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Clean Pastures

Clean Pastures is a 1937 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Friz Freleng.[2] The short was released on May 22, 1937.[3]

Clean Pastures
Clean Pastures title card
Directed byI. Freleng
Produced byLeon Schlesinger
StarringBen Carter
Lillian Randolph
William Days
Paul Taylor's Sportsmen
Basin Street Boys
Mel Blanc[1]
Music byCarl W. Stalling
The Four Blackbirds
Animation byPaul Smith
Phil Monroe
Color processTechnicolor
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Vitaphone
Release date
  • May 22, 1937 (1937-05-22) (USA)
Running time
7 min (one reel)
LanguageEnglish

The cartoon gets the title from the Warner Bros.' 1936 film The Green Pastures.

Plot edit

Clean Pastures opens in Harlem, New York City, where African American caricatures gamble, drink, and dance in a sea of bars, clubs, and dancing girls. In Heaven, known as "Pair-O-Dice", a black Saint Peter reads the headline, "Pair-O-Dice Preferred Hits New Low As Hades Inc. Soars". The angel rings an angelic Stepin Fetchit with enormous lips[4][5]—probably a reference to Oscar Polk's performance as Gabriel in The Green Pastures[6] and orders him to rectify the situation. Gabriel descends to Harlem and stands by a sign (modeled after James Montgomery Flagg's World War I Uncle Sam poster)[5] that reads, "Pair-O-Dice Needs You! Opportunity, Travel, Good Food, Water Melon, Clean Living, Music, Talkies". Nevertheless, the denizens of Harlem continue with their iniquity.

An excerpt of the song "Swing for Sale", as featured in the cartoon Have You Got Any Castles.
 
An angelic caricature of Stepin Fetchit tries to recruit souls for Pair-O-Dice using a pastiche of James Montgomery Flagg's World War I army recruitment poster.

Angels, caricatures of jazz performers Louis Armstrong, Cab Calloway, Fats Waller, The Mills Brothers, and Jimmie Lunceford, tell Saint Peter that to get people to paradise he will need "rhythm".[4][7] (The short's credits list no voice actors, but a member of the all-black jazz group the Four Blackbirds —possibly Leroy Hurt—provides the cartoon's celebrity impressions.)[8] The musicians go to Harlem and break into a performance of "Swing for Sale", and the Harlemites flock to listen. The film's climax takes on the characteristics of "a revivalist camp meeting" as the band makes its way to Pair-O-Dice, and people follow them in droves.[9] The newcomers receive their halos, and in the cartoon's final gag, the Devil himself asks to be admitted.

Clean Pastures is a musical film, which means that it shifts between musical and non-musical sections, both of which are integral to the story.[10] Carl Stalling's musical score makes use of both public-domain music and songs owned by Warner Bros. Stalling's music "supplies both the foundation for the story and the driving force behind the animation." Music is of such importance that characters in Clean Pastures dance about even when no performers are pictured.[11] The all-black jazz group the Four Blackbirds performs the backing vocals for these songs.[8]

A choir of a cappella, black male voices opens the cartoon with "Save Me, Sister, from Temptation", a song from the 1936 Warner Bros. film The Singing Kid featuring Al Jolson. Thus, Stalling establishes one of the cartoon's themes, that sinners may be redeemed, from the opening credits. As the scene shifts to Harlem, the jazz standard "Sweet Georgia Brown" accompanies the bevy of African American vices. Caricatures of Bill "Bojangles" Robinson and Al Jolson perform snippets of the blackface tunes "Old Folks at Home" and "I Love to Singa". However, the short's major number is "Swing for Sale", performed by caricatures of popular black jazz performers. The short ends with a jazzed-up version of James A. Bland's minstrel spiritual "Oh! Dem Golden Slippers".[4]

Critical reception edit

Black critics in the 1930s wrote about the play and film The Green Pastures, but they were silent on its animated parody. Weisenfeld speculates that this is because animated cartoons were not seen as significant at the time.[6] Modern critics of Clean Pastures fault the film for its stereotypical depictions of black culture. Cultural studies scholar William Anthony Nericcio sees the film as representative of a pattern in the works of Friz Freleng, who also produced such stereotype-ridden films as Jungle Jitters, Goldilocks and the Jivin' Bears, and the Speedy Gonzales cartoons.[12] Lindvall and Fraser are more forgiving and call the cartoon "playful", "light", and "mischievous".[13]

Daniel Goldmark alleges that the film is a burlesque of black religion and culture in its portrayal of Pair-O-Dice as "heavenly Harlem shops and singing choirs".[14] In his interpretation, the film's use of rhythm is a metaphor for faith. This demonstrates white Americans' placement of jazz alongside religion and "the unfettered expressions of emotion associated with it" as aspects of African American culture. The cartoon implies that jazz cannot be replaced in the black psyche, as the musicians in the film must appropriate jazz, not compete with it, to draw Harlemites to Pair-O-Dice.[15] The mortal characters are given no information about why Pair-O-Dice is better than Harlem, but the upbeat music is enough to lure them there. Even the Devil himself takes the bait.[14] In the end, the film reaffirms the vision of Paradise from The Green Pastures, with its "perpetual Negro holiday [and] everlasting weekend fish fry."[16]

On the other hand, Judith Weisenfeld sees Clean Pastures as an explicit rejection of Connelly's fish fry. Instead, she argues that the short is a metaphor for the replacement of one generation of African American performers and stereotypes for a new one as the result of African Americans moving to urban areas.[6] In contrast to The Green Pastures and its portrayal of rural black culture, the cartoon is set in a solidly urban framework. Clean Pastures replaces stereotypes of black watermelon eaters and chicken stealers with black dancers, drinkers, and gamblers.[5] Old-style black stereotypes are represented by the Stepin Fetchit angel and his recruitment sign, which promises delights that only appeal to rural black stereotypes. Yet even Bill "Bojangles" Robinson and Al Jolson, who built their careers on blackface depictions of rural blacks, reject Fetchit's plea for souls and opt for the Kotton Klub nightclub.[17] The angelic jazz performers represent new, urban black culture. Through their rendition of "Swing for Sale", the souls of the Harlemites are saved, and the cartoon makes the point that the African American culture of the period was increasingly urban culture, and by extension, that the black Heaven is an urban, Northern place.[6] Lindvall and Fraser take a similar view, seeing the cartoon as part of the Warner directors' transition from stereotyping blacks as "rural bumpkins" to featuring them as "urban hepcat[s]".[13]

 
Jazz-performing angels use rhythm to lead the souls of Harlemites to heaven. Freleng's choice to caricature Cab Calloway, Fats Waller, and Louis Armstrong shows the crossover appeal of those performers among white audiences in the 1930s.

Goldmark and Weisenfeld agree that the film's portrayal of black culture is a negative one. Goldmark criticizes the film's implication that certain kinds of black music or black performers are better than others. He interprets the short's jazzy finale, which juxtaposes contemporary popular jazz with a traditional African American spiritual, as representative of this theme:

Furthermore, placing the creators of "good" hot jazz in heaven suggests that certain types of black music are better than others: "hot" music made in such places as Harlem would lead to debauchery and eventually to Hades, Inc. Only through the noble efforts of famous black musicians could souls be turned to a better direction.[14]

Contemporary black commentators argued that to white audiences, Connelly's The Green Pastures simply reinforced the notion that black people presented a danger that needed to be contained. Weisenfeld argues that this is also the case with Freleng's parody. To white viewers in the 1930s, the film's implication that blacks care for nothing but gambling, drinking, and dancing only reinforces notions of the dangers posed by urban blacks.[6] According to Goldmark, the choice of performers caricatured is telling; that Armstrong and Calloway are depicted as angels indicates that their crossover appeal was strong enough among whites that white audiences would not have felt threatened by the notion that they were angels in Heaven.[14] Weisenfeld notes that by focusing the narrative on Saint Peter and his Stepin Fetchit underling, the animators ducked the potential offense white audiences might have felt upon seeing a black God.[5]

Notes edit

  • Many Hollywood cartoons from the 1930s are based on feature films.[18] Therefore, it was only natural for Leon Schlesinger's cartoon studio to parody the 1936 Warner Bros. musical film The Green Pastures, itself an adaptation of a play by Marc Connelly which won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1930. The Green Pastures features an all-black cast and proved a success for Warner Bros., despite generating controversy.[19] Animator Friz Freleng had directed the short Sunday Go to Meetin' Time in 1936. The cartoon lampoons African American religious beliefs to the backdrop of jazz music[20] and tells the story of a rural black man who shirks church on Sunday in favor of worldly pastimes and finds himself in Hell as a result.[21] Clean Pastures was thus keeping with his past work. Freleng even reuses animation of a jitterbugging couple from the Sunday Go to Meetin' Time in Clean Pastures. The short's use of caricatures of famous performers was in the same vein as such Freleng films as At Your Service Madame and The Coo-Coo Nut Grove.[22]
  • Schlesinger and Warner Bros. had problems with Clean Pastures from the start. Hollywood censors alleged that the film ran afoul of the Hays Production Code because it burlesqued religion. Later commentators surmise that the censors also objected to the portrayal of a Heaven run by African Americans.
  • Modern critics have been no kinder to the film and cite its portrayal of black characters as offensive and reliant on negative stereotypes. Musicologist Daniel Goldmark interprets the film as a send-up of black religion and culture and the increasing identification of 1930s white audiences of jazz music with black culture. Religion scholar Judith Weisenfeld sees Clean Pastures as a metaphor for the replacement of rural, minstrel show stereotypes of blacks for modern, urban ones Warner Bros. had trouble distributing the film. In an interview for Look magazine, producer Leon Schlesinger complained that Clean Pastures gave him more trouble with Hollywood censors than any live-action film.[23] Censor Joseph I. Breen alleged that the cartoon violated the Hays Production Code, a set of rules for the content of American films, because it burlesqued religion. In a letter to Schlesinger, Breen complained about the scenes set in a parodic Heaven known as "Pair-O-Dice" and said, "I am certain that such scenes would give serious offense to many people in all parts of the world."[24] Authorities also requested that Schlesinger remove the halo from one of the black characters.[23] The letter does not specify to what exactly Breen objected, but musicologist Daniel Goldmark speculates that it was the idea of Heaven being run by blacks and the cartoon's implication that Heaven holds a place for "gamblers, dancers, drinkers, and, above all else, jazz fans", making it "even more threatening to white viewers."[11] Schlesinger managed to quell the censors by making alterations, such as cutting the phrase "De Lawd".[23] The short debuted in theatres on May 22, 1937. Tin Pan Alley Cats, a 1943 cartoon directed by Bob Clampett, was inspired in part by Clean Pastures and has a similar theme of redemption.[11]
  • Because of the racial stereotypes used against black people throughout the short, it prompted United Artists to withhold it from syndication within the United States in 1968. As such, the short was placed into the so-called Censored Eleven, a group of eleven Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes shorts withheld from television distribution in the United States since 1968 due to heavy stereotyping of black people.[25] The Green Pastures, on the other hand, is still in distribution.[20]

References edit

  1. ^ Scott, Keith (2022). Cartoon Voices from the Golden Age, 1930-70. BearManor Media. pp. 23–24. ISBN 979-8-88771-010-5.
  2. ^ Beck, Jerry; Friedwald, Will (1989). Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies: A Complete Illustrated Guide to the Warner Bros. Cartoons. Henry Holt and Co. p. 57. ISBN 0-8050-0894-2.
  3. ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 104–106. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  4. ^ a b c Goldmark 94.
  5. ^ a b c d Weisenfeld 79.
  6. ^ a b c d e Weisenfeld 80.
  7. ^ Goldmark 186, note 41.
  8. ^ a b Goldmark 186, note 44.
  9. ^ Goldmark 95–6.
  10. ^ Goldmark 93.
  11. ^ a b c Goldmark 97.
  12. ^ Nericcio 136.
  13. ^ a b Lindvall and Fraser 129.
  14. ^ a b c d Goldmark 96.
  15. ^ Goldmark 95.
  16. ^ Donald Bogle, quoted in Goldmark 96.
  17. ^ Weisenfeld 79–80.
  18. ^ Weisenfeld 266, note 92.
  19. ^ Goldmark 93–4.
  20. ^ a b Weisenfeld 266, note 95.
  21. ^ Lindvall and Frasier 128.
  22. ^ Maltin 238.
  23. ^ a b c Quoted in Cohen 29.
  24. ^ Breen, Joseph I. Letter to Leon Schlesinger. Quoted in Barrier, Michael (1999). Hollywood Cartoons: American Animation in Its Golden Age. Quoted in Goldmark 97.
  25. ^ The Straight Dope.

Further reading edit

  • Cohen, Karl F. (2004). Forbidden Animation: Censored Cartoons and Blacklisted Animators in America. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. ISBN 0-7864-2032-4.
  • Goldmark, Daniel (2005). Tunes for 'Toons: Music and the Hollywood Cartoon. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-23617-3.
  • Lindvall, Terry, and Ben Fraser (1998). "Darker Shades of Animation: African-American Images in Warner Bros. Cartoons". Reading the Rabbit: Explorations in Warner Bros. Animation. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-2538-1.
  • Landler, Mark (September 23, 1995). "Turner to Merge into Time Warner; a $7.5 Billion Deal", The New York Times. Accessed July 4, 2008.
  • Maltin, Leonard (1987). Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons, Revised and Updated Edition. Plume. ISBN 0-452-25993-2.
  • Nericcio, William Anthony (2007). Tex{t}-Mex: Seductive Hallucinations of the "Mexican" in America. Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-71457-2.
  • Straight Dope Science Advisory Board (February 5, 2002). "Did Bugs Bunny appear in a racist cartoon during World War II?" The Straight Dope. Accessed June 21, 2007.
  • Weisenfeld, Judith (2007). Hollywood Be They Name: African American Religion in American Film, 1929–1949. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-25100-8.

See also edit

  • Hazbin Hotel, a 21st century animated musical series with a similar premise about redeeming sinners into Heaven

External links edit

  • Clean Pastures at IMDb  
  • Clean Pastures on the Internet Archive
  • Clean Pastures on the DailyMotion dot com

clean, pastures, 1937, warner, bros, merrie, melodies, cartoon, directed, friz, freleng, short, released, 1937, title, carddirected, frelengproduced, byleon, schlesingerstarringben, carterlillian, randolphwilliam, dayspaul, taylor, sportsmenbasin, street, boys. Clean Pastures is a 1937 Warner Bros Merrie Melodies cartoon directed by Friz Freleng 2 The short was released on May 22 1937 3 Clean PasturesClean Pastures title cardDirected byI FrelengProduced byLeon SchlesingerStarringBen CarterLillian RandolphWilliam DaysPaul Taylor s SportsmenBasin Street BoysMel Blanc 1 Music byCarl W StallingThe Four BlackbirdsAnimation byPaul SmithPhil MonroeColor processTechnicolorDistributed byWarner Bros VitaphoneRelease dateMay 22 1937 1937 05 22 USA Running time7 min one reel LanguageEnglish The cartoon gets the title from the Warner Bros 1936 film The Green Pastures Contents 1 Plot 2 Critical reception 3 Notes 4 References 5 Further reading 6 See also 7 External linksPlot editClean Pastures opens in Harlem New York City where African American caricatures gamble drink and dance in a sea of bars clubs and dancing girls In Heaven known as Pair O Dice a black Saint Peter reads the headline Pair O Dice Preferred Hits New Low As Hades Inc Soars The angel rings an angelic Stepin Fetchit with enormous lips 4 5 probably a reference to Oscar Polk s performance as Gabriel in The Green Pastures 6 and orders him to rectify the situation Gabriel descends to Harlem and stands by a sign modeled after James Montgomery Flagg s World War I Uncle Sam poster 5 that reads Pair O Dice Needs You Opportunity Travel Good Food Water Melon Clean Living Music Talkies Nevertheless the denizens of Harlem continue with their iniquity source source An excerpt of the song Swing for Sale as featured in the cartoon Have You Got Any Castles nbsp An angelic caricature of Stepin Fetchit tries to recruit souls for Pair O Dice using a pastiche of James Montgomery Flagg s World War I army recruitment poster Angels caricatures of jazz performers Louis Armstrong Cab Calloway Fats Waller The Mills Brothers and Jimmie Lunceford tell Saint Peter that to get people to paradise he will need rhythm 4 7 The short s credits list no voice actors but a member of the all black jazz group the Four Blackbirds possibly Leroy Hurt provides the cartoon s celebrity impressions 8 The musicians go to Harlem and break into a performance of Swing for Sale and the Harlemites flock to listen The film s climax takes on the characteristics of a revivalist camp meeting as the band makes its way to Pair O Dice and people follow them in droves 9 The newcomers receive their halos and in the cartoon s final gag the Devil himself asks to be admitted Clean Pastures is a musical film which means that it shifts between musical and non musical sections both of which are integral to the story 10 Carl Stalling s musical score makes use of both public domain music and songs owned by Warner Bros Stalling s music supplies both the foundation for the story and the driving force behind the animation Music is of such importance that characters in Clean Pastures dance about even when no performers are pictured 11 The all black jazz group the Four Blackbirds performs the backing vocals for these songs 8 A choir of a cappella black male voices opens the cartoon with Save Me Sister from Temptation a song from the 1936 Warner Bros film The Singing Kid featuring Al Jolson Thus Stalling establishes one of the cartoon s themes that sinners may be redeemed from the opening credits As the scene shifts to Harlem the jazz standard Sweet Georgia Brown accompanies the bevy of African American vices Caricatures of Bill Bojangles Robinson and Al Jolson perform snippets of the blackface tunes Old Folks at Home and I Love to Singa However the short s major number is Swing for Sale performed by caricatures of popular black jazz performers The short ends with a jazzed up version of James A Bland s minstrel spiritual Oh Dem Golden Slippers 4 Critical reception editBlack critics in the 1930s wrote about the play and film The Green Pastures but they were silent on its animated parody Weisenfeld speculates that this is because animated cartoons were not seen as significant at the time 6 Modern critics of Clean Pastures fault the film for its stereotypical depictions of black culture Cultural studies scholar William Anthony Nericcio sees the film as representative of a pattern in the works of Friz Freleng who also produced such stereotype ridden films as Jungle Jitters Goldilocks and the Jivin Bears and the Speedy Gonzales cartoons 12 Lindvall and Fraser are more forgiving and call the cartoon playful light and mischievous 13 Daniel Goldmark alleges that the film is a burlesque of black religion and culture in its portrayal of Pair O Dice as heavenly Harlem shops and singing choirs 14 In his interpretation the film s use of rhythm is a metaphor for faith This demonstrates white Americans placement of jazz alongside religion and the unfettered expressions of emotion associated with it as aspects of African American culture The cartoon implies that jazz cannot be replaced in the black psyche as the musicians in the film must appropriate jazz not compete with it to draw Harlemites to Pair O Dice 15 The mortal characters are given no information about why Pair O Dice is better than Harlem but the upbeat music is enough to lure them there Even the Devil himself takes the bait 14 In the end the film reaffirms the vision of Paradise from The Green Pastures with its perpetual Negro holiday and everlasting weekend fish fry 16 On the other hand Judith Weisenfeld sees Clean Pastures as an explicit rejection of Connelly s fish fry Instead she argues that the short is a metaphor for the replacement of one generation of African American performers and stereotypes for a new one as the result of African Americans moving to urban areas 6 In contrast to The Green Pastures and its portrayal of rural black culture the cartoon is set in a solidly urban framework Clean Pastures replaces stereotypes of black watermelon eaters and chicken stealers with black dancers drinkers and gamblers 5 Old style black stereotypes are represented by the Stepin Fetchit angel and his recruitment sign which promises delights that only appeal to rural black stereotypes Yet even Bill Bojangles Robinson and Al Jolson who built their careers on blackface depictions of rural blacks reject Fetchit s plea for souls and opt for the Kotton Klub nightclub 17 The angelic jazz performers represent new urban black culture Through their rendition of Swing for Sale the souls of the Harlemites are saved and the cartoon makes the point that the African American culture of the period was increasingly urban culture and by extension that the black Heaven is an urban Northern place 6 Lindvall and Fraser take a similar view seeing the cartoon as part of the Warner directors transition from stereotyping blacks as rural bumpkins to featuring them as urban hepcat s 13 nbsp Jazz performing angels use rhythm to lead the souls of Harlemites to heaven Freleng s choice to caricature Cab Calloway Fats Waller and Louis Armstrong shows the crossover appeal of those performers among white audiences in the 1930s Goldmark and Weisenfeld agree that the film s portrayal of black culture is a negative one Goldmark criticizes the film s implication that certain kinds of black music or black performers are better than others He interprets the short s jazzy finale which juxtaposes contemporary popular jazz with a traditional African American spiritual as representative of this theme Furthermore placing the creators of good hot jazz in heaven suggests that certain types of black music are better than others hot music made in such places as Harlem would lead to debauchery and eventually to Hades Inc Only through the noble efforts of famous black musicians could souls be turned to a better direction 14 Contemporary black commentators argued that to white audiences Connelly s The Green Pastures simply reinforced the notion that black people presented a danger that needed to be contained Weisenfeld argues that this is also the case with Freleng s parody To white viewers in the 1930s the film s implication that blacks care for nothing but gambling drinking and dancing only reinforces notions of the dangers posed by urban blacks 6 According to Goldmark the choice of performers caricatured is telling that Armstrong and Calloway are depicted as angels indicates that their crossover appeal was strong enough among whites that white audiences would not have felt threatened by the notion that they were angels in Heaven 14 Weisenfeld notes that by focusing the narrative on Saint Peter and his Stepin Fetchit underling the animators ducked the potential offense white audiences might have felt upon seeing a black God 5 Notes editMany Hollywood cartoons from the 1930s are based on feature films 18 Therefore it was only natural for Leon Schlesinger s cartoon studio to parody the 1936 Warner Bros musical film The Green Pastures itself an adaptation of a play by Marc Connelly which won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1930 The Green Pastures features an all black cast and proved a success for Warner Bros despite generating controversy 19 Animator Friz Freleng had directed the short Sunday Go to Meetin Time in 1936 The cartoon lampoons African American religious beliefs to the backdrop of jazz music 20 and tells the story of a rural black man who shirks church on Sunday in favor of worldly pastimes and finds himself in Hell as a result 21 Clean Pastures was thus keeping with his past work Freleng even reuses animation of a jitterbugging couple from the Sunday Go to Meetin Time in Clean Pastures The short s use of caricatures of famous performers was in the same vein as such Freleng films as At Your Service Madame and The Coo Coo Nut Grove 22 Schlesinger and Warner Bros had problems with Clean Pastures from the start Hollywood censors alleged that the film ran afoul of the Hays Production Code because it burlesqued religion Later commentators surmise that the censors also objected to the portrayal of a Heaven run by African Americans Modern critics have been no kinder to the film and cite its portrayal of black characters as offensive and reliant on negative stereotypes Musicologist Daniel Goldmark interprets the film as a send up of black religion and culture and the increasing identification of 1930s white audiences of jazz music with black culture Religion scholar Judith Weisenfeld sees Clean Pastures as a metaphor for the replacement of rural minstrel show stereotypes of blacks for modern urban ones Warner Bros had trouble distributing the film In an interview for Look magazine producer Leon Schlesinger complained that Clean Pastures gave him more trouble with Hollywood censors than any live action film 23 Censor Joseph I Breen alleged that the cartoon violated the Hays Production Code a set of rules for the content of American films because it burlesqued religion In a letter to Schlesinger Breen complained about the scenes set in a parodic Heaven known as Pair O Dice and said I am certain that such scenes would give serious offense to many people in all parts of the world 24 Authorities also requested that Schlesinger remove the halo from one of the black characters 23 The letter does not specify to what exactly Breen objected but musicologist Daniel Goldmark speculates that it was the idea of Heaven being run by blacks and the cartoon s implication that Heaven holds a place for gamblers dancers drinkers and above all else jazz fans making it even more threatening to white viewers 11 Schlesinger managed to quell the censors by making alterations such as cutting the phrase De Lawd 23 The short debuted in theatres on May 22 1937 Tin Pan Alley Cats a 1943 cartoon directed by Bob Clampett was inspired in part by Clean Pastures and has a similar theme of redemption 11 Because of the racial stereotypes used against black people throughout the short it prompted United Artists to withhold it from syndication within the United States in 1968 As such the short was placed into the so called Censored Eleven a group of eleven Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes shorts withheld from television distribution in the United States since 1968 due to heavy stereotyping of black people 25 The Green Pastures on the other hand is still in distribution 20 References edit Scott Keith 2022 Cartoon Voices from the Golden Age 1930 70 BearManor Media pp 23 24 ISBN 979 8 88771 010 5 Beck Jerry Friedwald Will 1989 Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies A Complete Illustrated Guide to the Warner Bros Cartoons Henry Holt and Co p 57 ISBN 0 8050 0894 2 Lenburg Jeff 1999 The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons Checkmark Books pp 104 106 ISBN 0 8160 3831 7 Retrieved 6 June 2020 a b c Goldmark 94 a b c d Weisenfeld 79 a b c d e Weisenfeld 80 Goldmark 186 note 41 a b Goldmark 186 note 44 Goldmark 95 6 Goldmark 93 a b c Goldmark 97 Nericcio 136 a b Lindvall and Fraser 129 a b c d Goldmark 96 Goldmark 95 Donald Bogle quoted in Goldmark 96 Weisenfeld 79 80 Weisenfeld 266 note 92 Goldmark 93 4 a b Weisenfeld 266 note 95 Lindvall and Frasier 128 Maltin 238 a b c Quoted in Cohen 29 Breen Joseph I Letter to Leon Schlesinger Quoted in Barrier Michael 1999 Hollywood Cartoons American Animation in Its Golden Age Quoted in Goldmark 97 The Straight Dope Further reading editCohen Karl F 2004 Forbidden Animation Censored Cartoons and Blacklisted Animators in America Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers ISBN 0 7864 2032 4 Goldmark Daniel 2005 Tunes for Toons Music and the Hollywood Cartoon Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 23617 3 Lindvall Terry and Ben Fraser 1998 Darker Shades of Animation African American Images in Warner Bros Cartoons Reading the Rabbit Explorations in Warner Bros Animation Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 2538 1 Landler Mark September 23 1995 Turner to Merge into Time Warner a 7 5 Billion Deal The New York Times Accessed July 4 2008 Maltin Leonard 1987 Of Mice and Magic A History of American Animated Cartoons Revised and Updated Edition Plume ISBN 0 452 25993 2 Nericcio William Anthony 2007 Tex t Mex Seductive Hallucinations of the Mexican in America Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 71457 2 Straight Dope Science Advisory Board February 5 2002 Did Bugs Bunny appear in a racist cartoon during World War II The Straight Dope Accessed June 21 2007 Weisenfeld Judith 2007 Hollywood Be They Name African American Religion in American Film 1929 1949 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 25100 8 See also editHazbin Hotel a 21st century animated musical series with a similar premise about redeeming sinners into HeavenExternal links editClean Pastures at IMDb nbsp Clean Pastures on the Internet Archive Clean Pastures on the DailyMotion dot com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clean Pastures amp oldid 1223222085, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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