Growing up as a kid in the 1960’s, Saturday morning cartoons were part and parcel to my early growing up years. All of the major TV studios would show cartoons for our pleasure. It may have even been a follow-on to the wildly successful family programming of the Walt Disney Co.: The Wonderful World of Disney. Initially the format was to replay the cartoons played before theatrical released movies of the 1940’s and 50’s. Eventually, cartoon programming was being created just for TV and often used as a showcase that advertisers could show products to a burgeoning post war market. Breakfast cereals such as Frosted Flakes, Cheerios, and Rice Crispies immediately come to mind. Like Mickey Mouse is the iconic mascot of Disney, Bugs Bunny was to the Warner Brothers Studios. Bugs Bunny is celebrating his 75th anniversary today, 27 July 2015, debuting in “A Wild Hair” with the voice of Mel Blanc.
Of all the zany madcap cartoons Bugs starred in, it is his 1948 “My Bunny Lies over the Sea” that has Bugs getting lost on his was to vacationing at California’s La Brea Tar Pits and instead winds up in Scotland. He meets character Angus MacRory wearing a kilt and playing a version of Bonnie Banks O' Loch Lomond on his bagpipes. Bugs mistakes the pipes as a monster attacking ‘an old lady’, Bugs stomping the bagpipes to pieces, much to Angus’s chagrin. MacRory and Bugs spend the rest of the cartoon in various challenges such as golf and eventually a piping challenge. MacRory does his best playing a very fast pieced piece, but Bugs plays the bagpipes with bass drum balanced on his head (played by his ears) and various band instruments attached to drones, etc. When watching the cartoon again, I realize that both Bugs and the Scot MacRory are voiced by Mel Blanc.
As a kid, this classic cartoon would play every so often in the Saturday morning cartoon lineup, and when it did, I loved it. I do not recall when I first saw it, but I do recall it distinctly enough to describe it as some of the earliest bagpiping I remember. As a side note, I was amazed in junior high with a revelation that many of the cartoons seen on Saturdays were released before I was born and came from the 1940’s. Thankfully, I’m not so old as to remember the original releases, but it’s also wonderful to be old enough to have experienced some of those early moments and programming of the TV age. And that Bugs Bunny and his cartoon contemporaries are ageless and can still be seen.
So cheers to the creative team who created that “Wascally Wabbit’ for our delight and entertainment 75 years ago and for their insight in using the bagpipes as a bit of comic relief.
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