Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

Felix the Cat is a cartoon character created in 1919 by Pat Sullivan and Otto Messmer during the silent film era. An anthropomorphic young black cat with white eyes, a black body, and a giant grin, he is often considered one of the most recognized cartoon characters in history. Felix was the first fully realized recurring animal character in the history of American film animation.[5]

Felix the Cat
Felix the Cat hand-drawn by Otto Messmer
First appearanceFeline Follies November 9, 1919; 105 years ago (as Master Tom)
The Adventures of Felix (1919) (as Felix)
Created byPat Sullivan
Otto Messmer
Designed byPat Sullivan and Otto Messmer (1919–1924)
Bill Nolan (1924–1931; 1936)
Otto Messmer (1932–1955)
Joe Oriolo (1955–present)
Voiced byEnglish
Harry Edison (1929–1930)[1]
Walter Tetley (1936)
Jack Mercer (1959–1962)
Ken Roberts (1959)[2]
David Kolin (1988)
Jim Pike (1990)[3]
Thom Adcox-Hernandez (1995)
Charlie Adler (1996)
Don Oriolo (2000–2001)
Denise Nejame (2000–2001; Baby)
Dave Coulier (2004)
Lani Minella (2010)[4]
Japanese
Toshihiko Seki (2000–2001)
Yumi Tōma (2000–2001; Baby)
In-universe information
SpeciesCat
GenderMale
FamilyInky and Winky (nephews)
Significant otherKitty
(named Kitty White or Marie in the first 3 years of the silent cartoons)

Felix originated from the studio of Australian cartoonist-film entrepreneur Pat Sullivan. Either Sullivan himself or his lead animator, American Otto Messmer, created the character.[6] What is certain is that Felix emerged from Sullivan's studio, and cartoons featuring the character became well known in popular culture. Aside from the animated shorts, Felix starred in a comic strip (drawn by Sullivan, Messmer and later Joe Oriolo) beginning in 1923,[7] and his image soon adorned merchandise such as ceramics, toys, and postcards. Several manufacturers made stuffed Felix toys. Jazz bands such as Paul Whiteman's played songs about him (1923's "Felix Kept on Walking" and others).

By the late 1920s, with the arrival of sound cartoons, Felix's success was fading. The new Disney shorts of Mickey Mouse made the silent offerings of Sullivan and Messmer, who were then unwilling to move to sound production, seem outdated. In 1929, Sullivan decided to make the transition and began distributing Felix sound cartoons through Copley Pictures. The sound Felix shorts proved to be a failure and the operation ended in 1932. Felix saw a brief three-cartoon resurrection in 1936 by the Van Beuren Studios.

Felix cartoons began airing on American television in 1953. Joe Oriolo introduced a redesigned, "long-legged" Felix, with longer legs, a much smaller body, and a larger, rounder head with no whiskers and no teeth. Oriolo also added new characters and gave Felix a "Magic Bag of Tricks" that could assume an infinite variety of shapes at Felix's behest. The cat has since starred in other television programs and in two feature films. As of the 2010s, Felix is featured on a variety of merchandise from clothing to toys. Joe's son Don Oriolo later assumed creative control of Felix.

Early versions of Felix the Cat entered the public domain in 1994 under the Copyright Act of 1976.

In 2002, TV Guide ranked Felix the Cat number 28 on its "50 Greatest Cartoon Characters of All Time" list.[8]

In 2014, Don Oriolo sold the trademark and remaining copyrights to the character to DreamWorks Animation via DreamWorks Classics, which is now part of Comcast's NBCUniversal division via Universal Pictures.[9]

History

edit

Creation

edit
Feline Follies by Pat Sullivan, silent, 1919
 
A scene of Felix laughing, from Felix in Hollywood (1923)
 
Sullivan's work
 
Felix and Charlie Chaplin share the screen in a moment from Felix in Hollywood (1923).
 
The "Felix pace" as seen in Oceantics (1930)
 
Felix in the color cartoon Felix the Cat and the Goose That Laid the Golden Egg (1936)
 
Children with Felix the Cat toy, Nielsen Park Beach, Sydney, NSW, 1926

On November 9, 1919, Master Tom, a prototype of Felix, debuted in a Paramount Pictures short titled Feline Follies.[10] Produced by the Manhattan-based animation studio owned by Pat Sullivan, the cartoon was directed by cartoonist and animator Otto Messmer. It was a success, and the Sullivan studio quickly set to work on producing another film featuring Master Tom, in Musical Mews (released on November 16, 1919). It too proved to be successful with audiences. Messmer claimed that John King of Paramount Magazine suggested the name "Felix", as in "feline", and for contrast of the felicity traditionally associated with a black cat.[11] The name was first used for the third film starring the character, The Adventures of Felix (released on December 14, 1919). Sullivan claimed he named Felix after Australia Felix from Australian history and literature. In 1924, animator Bill Nolan redesigned the character, making him both rounder and "cuter". Felix's new looks, coupled with Messmer's character animation, brought Felix to a higher profile.[12]

Authorship

edit

The question of who created Felix remains a matter of dispute. Sullivan stated in numerous newspaper interviews that he created Felix and did the key drawings for the character. On a visit to Australia in 1925, Sullivan told The Argus newspaper that "[t]he idea was given to me by the sight of a cat which my wife brought to the studio one day".[13] On other occasions, he claimed that Felix had been inspired by Rudyard Kipling's "The Cat that Walked by Himself" or by his wife's love for strays.[12] Members of the Australian Cartoonist Association have claimed that lettering used in Feline Follies matches Sullivan's handwriting[14] and that Sullivan lettered within his drawings.[14] In addition, at roughly the 4:00 mark in Feline Follies, the words 'Lo Mum' are used in a speech bubble by one of the kittens; this was a term for one's mother not used by Americans, but certainly by Australians. Yet Messmer claimed to have single-handedly drawn Feline Follies from home, raising questions as to why an American would use the term 'Mum' in a cartoon he solely drew himself. Sullivan's supporters also say the case is supported by his March 18, 1917, release of a cartoon short titled The Tail of Thomas Kat more than two years prior to Feline Follies. Both an Australian ABC-TV documentary screened in 2004[15] and the curators of an exhibition at the State Library of New South Wales in 2005 suggested that Thomas Kat was a prototype or precursor of Felix. Few details of Thomas have survived. His fur color has not been definitively established, and the surviving copyright synopsis for the short suggests significant differences between Thomas and the later Felix. For example, whereas the later Felix magically transforms his tail into tools and other objects, Thomas is a non-anthropomorphized cat who loses his tail in a fight with a rooster, never to recover it.[16]

Sullivan was the studio proprietor and—as is the case with almost all film entrepreneurs—he owned the copyright to any creative work by his employees. In common with many animators at the time, Messmer was not credited. After Sullivan's death in 1933, his estate in Australia took ownership of the character; although Messmer told Harry Kopp that Sullivan promised him the rights to Felix in his will, no such will existed by the time he died. Kopp and the estate got the rights in 1934 from King Features Syndicate after numerous conferences with him.[17][18]

It was not until after Sullivan's death that Sullivan staffers such as Hal Walker, Al Eugster,[19] Gerry Geronimi,[20] Rudy Zamora, George Cannata, and Sullivan's own lawyer, Harry Kopp, credited Messmer with Felix's creation. They claimed that Felix was based on an animated Charlie Chaplin that Messmer had animated for Sullivan's studio earlier on. The down-and-out personality and movements of the cat in Feline Follies reflect key attributes of Chaplin's, and, although blockier than the later Felix, the familiar black body is already there (Messmer found solid shapes easier to animate).[21] Messmer himself recalled his version of the cat's creation in an interview with animation historian John Canemaker:

Sullivan's studio was very busy, and Paramount, they were falling behind their schedule and they needed one extra to fill in. And Sullivan, being very busy, said, "If you want to do it on the side, you can do any little thing to satisfy them." So I figured a cat would be about the simplest. Make him all black, you know—you wouldn't need to worry about outlines. And one gag after the other, you know? Cute. And they all got laughs. So Paramount liked it so they ordered a series.

Further, Messmer told Canemaker that both he and Sullivan drew Felix based on models from the minstrel show tradition and the pickaninny caricature:

Pat Sullivan... started off on his own, doing his little Negro Pickaninny [Sammie Johnsin]. Which later on became almost Felix, at least in my mind anyway. Same kind of a, only he was a pickaninny. Now that was going along pretty good, but it didn't through the South, that little anti-Negro feeling. They wouldn't run the Pickaninnies.[22]

The tropes of minstrelsy were useful for creating a cartoon animal because they cued the audience to expect a lively, amusing and rebellious character.[22]

Animation historians back Messmer's claims. Among them are Michael Barrier, Jerry Beck, Colin and Timothy Cowles, Donald Crafton, David Gerstein, Milt Gray, Mark Kausler, Leonard Maltin, and Charles Solomon.[23][12][24][25] No animation historians outside of Australia have argued on behalf of Sullivan.[citation needed]

Sullivan marketed the cat relentlessly while Messmer continued to produce a prodigious volume of Felix cartoons. Messmer did the animation on white paper with inkers tracing the drawings directly. The animators drew backgrounds onto pieces of celluloid, which were then laid atop the drawings to be photographed. Any perspective work had to be animated by hand, as the studio cameras were unable to perform pans or trucks.

Popularity and distribution

edit

Paramount Pictures distributed the earliest films from 1919 to 1921. Margaret J. Winkler distributed the shorts from 1922 to 1925, the year when Educational Pictures took over the distribution of the shorts. Sullivan promised them one new Felix short every two weeks.[26] The combination of solid animation, skillful promotion, and widespread distribution brought Felix's popularity to new heights.[12]

References to alcoholism and Prohibition were also commonplace in many of the Felix shorts, particularly Felix Finds Out (1924), Whys and Other Whys (1927), and Felix Woos Whoopee (1930), to name a few. In Felix Dopes It Out (1924), Felix tries to help a suicidal man who is plagued with a red nose. By the end of the short, the cat finds the cure for the condition: "Keep drinking, and it'll turn blue".

Felix's great success also spawned a host of imitators. The appearances and personalities of other 1920s feline stars such as Julius of Walt Disney's Alice Comedies, Waffles of Paul Terry's Aesop's Film Fables, and especially Bill Nolan's 1925 adaptation of Krazy Kat (distributed by the eschewed Winkler) all seem to have been directly patterned after Felix.[27] This influence also extended outside the United States, serving as inspiration for Suihō Tagawa in the creation of his character Norakuro, a dog with black fur.[28]

 
Educational Pictures advertisement from 1926 Motion Picture News.

Felix's cartoons were also popular among critics. They have been cited as imaginative examples of surrealism in filmmaking. Felix has been said to represent a child's sense of wonder, creating the fantastic when it is not there, and taking it in stride when it is. His famous pace—hands behind his back, head down, deep in thought—became a trademark that has been analyzed by critics around the world.[29] Felix's expressive tail, which could be a shovel one moment, an exclamation mark or pencil the next, serves to emphasize that anything can happen in his world.[30] Aldous Huxley wrote that the Felix shorts proved that "[w]hat the cinema can do better than literature or the spoken drama is to be fantastic".[12]

By 1923, the character was at the peak of his film career. Felix in Hollywood, a short released during that year, plays upon Felix's popularity, as he becomes acquainted with such fellow celebrities as Douglas Fairbanks, Cecil B. DeMille, Charlie Chaplin, Ben Turpin, and even censor Will H. Hays. His image could be seen on clocks (not to be confused with the Kit-Cat Klock) and Christmas ornaments. Felix also became the subject of several popular songs of the day, such as "Felix Kept Walking" by Paul Whiteman. Sullivan made an estimated $100,000 a year from toy licensing alone.[12] With the character's success also emerged a handful of new costars. These included Felix's master Willie Jones, a mouse named Skiddoo, Felix's nephews Inky, Dinky, and Winky, and his girlfriend Kitty. Felix the Cat sheet music, with music by Pete Wendling and Max Kortlander and featuring lyrics by Alfred Bryan, was published in 1928 by Sam Fox Publishing Company. The cover art of Felix playing a banjo was done by Otto Messmer.[31]

Most of the early Felix cartoons mirrored American attitudes of the "Roaring Twenties". Ethnic stereotypes appeared in such shorts as Felix Goes Hungry (1924). Recent events such as the Russian Civil War were depicted in shorts like Felix All Puzzled (1924). Flappers were caricatured in Felix Strikes It Rich (1923). He also became involved in union organizing with Felix Revolts (also 1923). In some shorts, Felix even performed a rendition of the Charleston.

In 1928, Educational ceased releasing the Felix cartoons, and several were reissued by First National Pictures. Copley Pictures distributed them from 1929 to 1930.[32] There was a brief three-cartoon resurrection in 1936 by the Van Beuren Studios (The Goose That Laid the Golden Egg, Neptune Nonsense, and Bold King Cole), which are all directed by Disney alumni Burt Gillett, who was suffering from bipolar disorder at the time.[33] Sullivan did most of the marketing for the character in the 1920s. In these Van Beuren shorts, Felix spoke and sang in a high-pitched, childlike voice provided by then-21-year-old Walter Tetley, who was a popular radio actor in the 1930s, 1940s and even 1950s (Julius on The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show, and Leroy on The Great Gildersleeve), but later best known in the 1960s as the voice of Sherman on The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show's Mister Peabody segments.[34]

Felix as mascot and pop culture icon

edit
 
The U.S. Navy insignia for the VF-31 squadron from 1948.

Given the character's unprecedented popularity and the fact that his name was partially derived from the Latin word for "happy", some rather notable individuals and organizations adopted Felix as a mascot. The first of these was a Los Angeles Chevrolet dealer and friend of Pat Sullivan named Winslow B. Felix, who first opened his showroom in 1921. The three-sided neon sign of Felix Chevrolet,[35][36] with its giant, smiling images of the character, is today one of LA's better-known landmarks, standing watch over both Figueroa Street and the Harbor Freeway. Others who adopted Felix included the 1922 New York Yankees and pilot and actress Ruth Elder, who took a Felix doll with her in an attempt to become the first woman to duplicate Charles Lindbergh's transatlantic crossing to Paris.[37]

 
Felix on the tail of an F-14 Tomcat of VF-31, now at the Evergreen Aviation Museum.

This popularity persisted. In the late 1920s, the U.S. Navy's Bombing Squadron Two (VB-2B) adopted a unit insignia consisting of Felix happily carrying a bomb with a burning fuse. They retained the insignia through the 1930s, when they became a fighter squadron under the designations VF-6B and, later, VF-3, whose members Edward O'Hare and John Thach became famous naval aviators in World War II. After the war, a U.S. Navy fighter squadron currently designated VFA-31 replaced its winged meat-cleaver logo with the same insignia after the original Felix squadron had been disbanded. The carrier-based night-fighter squadron, nicknamed the "Tomcatters", remained active under various designations continuing to the present day, and Felix still appears on both the squadron's cloth jacket patches and aircraft, carrying his bomb with its fuse burning.

Felix is also the oldest high school mascot in the state of Indiana, chosen in 1926 after a Logansport High School player brought his plush Felix to a basketball game. When the team came from behind and won that night, Felix became the mascot of all the Logansport High School sports teams.[38][39]

When television was in the experimental stages in 1928, the very first image to ever be seen was a toy Felix the Cat mounted to a revolving phonograph turntable. It remained on screen for hours while engineers used it as a test pattern.[40][41]

Over a century after his debut on screen in 1919, he still makes occasional appearances in pop culture. The pop punk band The Queers also use Felix as a mascot, often drawn to reflect punk sensibilities and attributes such as scowling, smoking, or playing the guitar. Felix adorns the covers of both the Surf Goddess EP and the Move Back Home album. Felix also appears in the music video for the single "Don't Back Down". Besides appearing on the covers and liner notes of various albums, the iconic cat also appears in merchandise such as T-shirts and buttons. In an interview with bassist B-Face, he asserts that Lookout! Records is responsible for the use of Felix as a mascot.[42] Felix was planned to make a cameo in the 1988 film Who Framed Roger Rabbit in a sequence set at Marvin Acme's funeral, which was cut for pacing reasons at the storyboard stage.[43][44] In the final film, his face appears as the comedy and tragedy masks above the entrance of the tunnel that leads to ToonTown. He also appeared as a giant puppet at the 2015 Treefort Music Fest.

For Felix the Cat's 100th anniversary, Universal Pictures dubbed November 9 "Felix the Cat Day" and released new merchandise, including a Pop! figure, Skechers brand shoes, clocks, a PEZ dispenser, shirts, bags, pillows, and pomade.[45][46] Also for the anniversary, the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia (NFSA) released an article detailing Felix the Cat's history with frames and clips from early animations.[47]

Comics

edit
Felix the Cat
 
An ink drawing of Felix by Otto Messmer, c. 1975.
Author(s)Pat Sullivan
Otto Messmer (1927–1954)
Jack Mendelsohn (1948–1952)
Joe Oriolo (1955–1966)[48]
Current status/scheduleDaily and Sunday; concluded
Launch dateAugust 19, 1923; 101 years ago (1923-08-19)
End date1966; 58 years ago (1966)
Syndicate(s)King Features Syndicate
Publisher(s)Dell Comics
Genre(s)Humor

Pat Sullivan began a syndicated comic strip on August 19, 1923, distributed by King Features Syndicate.[12] In 1927 Messmer took over drawing duties of the strip.[49] (The first The Felix Annual from 1924 issued in Great Britain shows the last two stories are not the usual Otto Messmer style, so a difference in Pat Sullivan-drawn cartoons can be noted.)

Messmer himself pursued the Sunday Felix comic strips until their discontinuance in 1943, when he began eleven years of writing and drawing Felix comic books for Dell Comics that were released every other month. Jack Mendelsohn was the ghostwriter of the Felix strip from 1948 to 1952.[50] In 1954, Messmer retired from the Felix daily newspaper strips, and his assistant Joe Oriolo (the creator of Casper the Friendly Ghost) took over.[51] The strip concluded in 1966.

Felix co-starred with Betty Boop in the Betty Boop and Felix comic strip (1984–1987).

After 35 years of not being in any comics, Source Point Press announced that Felix the Cat would get a new comic book series, with the permission by DreamWorks Animation to use the character, following a decade of owning the character and using him as a fashion brand. The comic is written by Mark Federali, illustrated by Tracy Yardley, and was due to be released sometime in 2022.[52] Yardley later said in February 2022 that production has been delayed and Source Point Press is no longer publishing the books.[53] Later in September, Yardley said that the comic was not cancelled, and that it will be published by Rocketship Entertainment.[54] A month later, Rocketship announced that artists and writers, inciuding Mike Federali, would be attending New York Comic Con. Federali signed copies of the comic.[55] On November 15, Rocketship announced through its new imprint Bottlerocket, that the comic would release in the spring of 2023,[56] but the release dated switched to Fall of 2023 which was released on November 7, 2023.[57]

From silent to sound

edit
 
Felix, Inky and Winky in April Maze (1930)

With the advent of synchronized sound in The Jazz Singer in 1927, Educational Pictures, who distributed the Felix shorts at the time, urged Pat Sullivan to make the leap to "talkie" cartoons, but Sullivan refused. Further disputes led to a break between Educational and Sullivan. Only after competing studios released the first synchronized-sound animated films, such as Fleischer's My Old Kentucky Home, Van Beuren's Dinner Time and Disney's Steamboat Willie, did Sullivan see the possibilities of sound. He managed to secure a contract with First National Pictures in 1928, but for reasons unknown, this did not last, so Sullivan sought out Jacques Kopfstein and Copley Pictures to distribute his new sound Felix cartoons.[58][59] On October 16, 1929, an advertisement appeared in Film Daily with Felix announcing, Jolson-like, "You ain't heard nothin' yet!"[60]

Felix's transition to sound was not a smooth one. Sullivan did not carefully prepare for Felix's transition to sound and added sound effects into the sound cartoons as a post-animation process.[61] The results were disastrous. More than ever, it seemed as though Disney's mouse was drawing audiences away from Sullivan's silent star. Not even entries such as the Fleischer-style off-beat Woos Whoopee or the Silly Symphony-esque April Maze (both 1930) could regain the franchise's audience. Kopfstein finally canceled Sullivan's contract. Subsequently, he announced plans to start a new studio in California, but such ideas never materialized. Things went from bad to worse when Sullivan's wife, Marjorie, died in March 1932. After this, Sullivan completely fell apart. He slumped into an alcoholic depression, his health rapidly declined, and his memory began to fade. He could not even cash checks to Messmer because his signature was reduced to a mere scribble. He died in 1933. Messmer recalled: "He left everything a mess, no books, no nothing. So when he died the place had to close down, at the height of popularity, when everybody, RKO and all of them, for years they tried to get hold of Felix... I didn't have that permission [to continue the character] 'cause I didn't have legal ownership of it".[62]

In 1935, Amadee J. Van Beuren of the Van Beuren Studios called Messmer and asked him if he could return Felix to the screen. Van Beuren even stated that Messmer would be provided with a full staff and all of the necessary utilities, but Messmer declined his offer and instead recommended Burt Gillett, a former Sullivan staffer who was now heading the Van Beuren staff. In 1936, Van Beuren obtained approval from Sullivan's brother to license Felix to his studio with the intention of producing new shorts both in color and with sound. With Gillett at the helm, now with a heavy Disney influence, he did away with Felix's established personality, rendering him a stock talking animal character of the type popular in the day. The new shorts were unsuccessful, and after only three outings Van Beuren discontinued the series, leaving a fourth in the storyboard stages.[27]

Revival

edit

In 1953, Official Films purchased the Sullivan–Messmer shorts, added soundtracks to them, and distributed them to the home movie and television markets.

Otto Messmer's assistant Joe Oriolo, who had taken over the Felix comic strip, struck a deal with Felix's new owner, Pat Sullivan's nephew, to begin a new series of Felix cartoons on television. Oriolo went on to star Felix in 260 television cartoons produced by Famous Studios which was renamed to Paramount Cartoon Studios, and distributed by Trans-Lux beginning in 1958. Like the Van Beuren studio before, Oriolo gave Felix a more domesticated and pedestrian personality geared more toward children and introduced now-familiar elements such as Felix's Magic Bag of Tricks, a satchel that could assume the shape and characteristics of anything Felix wanted. The show did away with Felix's previous supporting cast and introduced many new characters, all of which were performed by voice actor Jack Mercer.

Oriolo's plots revolve around the unsuccessful attempts of the antagonists to steal Felix's Magic Bag, though in an unusual twist, these antagonists are occasionally depicted as Felix's friends as well. The cartoons proved popular, but critics have dismissed them as paling in comparison to the earlier Sullivan–Messmer works, especially since Oriolo aimed the cartoons at children. Limited animation (required due to budgetary restraints) and simplistic storylines did nothing to diminish the series' popularity.[27]

In 1970, Oriolo gained complete control of the Felix character and Don Oriolo continues to promote the character to this day, even though the rights are now owned by DreamWorks Animation.

In 1975 until 1977, Oriolo presented a live-action series called Felix the Cat Live.

In the late 1980s, after his father's death, Don Oriolo teamed up with European animators to work on the character's first feature film, Felix the Cat: The Movie.[63] In the film, Felix visits an alternate reality along with the Professor and Poindexter. New World Pictures planned a 1987 Thanksgiving release for U.S. theaters, which did not happen;[63] the movie went direct-to-video in August 1991,[64] which was widely panned upon its release[65] before being completely abandoned in the US during the 21st century. In 1994, Felix appeared on television again, to replace the popular Fido Dido bumpers on CBS, and then one year later in the series The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat. Baby Felix followed in 2000 for the Japanese market, and also the direct-to-video Felix the Cat Saves Christmas released in 2004. Oriolo also brought about a new wave of Felix merchandising, including Wendy's Kids Meal toys and a video game for the Nintendo Entertainment System.

 
A Felix prototype in Feline Follies (1919)

Felix was voted in 2004 among the 100 Greatest Cartoons in a poll conducted by the British television channel Channel 4, ranking at No. 89.[66]

According to Don Oriolo's Felix the Cat blog, as of September 2008 there were plans in development for a new television series. Oriolo's biography page also mentions a 52-episode cartoon series then in the works titled The Felix the Cat Show, which was slated to use computer graphics.[67] Oriolo has not produced or directed any cartoons or feature films featuring Felix the Cat since the mid-2000s.

Home video

edit

DVD releases include Presenting Felix the Cat from Bosko Video;[68] Felix! from Lumivision;[69] Felix the Cat: The Collector's Edition from Delta Entertainment; and Before Walt from Inkwell Images Ink.[70] Some of the TV series cartoons (from 1958 to 1959) were released on DVD by Classic Media. Some of the 1990s series has also been released.

Filmography

edit

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ The Talkies. University of California Press. November 22, 1999. ISBN 9780520221284. Retrieved February 1, 2021.
  2. ^ "Felix the Cat on Records". cartoonresearch.com. Retrieved November 4, 2020.
  3. ^ "Various Australian Commercials Part 33 (ATV-10, March 10, 1990)". Facebook. Retrieved December 28, 2020.
  4. ^ "Lani Minella Resume" (PDF). Lani Minella. Retrieved November 1, 2020.
  5. ^ Cart, Michael (March 31, 1991). "The Cat With the Killer Personality". The New York Times. Archived from the original on April 11, 2014. Retrieved December 30, 2022.
  6. ^ Barrier, Michael (2003). Hollywood Cartoons: American Animation in Its Golden Age. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-516729-0.
  7. ^ "Goldenagecartoons.com". Felix.goldenagecartoons.com. Archived from the original on October 31, 2013. Retrieved March 10, 2014.
  8. ^ TV Guide Book of Lists. Running Press. 2007. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-7624-3007-9.
  9. ^ McNary, Dave (June 17, 2014). "DreamWorks Animation Buys Felix the Cat". Variety. Retrieved June 17, 2014.
  10. ^ Solomon, 34, says that the character was "the as yet unnamed Felix".
  11. ^ Maltin 1987, p. 23.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Solomon 1994, p. 34.
  13. ^ "Felix exhibition guide (archived)" (PDF). webarchive.nla.gov.au. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 10, 2007. Retrieved September 2, 2017.
  14. ^ a b "All Media and legends...A thumbnail dipped in tar". Vixenmagazine.com. Archived from the original on September 27, 2008. Retrieved September 14, 2008.
  15. ^ "Rewind (ABC TV): Felix the Cat". Abc.net.au. October 31, 2004. Archived from the original on February 8, 2012. Retrieved March 10, 2014.
  16. ^ "100 Years of Felix the Cat". February 25, 2020. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  17. ^ Culhane 1986, p. 57-58.
  18. ^ Canemaker 1991, p. 137-138.
  19. ^ Canemaker 1991, p. 108.
  20. ^ "Gerry Geronimi: An Interview by Michael Barrier and Milton Gray". Retrieved June 27, 2022.
  21. ^ Maltin 1987, p. 22-23.
  22. ^ a b Sammond, Nicholas (2015). Birth of an Industry: Blackface Minstrelsy and the Rise of American Animation. Durham. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-8223-7578-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  23. ^ Barrier 1999, p. 29.
  24. ^ Beck 1998, p. 23.
  25. ^ Felix From 1933 Returns
  26. ^ Barrier 1999, p. 30.
  27. ^ a b c Solomon 1994, p. 37.
  28. ^ "Norakuro"
  29. ^ For example, Solomon, 34, quotes Marcel Brion on these points.
  30. ^ Solomon 1994, p. 36.
  31. ^ Heritage Auctions: completed auctions, August 9, 2009, and was subtitled "Pat Sullivan's Famous Creation in Song".
  32. ^ Canemaker 1991, p. 129-130.
  33. ^ Canemaker 1991, p. 141-142.
  34. ^ ETERNAL YOUTH: WALTER TETLEY, RADIO'S ESSENTIAL KID
  35. ^ "Laokay.com". Retrieved March 10, 2014.
  36. ^ Los Angeles, CA (January 1, 1970). "maps.google.com". Goo.gl. Retrieved March 10, 2014.
  37. ^ Canemaker 1991, p. 118.
  38. ^ "History of Mascot Felix the Cat". lhs.lcsc.k12.in.us. Logansport High School. Archived from the original on March 22, 2020. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
  39. ^ Viquez, Marc (June 10, 2020). "How Felix the Cat Became This High School's Mascot". SportsLogos.Net News. Archived from the original on June 18, 2020. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
  40. ^ "The First Star of Television". Museum of Television. Retrieved August 9, 2018.
  41. ^ Shedden, David (November 7, 2014). "Today in Media History: In 1928 Felix the Cat began testing a new tech called television". Poynter. Retrieved August 9, 2018.
  42. ^ "The Queers – Interviews". Thequeersrock.com. Archived from the original on March 9, 2008. Retrieved September 14, 2008.
  43. ^ Who Shot Roger Rabbit, 1986 script by Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman
  44. ^ "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, by Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman".
  45. ^ Beck, Jerry (October 28, 2019). "Universal Celebrates 100 Years of "Felix The Cat"". Animation Scoop. Archived from the original on October 31, 2019. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
  46. ^ Knight, Rosie (November 9, 2019). "Celebrate 100 Years of Felix the Cat with a New Line of Merch". Nerdist. Archived from the original on November 11, 2019. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
  47. ^ Bondfield, Mel (November 5, 2019). "100 Years of Felix the Cat". www.nfsa.gov.au. National Film and Sound Archive of Australia. Archived from the original on June 26, 2020. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
  48. ^ "Oriolo entry". Who's Who of American Comic Books, 1928–1999. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
  49. ^ Messmer entry, Who's Who of American Comic Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 18, 2018.
  50. ^ Mendelsohn entry, Who's Who of American Comic Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 18, 2018.
  51. ^ Canemaker 1991, p. 149.
  52. ^ Alexa, Lauren (August 25, 2021). "'Felix the Cat' Returning in New Kids' Comic Book Series". Animation World Network. Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  53. ^ "Tracy Yardley on Twitter: As far as I understand, Source Point is no longer publishing the books. I'll wait for some official announcement to say more about when or who it's coming from". Twitter. February 23, 2022. Retrieved May 25, 2022.
  54. ^ "Tracey Yardley on Twitter: It's not cancelled. I'mcurrently struggling to finish drawing the last issue while I take care of my wife's aunt as she slowly dies of cancer. The book will be published by Rocketship Entertainment as soon as the all the line art/coloring/lettering/printing is complete". September 10, 2022. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  55. ^ "NYCC '22: Rocketship brings stars, signings and giveaways". The Beat. October 5, 2022. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
  56. ^ Johnston, Rich (November 15, 2022). "Rocketship's Imprint For Kids, Bottlerocket, Starts With Felix The Cat". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved December 6, 2022.
  57. ^ "Felix the Cat|Paperback".
  58. ^ Canemaker 1991, p. 121-123.
  59. ^ Canemaker 1991, p. 128-129.
  60. ^ The Film Daily (Jul–Dec 1929). New York, Wid's Films and Film Folks. July 1929. p. 978.
  61. ^ Gordon, Ian (2002). "Felix the Cat". St. James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture. Archived from the original on June 28, 2009.
  62. ^ Quoted in Solomon 37.
  63. ^ a b Cawley, John; Korkis, Jim (1990). Cartoon Superstars. Pioneer Books. pp. 88–89. ISBN 1-55698-269-0. Retrieved June 14, 2010.
  64. ^ "New on Video". Beacon Journal. August 23, 1991. p. D21. Retrieved June 14, 2010.
  65. ^ Gritten, David, ed. (2007). "Felix the Cat: The Movie". Halliwell's Film Guide 2008. Hammersmith, London: HarperCollins Publishers. p. 401. ISBN 978-0-00-726080-5.
  66. ^ "The 100 Greatest Cartoons". Channel 4. Archived from the original on March 6, 2005. Retrieved February 20, 2013.
  67. ^ "Donsfelixblog.com". Donsfelixblog.com. Archived from the original on May 17, 2014. Retrieved March 10, 2014.
  68. ^ Cyrenne, Randall (August 7, 2004). "Presenting Felix the Cat: The Otto Mesmer Classics 1919–1924". Animated Views. Retrieved April 20, 2022.
  69. ^ Felix
  70. ^ Before Walt

References

edit

Further reading

edit
  • Patricia Vettel Tom (1996): Felix the Cat as Modern Trickster. JSTOR 3109216 American Art, Vol. 10, No. 1 (Spring, 1996), pp. 64–87
edit