o'clock shadows, and eye alignments.) If it looks as if it might
have been akin to assembly line production, you're on the right track. Past
animation was the opposite of today's razzle- dazzle visuals that render
storylines secondary. The Hanna-Barbera formula was to develop iconic characters
and storyboard a compelling narrative, which gave them a witty, clever vibe
that's hard to top. They were also sharper and more vivid. Digital technology
is more flexible and (perhaps) more realistic, but it's not necessarily better
art.
Seeing this exhibit is the most fun you're likely to have in
a museum all year. There is also poignancy and sadness on display as well.
Warner Brothers absorbed Hanna-Barbera in 2001, and Saturday morning cartoons
officially died in 2016, though they had been terminal since the 1990s. The 'toons
fell prey to misguided attacks on children's television, unwise content shifts
in the cartoon industry, and diminished imagination.
You might recall Peggy Charren and Action for Children's
Television. From 1968 on, there were relentless attacks on cartoons that
yielded regulations. (Remember how "Road Runner" was deemed too
violent?) Some of the new rules were wise (like banning direct advertising
aimed at kids), but by 1973, children's programming was pared to just 12
minutes per hour; by 1996, all the networks combined could have no more than 36
hours per week. Must have been all those kids running off of cliffs like Wile
E. Coyote! Or was it serious people ruining our world? (I'm gong with the
second option.)
Cartoonists also bear some blame for forgetting that animal
characters are time-tested; they are fabliaux
on a gel cell. Making characters more "realistic" wasn't the best
idea. "The Jestons" was beloved, but it was just a family sit-com set
in the future. (It was also spawned the derivative "Flintstones,"
which exchanged the imagine future for a mythical past.) I know loads of Gen Xers
loved "Scooby-Doo," but it too flunked the imagination sniff test.
And then there was dreck like "Powder Puff Girls," "The Banana
Splits," "Teen Titans," and "The Space Kidettes." The
more "real" cartoons became, the less interesting they became. Kids watched
'toons because they were unrealistic;
not because they wanted to work out anxieties or improve self-esteem.
The final blow came when cartoons ceased trying to be
original. Many became cartoon versions of live shows (e.g. "The Partridge
Family," "Bewitched"), extended advertisements ("G.I.
Joe," "The Transformers"), or baby versions of older cartoons and
were so inane they bored toddlers out of their diapers. By the late 1990s, the homogenized
Disney worldview was triumphant and the salad days of Saturday morning existed
only on cable Cartoon Network and not so much there either. It was fun while it
lasted. I'm glad to relive those days, though I'm sad it was in a museum.
Rob Weir
2 comments:
I'm glad you liked the exhibit. I have more like this planned. Let me know if you want me to keep you updated.
Post a Comment