Bob Clampett

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Robert Emerson "Bob" Clampett (May 8, 1913May 4, 1984) was an American animator, producer, director, and puppeteer best known for his work on the Looney Tunes series of cartoons from Warner Bros. and the television shows Time for Beany, and Beany and Cecil.

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Clampett showed an interest in animation and puppetry from his early teens in Los Angeles. The young Clampett designed the first Mickey Mouse dolls for Walt Disney. As Clampett would later claim in interviews, Disney was impressed with the young artist, and promised him a job. However, a lack of space at Disney's tiny Hyperion studio prevented Clampett from taking the position. Instead, he secured a job in 1931 at the studio of Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising where he worked on the studio's Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series. In his first years at the studio, Clampett mostly worked for Friz Freleng, under whose guidance Clampett grew into an able animator. In 1935, he designed the studio's first major star, Porky Pig, who appeared in Freleng's film I Haven't Got a Hat.

Clampett moved to Tex Avery's unit that same year, and the two soon developed an insanely irreverent style of animation that would set Warner Bros. apart from its competitors. Working apart from the other animators in a dilapidated wooden building, Avery and Clampett soon discovered they were not the only inhabitants. They shared the building with thousands of tiny termites. They christened the building Termite Terrace, a name eventually used by fans and historians to describe the entire studio.

They were soon joined by animators Chuck Jones, Virgil Ross and Sid Sutherland, and worked virtually without interference on their new, groundbreaking style of humor for the next year. It was a wild place with an almost college fraternity-like atmosphere. Animators would frequently pull pranks such as gluing paper streamers to the wings of flies. Leon Schlesinger, who rarely ventured there, was reputed on one visit to have remarked in his lisping voice, "Pew, let me out of here! The only thing missing is the sound of a flushing toilet!!"

Clampett about this time pressured studio head Leon Schlesinger to give him a chance as a director, and was finally given that chance on an animated sequence for the Joe E. Brown film What's Your Birthday?, animating signs of the zodiac. This led to what was essentially a co-directing stint with fellow animator Chuck Jones for the financially ailing Ub Iwerks, whom Schlesinger subcontracted to produce several Porky Pig shorts. These shorts featured the short-lived and generally unpopular Gabby Goat as Porky's sidekick. Despite Clampett and Jones' contributions, however, Iwerks was the only credited director.

Bugs Bunny and a gremlin in Falling Hare (1943), a cartoon directed by Bob Clampett
Bugs Bunny and a gremlin in Falling Hare (1943), a cartoon directed by Bob Clampett

Clampett was promoted to director in late 1937, and he soon entered his personal golden age. His cartoons grew increasingly violent, irreverent, and surreal, not beholden to even the faintest hint of real-world physics, and his characters are easily the rubberiest and wackiest of all the Warner directors'. Clampett was heavily influenced by surrealist artist Salvador Dalí, as is most visible in Porky in Wackyland (1938), where the entire short takes place within a Dali-esque landscape complete with melting objects and abstracted forms. Clampett and his work can even be considered part of the surreal movement, as it incorporated film as well as static media.

Over the next nine years, Clampett created some of the studio's funniest and most outrageous cartoons, including Porky in Wackyland (1938), Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid (1942), A Tale of Two Kitties (1942), which introduced Tweety Bird, Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs (1943), Russian Rhapsody (1944), The Great Piggy Bank Robbery (1946), and The Big Snooze (1946), his final cartoon with the studio, and one for which he did not get screen credit. It was largely Clampett's influence that would impel the Warners directors to shed the final vestiges of Disney and enter the territory they are famous for today.

When Tex Avery quit (or was fired, depending on the source) in 1941, Avery's unit was taken over by Clampett and Norman McCabe took over Clampett's old unit. Clampett finished Avery's remaining unfinished cartoons. When McCabe joined the armed forces, Frank Tashlin rejoined Schlesinger as director, and that unit was eventually turned over to Robert McKimson. Clampett himself left in 1946; his unit was taken over by Arthur Davis.

Clampett worked for a time at Screen Gems as a writer and gagman, but in 1949, he turned his attentions to television where he created the famous puppet show Time for Beany. The show would earn Clampett three Emmys and count such celebrities as Groucho Marx and Albert Einstein as fans. It also launched the career of Stan Freberg. In 1952 he created the Thunderbolt the Wondercolt television series, and in 1954 directed Willy The Wolf (the first puppet variety show on television), as well as creating and voicing the lead in the Buffalo Billy television show. In the late 1950s, Clampett was hired by Associated Artists Productions to catalog the pre-1948 Warner cartoons they had just acquired. In 1959, he created an animated version of the puppet show called Beany and Cecil, which began its run on ABC in 1962 and was on the network for five years.[1]

In his later years, Clampett toured college campuses and animation festivals as a lecturer on the history of animation. In 1975 he was the focus of a documentary entitled Bugs Bunny: Superstar, the first documentary to seriously examine the history of the Warner Bros. cartoons. Clampett, whose collection of drawings, films, and memorabilia from the golden days of Termite Terrace was legendary, provided nearly all of the behind-the-scenes drawings and home-movie footage for the film (critics also chuckled that he was wearing a very noticeable toupee).

Bob Clampett died of a heart attack on May 4, 1984, four days short of his 71st birthday.

Though Clampett's contribution to the Warner Brothers animation legacy cannot be overstated, his peers often referred to him as "a shameless self-promoter who provoked the wrath of his former Warner's colleagues in later years, for allegedly claiming credit for ideas which were not his." Chuck Jones particularly disliked Clampett, and made no mention of his association with him in his 1989 autobiography Chuck Amuck. Mel Blanc also accused Clampett of being an "egotist who took credit for everything." As years went on Clampett repeatedly referred to himself as "the creator" of Bugs Bunny, often adding the side-note that he used Clark Gable's carrot-eating scene in It Happened One Night as inspiration for his "creation." However, a viewing of the early Bugs cartoons of the late 1930s and early 1940s clearly demonstrates that the character was not "created" as a whole at one time, but rather evolved in terms of personality, voice and design over several years through the efforts of Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, Cal Dalton and Ben "Bugs" Hardaway, Bob McKimson, and Mel Blanc, in addition to Clampett's contributions.

In the 1979 compilation feature film The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Movie, Clampett is not mentioned when Bugs Bunny refers to his "several fathers." As the feature was compiled by Jones (along with Friz Freleng), the complete omission of Clampett is not surprising.

However it is worth mentioning that other Warner Brothers peers such as Tex Avery and Carl Stalling stood by Clampett during his talks on the cartoon industry in the 1960s and 1970s.

See Milt Gray's essay below for an alternate version of the Clampett controversy.

  • Barrier, Michael. (1999). Hollywood Cartoons: American Animation in Its Golden Age. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-195-03759-6.
  • Blanc, Mel. (1988). That's Not All, Folks!. Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-51244-3.
  • Jones, Charles M. (1989). Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 0-374-12348-9.
  • Maltin, Leonard. (1980). Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-070-39835-6.

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