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Crusader Rabbit

Crusader Rabbit is the first animated series produced specifically for television.[1] Its main characters were Crusader Rabbit and his sidekick Ragland T. Tiger, or "Rags". The stories were four-minute-long satirical cliffhangers.[2]

Crusader Rabbit
Title card
Created by
Starring
Opening theme"Rabbit Fanfare" (adapted from "The Trail to Mexico") and "Main Title Rabbit" (adapted from "Ten Little Indians")
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes
  • 455
  • 195 (black and white)
  • 260 (color)
Production
Executive producers
Running time4 minutes
Production companies
  • Television Arts Productions (1950–52)
  • Jerry Fairbanks, Inc. (1950–52)
  • Capital Enterprises/TV Spots (1956–59)
Release
Original network
Picture format
Original releaseAugust 1, 1950 (1950-08-01) –
December 1, 1959 (1959-12-01)

The concept was test marketed in 1948,[3] while the initial serial – Crusader vs. the State of Texas – aired on KNBH in Los Angeles beginning on August 1, 1950 (not August 1, 1949 as some sources erroneously state).[4] The program was syndicated from 1950 to 1951 for 195 episodes, then was revived in 1959 for 260 color episodes.[3] Jay Ward, who went on to create The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show, was involved as business manager and producer.[5]

Production history

The concept of a cartoon series made exclusively for television came from animator Alex Anderson, who worked for Terrytoons Studios. Terrytoons turned down Anderson's proposed series, preferring to remain in theatrical film animation. Consequently, Anderson approached Jay Ward to create a partnership – Anderson being in charge of production and Ward arranging financing. Ward became business manager and producer, joining with Anderson to form "Television Arts Productions" in 1947. They tried to sell the series – initially presented as part of a proposed series, The Comic Strips of Television, which featured an earlier incarnation of Dudley Do-Right of the Mounties – to the NBC television network, with Jerry Fairbanks as the network's "supervising producer".[3] NBC didn't broadcast Crusader Rabbit on their network, but allowed Fairbanks to sell the series in national syndication, with many NBC affiliates, including those in New York and Los Angeles, picking it up for local showings. WNBC-TV in New York continued to show the original Crusader Rabbit episodes from 1950 through 1967, and some stations used the program as late as the 1970s.

The original series employed limited animation, appearing almost as narrated storyboards with frequent cuts and minor movement by the characters, much in the style of another early NBC animated program, Tele-Comics. This was due to the limited budget that producers Jay Ward and Alex Anderson worked with to film the series. In 1948 Clarence E. Wheeler created the original opening and closing theme for the animated series, adapting and composing the folk melodies "The Trail to Mexico" (known on cue sheets as "Rabbit Fanfare") and "Ten Little Indians" (known as "Main Title Rabbit").[6]

Each program began with a title sequence of a mounted knight galloping across the screen. The episodes then featured a short, usually satirical, adventure in the form of a movie serial, ending with a cliffhanger.

Crusader Rabbit was syndicated from 1950 to 1952,[citation needed] totaling 195 episodes (divided into 10 "crusades"), and then re-aired for many years. It featured Crusader Rabbit, his companion Ragland T. Tiger ("Rags"), and their occasional nemeses – Dudley Nightshade and Whetstone Whiplash with his sidekick, Bilious Green. Some episodes featured Crusader's and Rags' friend Garfield the Groundhog. Ragland Tiger's name came from the jazz tune "Tiger Rag" and his middle initial "T" stood for The (as in Rags The Tiger), while Dudley Nightshade's name was a play on the poisonous plant, "deadly nightshade". As a running gag, another character would ask Rags what the "T" stood for, to which he would reply, "Larry. My father couldn't spell!"

The series was revived and 13 new "crusades" (totaling 260 color episodes) were produced in 1956 by Shull Bonsall's Capital Enterprises. Bonsall purchased Television Arts Productions and gained the rights to Crusader Rabbit during a protracted legal battle between Jay Ward, Alex Anderson, Jerry Fairbanks and the NBC network over ownership of the series. Animation was provided by Bonsall's Creston Studios, also known as TV Spots, Inc., supervised by Bob Ganon and Gerald Ray. The new series was not seen until early 1959.

The revived (2nd) series used an opening and closing theme from the British "Impress" production music library licensed by Emil Ascher publishing of New York. It was titled "Juggins", and was composed by Van Phillips, the professional name of Alexander Van Cleve Phillips.[6]

Lucille Bliss provided the voice of Crusader Rabbit in the original series; she was replaced by Ge Ge Pearson in the revived series. Vern Louden played Rags in both. Dudley Nightshade was voiced by Russ Coughlan, and narration was by Roy Whaley.

Legacy

The success of Crusader Rabbit inspired many more television cartoon character packages. Jay Ward would later produce The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show.[1]

Home video

In 1985, Rhino Entertainment released the first two volumes of Crusader Rabbit in a planned[citation needed] home video release of all the original episodes. However, 20th Century Fox claimed the distribution rights by their acquisition of previous owner Metromedia Producers Corporation. 20th Television currently owns the distribution rights of the show.[7]

In 2009, AudioTape, Inc. released a three-DVD set of 11 Crusader Rabbit serials; two from the black-and-white era (including "Crusader Rabbit Vs. the State of Texas") and nine from the color era.

In popular culture

  • There were two Dell Publishing comic books featuring Crusader Rabbit and Rags.[3]
  • In 2009, Lulu.com published Where Is Crusader Rabbit Now That We Really Need Him?, a biographical novel about soldiers in the Vietnam War by William K. Millar Jr.
  • A Leave it to Beaver episode mentions a Crusader Rabbit sweatshirt in the lost and found.

First series

The first series aired in syndication, with production of 195 episodes ending in 1951.[3]

Episodes

  • Crusader vs. the State of Texas (15 chapters)
  • Crusader vs. the Pirates (20 chapters)
  • Crusader and the Rajah of Rinsewater (20 chapters)
  • Crusader and the Schmohawk Indians (15 chapters)
  • Crusader and the Great Horse Mystery (20 chapters)
  • Crusader and the Circus (10 chapters)
  • Crusader in the Tenth Century (30 chapters)
  • Crusader and the Mad Hollywood Scientist (15 chapters)
  • Crusader and the Leprechauns (25 chapters)
  • Crusader and the Showboat (25 chapters)

Production staff

  • Executive Producer: Jerry Fairbanks
  • Producers: Jay Ward, Alex Anderson
  • Director: Alex Anderson
  • Story: Alex Anderson, Joe Curtin, Hal Goodman, Arthur North, Lloyd Turner
  • Artists: Alex Anderson, Bob Bastian, Bob Bemiller, Chuck Fusion, Randy Grochoski, Ed King, Ted Martine, Bob Mills, Lee Mishkin, Grim Natwick, Russ Sholl, Jim Scott, John Sparey, Dean Spille, Spaulding White, Volney White
  • Camera: Bob Oleson, Jack Williams
  • Music: Clarence E. Wheeler
  • Editor: Tom Stanford

Voices

  • Lucille Bliss — Crusader Rabbit[3]
  • Vern Louden — Ragland T. ("Rags") Tiger[3]
  • Russ Coughlin — Dudley Nightshade[3]
  • Roy Whaley — Narrator

Second series

The second series premiered in 1956 syndication with 260 episodes produced,[3] 20 "chapters" per episode. They were later edited into 13 one-hour programs.

Episodes

  • "The Great Uranium Hunt" (also known as "Mine Your Own Business")
  • "The Yukon Adventure" (also known as "Thar's Gold in Them Fills")
  • "Tales of Schmerwood Forest" (also known as "Crook's Tour")
  • "West We Forget"
  • "Sahara You"
  • "Gullible's Travels"
  • "Should Auld Acquaintance Be for Cotton" (also known as "Belly Acres Mystery")
  • "Nothing Atoll"
  • "Scars and Stripes"
  • "Apes of Rath"
  • "Caesar's Salad" (also known as "There's No Place Like Rome")
  • "The Great Baseball Mystery" (also known as "Gone With the Wind-Up")
  • "The Search for the Missing Link"

Production staff

  • Executive Producer: Shull Bonsall
  • Director: Sam Nicholson
  • Animation Director: Bob Bemiller
  • Story: Chris Bob Hayward, Barbara Chain
  • Story Sketch: Jack Miller
  • Music Scoring: Art Becker
  • Sound Effects: Ray Erlenborn, Gene Twambley
  • Layout: Ed Levitt
  • Animators: Alex Ignatiev, Bob Matz, Reuben Timmens, Joseph Price, John Sparey, Marv Woodward
  • Backgrounds: David Weidman, Eleanor Bogardus, Rosemary O'Connor
  • Ink and Paint: Martha Buckley, Maggi Alcumbrac
  • Production Planning: Dave Hoffman
  • Camera: Julian E. Raymond, Ted Bemiller
  • Editors: Charles McCann, Norman Vizents
  • Production Supervision: Bob Ganon

Voices

  • Ge Ge Pearson – Crusader Rabbit
  • Vern Louden – Ragland T. ("Rags") Tiger
  • Roy Whaley – Narrator
  • Russ Coughlan – Dudley Nightshade

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Lenburg, Jeff (2006). Who's Who in Animated Cartoons: An International Guide to Film And Television's Award-Winning And Legendary Animators. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 348–349. ISBN 978-1557836717. Retrieved November 20, 2012.
  2. ^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 141–142. ISBN 978-1538103739.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Crusader Rabbit at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on April 15, 2012.
  4. ^ "Debunking The Myths: Crusader Rabbit and Walt Disney" Cartoon Research
  5. ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 224–226. ISBN 978-1476665993.
  6. ^ a b "Crusader Rabbit" ClassicThemes
  7. ^ "Beyond The Simpsons: What Animation Assets Disney Will Own by Acquiring Fox – Animation Scoop". www.animationscoop.com. Retrieved March 11, 2023.

Further reading

  • Kevin Scott Collier. The Hare Raising Tales of Crusader Rabbit. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2018. ISBN 1723388726
  • Fred Patten. “2 ½ Carrots Tall: TV’s First Animated Cartoon Star: Part 1, The Story Behind Crusader Rabbit” Comics Scene #6 (November 1982), pp. 50–56; “Part 2, The Stories of Crusader Rabbit” Comics Scene #7 (February 1983), pp. 20–22.
  • Fred Patten. "Some Notes on Crusader Rabbit” Animatrix (UCLA Animation Workshop) #6 (Summer 1992), pp. 29–36.

External links

  • Crusader Rabbit at IMDb
  • Crusader Rabbit at Toonopedia

crusader, rabbit, first, animated, series, produced, specifically, television, main, characters, were, sidekick, ragland, tiger, rags, stories, were, four, minute, long, satirical, cliffhangers, title, cardcreated, byalexander, anderson, wardstarringfirst, ser. Crusader Rabbit is the first animated series produced specifically for television 1 Its main characters were Crusader Rabbit and his sidekick Ragland T Tiger or Rags The stories were four minute long satirical cliffhangers 2 Crusader RabbitTitle cardCreated byAlexander Anderson Jay WardStarringFirst series Lucille Bliss Second series Ge Ge Pearson Russ Coughlan Both series Vern Louden Roy WhaleyOpening theme Rabbit Fanfare adapted from The Trail to Mexico and Main Title Rabbit adapted from Ten Little Indians Country of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons3No of episodes455 195 black and white 260 color ProductionExecutive producersJerry Fairbanks 1950 52 Shull Bonsall 1956 59 Running time4 minutesProduction companiesTelevision Arts Productions 1950 52 Jerry Fairbanks Inc 1950 52 Capital Enterprises TV Spots 1956 59 ReleaseOriginal networkSyndication 1950 1979 WNBC 1950 1967 and KNBH 1950 NBC s owned and operated station in New York and Los Angeles 1950 1967 Picture formatBlack and White 1950 1952 Color 1956 1959 Original releaseAugust 1 1950 1950 08 01 December 1 1959 1959 12 01 The concept was test marketed in 1948 3 while the initial serial Crusader vs the State of Texas aired on KNBH in Los Angeles beginning on August 1 1950 not August 1 1949 as some sources erroneously state 4 The program was syndicated from 1950 to 1951 for 195 episodes then was revived in 1959 for 260 color episodes 3 Jay Ward who went on to create The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show was involved as business manager and producer 5 Contents 1 Production history 2 Legacy 3 Home video 4 In popular culture 5 First series 5 1 Episodes 5 2 Production staff 5 3 Voices 6 Second series 6 1 Episodes 6 2 Production staff 6 3 Voices 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksProduction history EditThe concept of a cartoon series made exclusively for television came from animator Alex Anderson who worked for Terrytoons Studios Terrytoons turned down Anderson s proposed series preferring to remain in theatrical film animation Consequently Anderson approached Jay Ward to create a partnership Anderson being in charge of production and Ward arranging financing Ward became business manager and producer joining with Anderson to form Television Arts Productions in 1947 They tried to sell the series initially presented as part of a proposed series The Comic Strips of Television which featured an earlier incarnation of Dudley Do Right of the Mounties to the NBC television network with Jerry Fairbanks as the network s supervising producer 3 NBC didn t broadcast Crusader Rabbit on their network but allowed Fairbanks to sell the series in national syndication with many NBC affiliates including those in New York and Los Angeles picking it up for local showings WNBC TV in New York continued to show the original Crusader Rabbit episodes from 1950 through 1967 and some stations used the program as late as the 1970s The original series employed limited animation appearing almost as narrated storyboards with frequent cuts and minor movement by the characters much in the style of another early NBC animated program Tele Comics This was due to the limited budget that producers Jay Ward and Alex Anderson worked with to film the series In 1948 Clarence E Wheeler created the original opening and closing theme for the animated series adapting and composing the folk melodies The Trail to Mexico known on cue sheets as Rabbit Fanfare and Ten Little Indians known as Main Title Rabbit 6 Each program began with a title sequence of a mounted knight galloping across the screen The episodes then featured a short usually satirical adventure in the form of a movie serial ending with a cliffhanger Crusader Rabbit was syndicated from 1950 to 1952 citation needed totaling 195 episodes divided into 10 crusades and then re aired for many years It featured Crusader Rabbit his companion Ragland T Tiger Rags and their occasional nemeses Dudley Nightshade and Whetstone Whiplash with his sidekick Bilious Green Some episodes featured Crusader s and Rags friend Garfield the Groundhog Ragland Tiger s name came from the jazz tune Tiger Rag and his middle initial T stood for The as in Rags The Tiger while Dudley Nightshade s name was a play on the poisonous plant deadly nightshade As a running gag another character would ask Rags what the T stood for to which he would reply Larry My father couldn t spell The series was revived and 13 new crusades totaling 260 color episodes were produced in 1956 by Shull Bonsall s Capital Enterprises Bonsall purchased Television Arts Productions and gained the rights to Crusader Rabbit during a protracted legal battle between Jay Ward Alex Anderson Jerry Fairbanks and the NBC network over ownership of the series Animation was provided by Bonsall s Creston Studios also known as TV Spots Inc supervised by Bob Ganon and Gerald Ray The new series was not seen until early 1959 The revived 2nd series used an opening and closing theme from the British Impress production music library licensed by Emil Ascher publishing of New York It was titled Juggins and was composed by Van Phillips the professional name of Alexander Van Cleve Phillips 6 Lucille Bliss provided the voice of Crusader Rabbit in the original series she was replaced by Ge Ge Pearson in the revived series Vern Louden played Rags in both Dudley Nightshade was voiced by Russ Coughlan and narration was by Roy Whaley Legacy EditThe success of Crusader Rabbit inspired many more television cartoon character packages Jay Ward would later produce The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show 1 Home video EditIn 1985 Rhino Entertainment released the first two volumes of Crusader Rabbit in a planned citation needed home video release of all the original episodes However 20th Century Fox claimed the distribution rights by their acquisition of previous owner Metromedia Producers Corporation 20th Television currently owns the distribution rights of the show 7 In 2009 AudioTape Inc released a three DVD set of 11 Crusader Rabbit serials two from the black and white era including Crusader Rabbit Vs the State of Texas and nine from the color era In popular culture EditThere were two Dell Publishing comic books featuring Crusader Rabbit and Rags 3 In 2009 Lulu com published Where Is Crusader Rabbit Now That We Really Need Him a biographical novel about soldiers in the Vietnam War by William K Millar Jr A Leave it to Beaver episode mentions a Crusader Rabbit sweatshirt in the lost and found First series EditThe first series aired in syndication with production of 195 episodes ending in 1951 3 Episodes Edit Crusader vs the State of Texas 15 chapters Crusader vs the Pirates 20 chapters Crusader and the Rajah of Rinsewater 20 chapters Crusader and the Schmohawk Indians 15 chapters Crusader and the Great Horse Mystery 20 chapters Crusader and the Circus 10 chapters Crusader in the Tenth Century 30 chapters Crusader and the Mad Hollywood Scientist 15 chapters Crusader and the Leprechauns 25 chapters Crusader and the Showboat 25 chapters Production staff Edit Executive Producer Jerry Fairbanks Producers Jay Ward Alex Anderson Director Alex Anderson Story Alex Anderson Joe Curtin Hal Goodman Arthur North Lloyd Turner Artists Alex Anderson Bob Bastian Bob Bemiller Chuck Fusion Randy Grochoski Ed King Ted Martine Bob Mills Lee Mishkin Grim Natwick Russ Sholl Jim Scott John Sparey Dean Spille Spaulding White Volney White Camera Bob Oleson Jack Williams Music Clarence E Wheeler Editor Tom StanfordVoices Edit Lucille Bliss Crusader Rabbit 3 Vern Louden Ragland T Rags Tiger 3 Russ Coughlin Dudley Nightshade 3 Roy Whaley NarratorSecond series EditThe second series premiered in 1956 syndication with 260 episodes produced 3 20 chapters per episode They were later edited into 13 one hour programs Episodes Edit The Great Uranium Hunt also known as Mine Your Own Business The Yukon Adventure also known as Thar s Gold in Them Fills Tales of Schmerwood Forest also known as Crook s Tour West We Forget Sahara You Gullible s Travels Should Auld Acquaintance Be for Cotton also known as Belly Acres Mystery Nothing Atoll Scars and Stripes Apes of Rath Caesar s Salad also known as There s No Place Like Rome The Great Baseball Mystery also known as Gone With the Wind Up The Search for the Missing Link Production staff Edit Executive Producer Shull Bonsall Director Sam Nicholson Animation Director Bob Bemiller Story Chris Bob Hayward Barbara Chain Story Sketch Jack Miller Music Scoring Art Becker Sound Effects Ray Erlenborn Gene Twambley Layout Ed Levitt Animators Alex Ignatiev Bob Matz Reuben Timmens Joseph Price John Sparey Marv Woodward Backgrounds David Weidman Eleanor Bogardus Rosemary O Connor Ink and Paint Martha Buckley Maggi Alcumbrac Production Planning Dave Hoffman Camera Julian E Raymond Ted Bemiller Editors Charles McCann Norman Vizents Production Supervision Bob GanonVoices Edit Ge Ge Pearson Crusader Rabbit Vern Louden Ragland T Rags Tiger Roy Whaley Narrator Russ Coughlan Dudley NightshadeSee also EditList of animated television seriesReferences Edit a b Lenburg Jeff 2006 Who s Who in Animated Cartoons An International Guide to Film And Television s Award Winning And Legendary Animators Hal Leonard Corporation pp 348 349 ISBN 978 1557836717 Retrieved November 20 2012 Perlmutter David 2018 The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows Rowman amp Littlefield pp 141 142 ISBN 978 1538103739 a b c d e f g h i Crusader Rabbit at Don Markstein s Toonopedia Archived from the original on April 15 2012 Debunking The Myths Crusader Rabbit and Walt Disney Cartoon Research Erickson Hal 2005 Television Cartoon Shows An Illustrated Encyclopedia 1949 Through 2003 2nd ed McFarland amp Co pp 224 226 ISBN 978 1476665993 a b Crusader Rabbit ClassicThemes Beyond The Simpsons What Animation Assets Disney Will Own by Acquiring Fox Animation Scoop www animationscoop com Retrieved March 11 2023 Further reading EditKevin Scott Collier The Hare Raising Tales of Crusader Rabbit CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform 2018 ISBN 1723388726 Fred Patten 2 Carrots Tall TV s First Animated Cartoon Star Part 1 The Story Behind Crusader Rabbit Comics Scene 6 November 1982 pp 50 56 Part 2 The Stories of Crusader Rabbit Comics Scene 7 February 1983 pp 20 22 Fred Patten Some Notes on Crusader Rabbit Animatrix UCLA Animation Workshop 6 Summer 1992 pp 29 36 External links EditCrusader Rabbit at IMDb Crusader Rabbit at Toonopedia Bubble Trouble a Crusader Rabbit children s book via the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crusader Rabbit amp oldid 1160160748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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