Animation
Nation
By
Steve Herte
Bewitched
Bunny (WB, 1954) – Director: Charles M. Jones.
Writer: Michael Maltese (story). Voices: Mel Blanc & Bea
Benaderet. Color, 7 minutes.
Broom-Stick
Bunny (WB, 1956) – Director: Charles M. Jones.
Writer: Tedd Pierce (story). Voices: Mel Blanc & June Foray.
Color, 7 minutes.
A
Witch’s Tangled Hare (WB, 1959) – Director: Abe
Levitow. Writer: Michael Maltese (story). Voices: Mel Blanc &
June Foray. Color, 6 minutes.
Halloween.
In my early years, it was one night I looked forward to, planned what
costume I would wear for and hoped for cool, but not rainy, weather.
Getting together with friends and visiting house after house for
who-knows-what goodies was great fun. And ... back when it was safe
to go out after dark without a parental escort. The worst that would
happen is you came home chalky or streaked with lipstick.
Ghosts,
goblins, vampires and witches, and things that go bump in the night
were always stars in my favorite stories in books and on film. The
scarier the movie, the more I liked it. Now, with the advanced stage
of computer graphics, horror can be (and is) taken to the
give-you-a-heart-attack level, which makes me a little wary of spooky
films today.
But
Warner Brothers cartoons took those same creatures of the night and
made them funny and memorable characters. Remember Gossamer, the
red-haired monster in Hair Raising Hare (1946)? How
about the Mr. Hyde creature that terrorized Bugs in Hyde and
Hare (1955)? One of my all-time favorites was Witch
Hazel, who appeared in three cartoons: Bewitched
Bunny (1954), Broom-Stick Bunny (1956)
and A Witch’s Tangled
Hare (1959). Bea Benaderet provided Hazel’s
voice in the first and June Foray brought the character to her place
in my heart in the other two cartoons.
In
the late ‘40s into the early ‘50s, the animators for Warner were
looking for a new enemy for their most popular character, Bugs Bunny.
Until that moment, Elmer Fudd had been the most popular of Bugs’
foes, but they realized there were just so many takes on stories
revolving around the two. Friz Freleng’s unit came up with Yosemite
Sam (said to have been modeled on Friz himself), who became very
popular with audiences. Robert McKimson’s unit developed one of the
studio’s most popular characters in the Tasmanian Devil.
Chuck
Jones’ unit, for its part, experimented with several characters,
each of which faced Bugs in a few cartoons, but none of which became
a long-term answer. The most popular of those characters were Marvin
the Martian and Witch Hazel. Witch Hazel appeared in three cartoons
with Bugs, beginning in 1954 with Bewitched Bunny. The ‘toon
proved so popular with audiences that she was brought back in 1956 by
Jones. The final Witch Hazel cartoon from Jones’ unit was made in
1959 with veteran animator Abe Levitow taking up the director’s
chores. It’s unclear whether Jones was ill during the shooting or
simply wasn’t interested, or perhaps it was intended on Jones’
part to give Levitow directorial experience.
The
character’s name, Witch Hazel, is a takeoff on the name of a North
American shrub and the astringent made from it. Other studios have
also had a character with the same name. In 1952, Witch Hazel
appeared in Disney’s Donald Duck cartoon, Trick or Treat,
where she helped Huey, Dewey and Louis get candy from Uncle Donald.
Ironically, Foray provided her voice. Her appearance is very
different from the Warner Bros. cartoons: short with a warty chin,
large red nose, green eyes, traditional witch’s outfit, long blonde
(sometimes grey) hair, and as tall, black hat. She is also far more
benevolent that the Warner version. After the cartoon appeared, she
was relegated to Disney comic books.
The
character also appeared for Famous Studios (Paramount) and MGM,
though not as a starring or co-starring character. Independent
Rembrandt Studios had a character called “Hazel Witch.”
But
no one used her like Jones did. He admitted in an interview that he
got the idea for the character from Disney’s cartoon, but he
thought he could improve on it by making her a villain and teaming
her with Bugs. Despite the common name,
Jones' conception of Witch Hazel differs greatly from the witch
appearing in the Disney cartoon. Jones’ witch is much more
stylized, with a rotund, green-skinned body wrapped in plain, blue
dress and supported by twig-like legs. She also has wild black hair,
out of which hairpins fly, spinning in midair whenever she zooms off
on her broom or cackles in glee over her next evil scheme. Her
crumpled hat looks as though it had been through one too many
campaigns. Her nose and chin jut out from her face, as she sports
only a single tooth. And she's far more villainous than Disney's
witch, who was benign.
In Bewitched
Bunny, the first of the series,
Hazel is the witch in the classic tale Hansel
and Gretel. She has lured a boy and
a girl into her house to eat them, looking up recipes
like "Waif Waffles" or "Moppet Muffins." Bugs
Bunny is reading the classic fairy tale, and happens by just as she’s
luring the two greedy children into her cottage singing, “Let’s
go eat the goodies.” Bugs gives the audience a Superman-like, “This
looks like a job for…” and dons a disguise as a truant officer.
He finds the two porcine urchins already in a covered pot wolfing
down ice cream. Learning their names Bugs puts two and two together
and advises them to run for their lives. But before they do they stop
in front of Hazel saying in a thick German accent, “Ach, your
mother rides a vacuum cleaner.” (I told you they were urchins,
right?)
Unfazed
by this sudden change of events, Hazel realizes Bugs is a rabbit. She
quickly switches her menu to rabbit stew and the chase begins. Hazel
makes sure the audience knows she’s a lady of quality by riding her
broom sidesaddle. Tiring of the chase, she fills a carrot with
poisoned brew and dangles it in front of Bugs, who can’t resist and
chows down. He passes out after a hilarious gagging scene and into
the pot he goes.
While
Hazel goes to her root cellar, a character resembling Prince Charming
makes a dramatic entrance and kisses Bugs’ hand, bringing him out
of the spell. Bugs wakes up and says: “You’re looking for Snow
White, this is the story of Hansel and Gretel.” The Prince leaves,
confused over how Bugs pronounced the name “Hansel.” The chase is
on again. Our Hero attempts an
escape down a hallway, but Hazel has him trapped. He
passes an emergency box on the wall and notices a vase of her magic
powder on a shelf bearing the sign “In Case of Emergency.” He
breaks the glass, and throws the vase at Hazel, instantly
transforming her into beautiful female rabbit with a soft and sexy
feminine voice, albeit with Hazel‘s laugh. She’s more enticing
than a carrot to Bugs. As they walk off he remarks to the
audience, "Ah sure, I know.
But aren't they all witches inside?"
Yikes!
You can’t say that today. The cartoon caused controversy in Canada
over the last line, the complainers averring that the lines made Bugs
into a misogynist. It was also edited out of commercial showings in
the United States and replaced with the line: "Sure
uh, I know. But after all, who wants to be alone on Halloween?"
However, the original version has been aired in Canada as recently as
this year on the Canadian cable channel Teletoon Retro.
As
drawn by Jones and company, Witch Hazel is quite jovial in her
villainy, with a strong sense of humor. During the cartoon, she
frequently says things that cause her to break into hysterical,
cackling laughter. She can also laugh at herself when she blunders.
During one sequence when she mounts her broom, it goes backwards and
she crashes into a wall. She looks at the audience and says with a
smile, "Oh, we women drivers... I had the silly thing in
reverse!" Jones wanted Foray to voice Witch Hazel, as he loved
her voice of the Disney Witch Hazel, but she was contracted to Disney
at the time, which led him to cast Warner contract player Benaderet.
Broom-Stick
Bunny opens on Halloween
night. Witch Hazel is preparing a batch of witch’s brew while
singing her own words to the old standard, “A Cup of Coffee, A
Sandwich and You.” In her case, they come out as, “A cup of
arsenic, a spider, some glue.” She
pauses at her magic mirror, asking it who's the ugliest one of all.
The genie in the mirror (something of a takeoff on Rex Ingram, who
famously portrayed the genie in 1940’s The
Thief of Bagdad) replies that she,
Witch Hazel, is the ugliest one of all. Hazel turns to the
audience and explains that she “deathly afraid” of growing
prettier as she gets older, a statement she concludes with a laugh.
She
returns to mixing the potion in her bubbling cauldron, but finds
herself missing one ingredient, when the doorbell rings. It’s Bugs
Bunny dressed as a witch for Halloween, his face hidden by an ugly
green mask. She howls, “DARLING!” and drags Bugs to the table for
some tea, hoping to “worm all of your ugly secrets” out of him.
“Funny,” she notes, “I don’t remember seeing her at any of
the union meetings.” Realizing how ugly the creature is, in a pique
of vanity she consults her magic mirror, which confirms, “that
creep is uglier far than thou!” Whoops! Can’t allow that. After
she leaves, Bugs turns to the audience. “She
isn't pretty now, but she was someone's baby once,” he says.
Witch
Hazel makes a tea brewed with an assortment of beauty enhancers to
make this new witch a pretty one, and grows impatient when she won’t
drink it. When Bugs takes off the mask, revealing that he’s really
a rabbit, Hazel flashes out of the room to her recipe book, where it
reads, “a rabbit’s clavicle.” It’s the last ingredient she
needs for her brew.
Innate
fear is rising in Bugs as he starts to leave, when Hazel zips back in
with a cleaver behind her back. And the chase is on. Hazel chooses
the wrong broom from the broom closet and chuckles at her mistake in
trying to ride her “sweeping broom.” (“Crazy me, that was
my sweeping broom!”) “Dat old babe means to do me serious hurt!”
Bugs gasps, as a carrot on a fishing line appears behind him. Hazel
reels him in and ties him up head to toe.
Back
at her cauldron, Hazel prepares to kill Bugs and use him in her brew.
But as she’s about to bring the cleaver down on his head, Bugs
gives her his patented big tear-filled eyes routine in an attempt to
win her sympathy. Bugs’ routine catches Hazel off guard and she
breaks down in a torrent of tears, claiming he reminds her of Paul,
her pet tarantula. Bugs, still hog-tied, tries to calm her down. He
brings her the cup of “tea” clenched in his teeth, walking on
tip-toe. She guzzles it down and becomes beautiful, instantly
changing into a slender and curvaceous redheaded beauty wrapped in a
tight teal-colored dress that exposes her finely shaped legs and the
top of her cleavage as music director Milt Franklyn strikes up “Oh,
You Beautiful Doll” in the background. (Her new look was based on
Foray, even copying her hairstyle.) Shocked, she runs to her mirror
and asks in a new softer, sexier tone of voice whether she’s still
“the ugliest of them all.” The genie immediately becomes enamored
of her, making Bob Hope type lecherous guttural noises and trying to
grab her. Hazel then flees on her broomstick, with the genie on a
flying carpet closely in pursuit.
Bugs,
still at Hazel’s house, looks at the two flying in the sky,
silhouetted by the moon and makes a call to the local air raid
headquarters, telling them, “You’re not going to believe me, but
I just saw a genie with light brown hair chasing a flying sorceress.”
Critics
and historians alike have cited Broom-Stick Bunny as
the funniest of Jones’ Witch Hazel cartoons, praising the film's
witty dialogue, written by Tedd Pierce. The cartoon contains
hysterical lines, such as such as Hazel's asking the costumed Bugs,
"Tell me, who undoes your hair?" He replies, "Do you
like it?" and her response is a gleeful "Like it? Why, it's
absolutely hideous!” Later, when she leaves the room to
prepare the beauty tea, she tells him, "Make yourself homely!"
Philip
DeGuard’s backgrounds and Ernie Nordli’s (who came over to
Jones’s unit from Disney) layouts remind me of those pioneered by
UPA Studios in the early ‘50s. The minimalist, expressionistic
backgrounds help the audience not only focus on the characters but
add a bit of other worldly-ness to the proceedings.
The
feather-in-the-cap for Jones for this cartoon was in wooing Foray
away from Disney and signing her to Warner Brothers. When first
informed of the carton, Foray expressed reservations about Jones
“stealing” a character from Disney, but, as Jones well knew, the
fact that “witch hazel” was long ago established as the name of
an astringent rub prevented Disney from establishing any ownership.
And when Foray first saw the depiction of Witch Hazel and read the
script, she knew this character was as far removed from Disney’s
character as an apple from as orange.
In
a 1989 interview with writer/historian Michael Mallory for Animation
Magazine (www.animationmagazine.net),
Foray speaks of her experience:
“My
agent called me and said, ‘You’ve never worked at Warner Bros.
before.’ And I was just getting my feet wet (in animation), I
really didn’t know too much about Bugs Bunny, or all that had gone
on before. So in 1954, Chuck called my agent and said, ‘I’d like
to hire June Foray,’ and I did Witch Hazel over there, you know,
with the hairpins flying, and who had a pet tarantula named Paul. He
named her ‘Witch Hazel’ too, and Disney of course was unable to
sue because Witch Hazel had been copyrighted by some alcohol company.
They couldn’t do anything about it. Chuck Jones fell in love with
Witch Hazel.”
A Witch’s Tangled Hare is
the last made by Jones’ unit. As the cartoon opens, we see a
character that looks like William Shakespeare on the scene with pen
and scroll at the ready, pausing at the castle Macbeth (clearly
labeled on the mailbox in front of the castle). We then see Hazel
quoting, “Double, double, toil and trouble...” and the
Shakespeare character scribbles frantically. Hazel lifts a platter
dome to reveal a sleeping Bugs Bunny. She awakens him and he flatters
her by calling her Zsa Zsa. He sees the boiling kettle and, thinking
it’s a bath, gets in.
Immediately, Bugs reprises similar scenes from Hiawatha’s Rabbit
Hunt (Freling, 1941) and Wackiki Wabbit (Jones,
1943) where he’s in the same situation and comments on how good it
smells (in this case until he looks at cook book and realizes he’s
the main ingredient). Hazel chases him once again with a cleaver (her
kitchen tool of choice), then goes to mount her broom, but her
bloomers show. She covers up and comments to the audience about her
modesty being one of her girlish qualities.
When
Hazel catches up to Bugs, she cackles and Bugs imitates her
laugh. She laughs again and he goes through a ridiculous,
exaggerated laugh with crazy bodily contortions and retorts, “Top
that, Lollobrigida!” This cartoon has everything. Bugs even hands
Hazel an anvil from one of the turrets to foil her broom riding. The
highlight, though, is a parody of Romeo
and Juliet. Hazel stands on a
balcony and shouts, “Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?”
(with the Shakespeare character scribbling furiously) “I art down
here.” “Why don’t thou come up here?” “I art shy. Why don’t
YOU come down here? I’ll catch you.” (You just know Bugs doesn’t
mean that.) Hazel lands on the ground with a thunderous crash.
(Continuity mistake: When Witch
Hazel is chasing Bugs Bunny up the castle tower, Bugs throws a stone
through the window before Hazel appears from behind the curtains.
When we see Bugs dressed up as Romeo, the glass panes disappear. When
we see Hazel dressed up as Juliet, they are back.)
The
final chase leads Bugs to the Shakespeare character. He is sitting
and moaning that he'll never be a writer. When Bugs praises him as
being William Shakespeare, he denies it. “I’m Sam Crubish!”
Hazel recognizes him from her past. “Yes, I waited outside
apartment 2-B for you.” “But I didn’t say 2-B,” Hazel
protests. As Sam and Hazel walk off together, Bugs picks up the
perfect last line, “2-B or not 2-B, that is the question!”
As
mentioned above, Jones turned over the director’s reins to Levitow,
who does an excellent job with the story by Michael Maltese. Mel
Blanc voices Bugs, while Foray once again provides the voice of Witch
Hazel. The carton is very funny, with several references to plays by
William Shakespeare: Hamlet, Macbeth, Romeo
and Juliet, and As You Like It.
Other
Appearances
In
Chuck Jones’ 1963 Merrie Melodies short Transylvania
6-5000, Witch Hazel makes a very brief cameo appearance as Bugs
transforms the cartoon’s vampire villain, Count Bloodcount, into
Witch Hazel by chanting a magic spell.
When
Warner Bros. shut down its animation studio in 1963, production
of Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes shorts
was contracted out to Freling’s DePatie-Freling Enterprises, who
produced animated shorts from 1964 to 1967, when Warner Bros. again
resumed production, finally closing for good in 1969. Director Robert
McKimson made her one of the stars of his 1966 cartoon A-Haunting
We Will Go, with Daffy Duck and Speedy Gonzales, which borrows
several elements from previous Warner cartoons.
It’s
Halloween, and this time around Daffy
Duck's nephew (essentially a pint-sized version of Daffy) goes
trick-and-treating as a witch, in the same outfit that Bugs Bunny
wore in Broom-Stick Bunny.
He visits Witch Hazel's house, and after seeing her hideous face (her
skin is more a yellowish than green), he runs home screaming. At
home, Daffy's nephew tries to tell his uncle that he saw a witch, but
Daffy is unimpressed, explaining that Daffy "there is no such
thing as a witch, and that she's just a poor old lady trying to get
along." He tells him that he will prove it by meeting Witch
Hazel himself.
We
cut to Witch Hazel's home, where she’s complaining that "all
she does is work in front of a hot stove making potions." She
concludes she needs a vacation, but, before going, she must find
someone to take her place. At this point, Speedy Gonzales knocks on
her door asking for a cup of cheese. Hazel complains, but soon gets
an idea, grabbing a special piece of cheese and feeding it to Speedy.
This causes Speedy to turn into an identical copy of Witch Hazel. The
real Witch Hazel asks Speedy if he can act like her. Speedy (who
takes this all quite calmly) says okay and runs around the house
yelling his usual "Ándale, ándale, arriba, arriba, arriba,
epa, epa." Witch Hazel notes that he still acts like himself,
but it will have to do. She takes off to Hawaii, leaving Speedy in
charge of the shop.
Soon
Daffy comes over and Speedy welcomes him in, offering him a cup of
tea. As Speedy goes off to make the tea, Daffy begins to get a little
frightened. He tries to reassure himself by stating "She can be
somebody's mother, or father, or something." Witch Speedy gives
Daffy the tea, which turns him into the flower creature from Duck
Amuck.
Hazel,
returning from Hawaii, sees what Speedy has done and turns him back
into a mouse. Spotting Daffy, she gets in the mood for a duck dinner
and returns Daffy to his old self. Daffy immediately runs away, but
Hazel catches him on a broom. Daffy jumps off her broom and
parachutes down, but Hazel turns the parachute turns into an anvil.
Witch Hazel laughs so hard at what she’s done she fails to see
where she’s going and runs into a rock.
Down
on the ground, another witch scares Daffy, but this turns out to be
his nephew in his witch disguise. His nephew asks him if he saw the
witch, but Daffy just tells him, "She's just some creepy old
lady trying to scare people, and that witchcraft is just a myth, an
old superstition." On the way home, Daffy turns back into the
flower creature, unbeknownst to his nephew.
Witch
Hazel has also appeared in cameos in various Warner Bros.
productions, such as the 1966 movie, Space Jam, and the
video games Bugs Bunny: Lost in Time (in which she
appears as a boss and also appears on the cover of the game)
and Looney Tunes Collector: Alert! (2000). She has
also appeared in one episode each of Animaniacs (in a
Rita and Runt episode), The Sylvester and Tweety
Mysteries, Pinky and the Brain, Tiny Toon
Adventures, and Duck Dodgers (which not only
alludes to Broom-Stick Bunny, but also brings back Foray to do
her voice).
In
2011, she evolved into Witch Lezah (Hazel spelled backwards) in The
Looney Tunes Show, and was voiced by Roz Ryan, but she was never
quite the same wacky character she was before. Sometimes change is
not good.
Witch
Hazel is one of my favorite Chuck Jones creations. She’s incredibly
vain, completely at home with the audience (she breaks through the
fourth wall in every cartoon), and consistently funny. I love how her
scene exits in Broom-Stick Bunny always end in a
flurry of hairpins, a masterful Jones addition. She’s a great foil
for Bugs Bunny. Even though she may want to cook and eat him or just
needs an essential part of his body for another potion, he’s still
able to distract her by playing on her femininity. She’s all witch,
but at the same time, she’s all woman, and vulnerable to flattery
and sentiment. She can be fierce, or she can be tender. And, similar
to Steve Allen, she enjoys her own jokes enormously. “That’s
sharp enough to split a hair…Split a hare!” (gales of cackling
laughter). But whatever mood she’s in, she’s a great, funny
character.
I
still like Halloween. I still love costumes, but I don’t go
gallivanting in the dark wearing one – too dangerous. I’ll stick
with my cartoons, especially those by Chuck Jones.
Where
To Find The Witch Hazel Cartoons
Bewitched
Bunny: Looney Tunes Golden
Collection, Vol. 5 (audio commentary
by Eric Goldberg). Looney Tunes
Platinum Collection, Vol. 1.
Broom-Stick
Bunny: Looney Tunes Golden
Collection set, Vol. 2 (audio
commentary by June Foray). Looney
Tunes Platinum Collection, Vol. 1.
A Witch’s Tangled Hare: Looney
Tunes Platinum Collection, Vol. 1.
A-Haunting
We Will Go: Looney Tunes Golden
Collection set, Vol. 4. Looney
Tunes Platinum Collection, Vol. 1.
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