Actually this is a KARTUNE! This was the last Paramount KARTUNE shot, released in 1953. NOVELTOONS, SCREEN SONGS, and KARTUNES had songs with the '"bouncing ball."
This was a Paramount "NOVELTOONS SING-A-LONG SCREEN SONGS" cartoon animated by Famous Studios in the late 1940's That also featured the title song "Start Your Day With A Song.
you're right on that This version has the "Harvevtoon logo & features the insturmental version of the song 4 & 20 Blackbirds.. but some of the older Paramount version does has the song "Start Your Day With A Song" & features the title
SCREEN SONG or NOVELTOON & several that I notice had a "Jack-In-The-Box" logo which was soon to be "adopted" as the offical mascot for Harvey Productions who would take over half of the cartoon that was shown & released by Paramount.studios in the late 1940's.
That is a great mystery to me. maybe this cartoon was syndicated by Worldvision (who was owned by Taft Broadcasting which also had the broadcast rights for some of the Hanna-Barbera cartoons back in the 1970's.)
According to wikipedia Many of the Paramount/Harveytoons (Casper & others where broadcasted by Worldvision Enterprise (not to be confused with World Vision Charities International) which wasd originally ABC Films (a division of ABC TV until 1971 when the FCC banned "fin-syn" rules. But now many of the "Harveytoon "cartoons are now owned by Classic Media.
This was the last of the "Kartune" series {the successor to Paramount's "Screen Songs" in 1951}, originally released in July 1953. Charles Irving, veteran New York radio announcer {working for ABC at the time}, is the narrator...
This is a Harvey Films TV print of this cartoon, but it got plastered over the Paramount titles. There was also a copyright shown that says "Harvey Films Inc." instead of "Paramount Pictures Corp."
Harvey Films was a TV distribution that owns the post-50 Paramount Famous library. UM&M/NTA also had the pre-50 Paramount cartoons outside of Harvey. "Harveytoon" was the TV version of "Noveltoon" from Paramount.
According to Jerry Beck, even though Classic Media owns the rights to the 1950-1962 Paramount cartoons (except Popeye), Paramount still owns the original negatives to those films, as well as the 1943-1950 Noveltoons and the Little Lulu cartoons (with all Paramount titles intact).
I am looking for a cartoon that starts out with a man telling st. peter his story and ends up with the man saying to st peter "whats the matter,cat got your tongue"
and the cat opens his paw and has st. peters tongue in it.
How random...when vcr's came out, I used a whole tape recording every cartoon i saw for weeks. This was on here, never thought I'd see it again!
kangarangatang 8 months ago
Hey Ma-rie I got-ta da Jizz Cake
18Aiki 9 months ago
I remember this so well!
TNitemare 9 months ago
Oh cheer-y beer-y hee. :D
MislaidAlbum 1 year ago
This is the last Paramount Kartune.
ThePopeyeFan 2 years ago
oh mama
cremator6666 2 years ago
Actually this is a KARTUNE! This was the last Paramount KARTUNE shot, released in 1953. NOVELTOONS, SCREEN SONGS, and KARTUNES had songs with the '"bouncing ball."
Kartoonkid95 3 years ago
Check out the Harvey Cartoons Candy Cabaret Singalong where you get to follow the bouncing ball.
stevenvz 2 years ago
@stevenvz It's not there anymore and I'm Mad! I also want to see Fresh Yeggs.
TeamRocket2010 10 months ago
Also I looking for the Paramount/Famous Studios Screen Song "Goal Rush" featuring the voices of Jackson Beck & Arnold Stang.
bigg3469 3 years ago
This was a Paramount "NOVELTOONS SING-A-LONG SCREEN SONGS" cartoon animated by Famous Studios in the late 1940's That also featured the title song "Start Your Day With A Song.
bigg3469 3 years ago
No they haven't, the opening does not have the "Star Your Day With a Song", it was replaced with something else.
HomeoftheGoodGuys 3 years ago
you're right on that This version has the "Harvevtoon logo & features the insturmental version of the song 4 & 20 Blackbirds.. but some of the older Paramount version does has the song "Start Your Day With A Song" & features the title
SCREEN SONG or NOVELTOON & several that I notice had a "Jack-In-The-Box" logo which was soon to be "adopted" as the offical mascot for Harvey Productions who would take over half of the cartoon that was shown & released by Paramount.studios in the late 1940's.
bigg3469 3 years ago
But why did they put the Worldvision logo at the end of the cartoon?
HomeoftheGoodGuys 3 years ago
That is a great mystery to me. maybe this cartoon was syndicated by Worldvision (who was owned by Taft Broadcasting which also had the broadcast rights for some of the Hanna-Barbera cartoons back in the 1970's.)
bigg3469 3 years ago
According to wikipedia Many of the Paramount/Harveytoons (Casper & others where broadcasted by Worldvision Enterprise (not to be confused with World Vision Charities International) which wasd originally ABC Films (a division of ABC TV until 1971 when the FCC banned "fin-syn" rules. But now many of the "Harveytoon "cartoons are now owned by Classic Media.
bigg3469 3 years ago
I see the Worldvision logo at the end.
Ironically, Paramount would absorb Worldvision in 1999.
PF9ThePikachuLover 3 years ago
I loved this cartoon series as a kid in the 60s! It has the famous "Just follow the bouncing ball..."
billieredsocks 3 years ago
You're thinking of Tex Avery's "Symphony In Slang" [MGM/1951], 'stvandy'...
fromthesidelines 3 years ago
This was the last of the "Kartune" series {the successor to Paramount's "Screen Songs" in 1951}, originally released in July 1953. Charles Irving, veteran New York radio announcer {working for ABC at the time}, is the narrator...
fromthesidelines 3 years ago
This is a Harvey Films TV print of this cartoon, but it got plastered over the Paramount titles. There was also a copyright shown that says "Harvey Films Inc." instead of "Paramount Pictures Corp."
Harvey Films was a TV distribution that owns the post-50 Paramount Famous library. UM&M/NTA also had the pre-50 Paramount cartoons outside of Harvey. "Harveytoon" was the TV version of "Noveltoon" from Paramount.
HomeoftheGoodGuys 4 years ago
According to Jerry Beck, even though Classic Media owns the rights to the 1950-1962 Paramount cartoons (except Popeye), Paramount still owns the original negatives to those films, as well as the 1943-1950 Noveltoons and the Little Lulu cartoons (with all Paramount titles intact).
Gabrielkat 3 years ago
Also some of the early "Little Audrey" cartoons.
bigg3469 3 years ago
I am looking for a cartoon that starts out with a man telling st. peter his story and ends up with the man saying to st peter "whats the matter,cat got your tongue"
and the cat opens his paw and has st. peters tongue in it.
stvandy1 4 years ago