Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A trademark on the name (but not legitimately the likeness) of Betty Boop is owned by Fleischer Studios, for which the character was created in the 1930s, but which was unable to claim copyright infringement in a 2008 district court case; [62] the merchandising rights to Betty's name were licensed to King Features Syndicate, [59] [60] until ...
5 languages. العربية ... Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Betty Boop's Double Shift; Boop! The Musical; D. Don't Take My Boop-Oop-A ...
This is one of Louis Armstrong's earliest film appearances. Armstrong and his orchestra perform "High Society Rag", the title song, and "Chinatown". [4] The use of a currently popular musician represented competition with the contemporaneous music library accessibility greatly exploited by animators Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising, when producing musically-synchronized shorts for the Warner Bros ...
The following is a list of films and other media in which Betty Boop has appeared. She was featured in 126 theatrical cartoons between 1930 and 1939 (89 in her own series and 37 in the Talkartoons, Screen Songs and Color Classics series).
A Bimbo and Betty cartoon (formally billed as such in the titles, still giving Betty no surname). 26 Minding the Baby: September 28 Jimmie Culhane Bernard Wolf A Betty and Bimbo cartoon (first time Betty's full name appears in the titles, stylized as "Betty-Boop"). 27 In the Shade of the Old Apple Sauce: October 19 Unknown A Bimbo cartoon.
Bimbo's Initiation is a 1931 Fleischer Studios Talkartoon animated short film starring Bimbo and featuring an early version of Betty Boop with a dog's ears and nose. [2] It was the final Betty Boop cartoon to be animated by the character's co-creator, Grim Natwick, prior to his departure for Ub Iwerks' studio.
A badly hung-over sun (complete with ice-pack on his head) slowly rises over Betty Boop's farm. Betty's farm is a sanctuary for birds, but the sanctuary is soon threatened by the arrival of the Tom Kat's Social Club, a group of hungry cats looking for an easy meal. They chase a helpless chick back to Betty's farm, who alerts Betty to the danger ...
Betty Boop is the first to listen to his sales pitch, where he promises such wonders as a "woolen hammer and rubber nails", a "sieve that never leaks" and some "brand new antiques". Betty politely tells him "Nothing today, kind sir". Apparently, this is the most favorable response he has gotten, so he goes around to the side door to try again.