5/20/2023 0 Comments Betty boop in color![]() She also stopped wearing jewelry and moving in suggestive ways. We miss you in Toontown.' Eddie Valiant: 'Wish I could say the same.' Eddie Valiant: 'Whatre you doin here, Betty' Betty Boop: 'Works been slow for me since the cartoons went to color.' Betty Boop: 'But I still got it, Eddie. Betty Boop: 'Gee, its swell to see you, Eddie. Boop was no longer a carefree flapper but instead turned into a housewife or a career woman in some episodes. In contrast to all the other Toons, Bettys in black and white. The Motion Picture Production Code, industry censorship guidelines for motion pictures, also impacted Betty Boop's content. The innocent yet sexual nature of the cartoons was a problem for the National Legion of Decency in 1934, a Catholic group founded by Archbishop of Cincinnati, John T, McNicholas. Many episodes also focused on men attempting to compromise her virtue. Some of the cartoons featured men trying to sneak a peek at her frame as she went on about her everyday life. ![]() ![]() Boop also wore a short dress and bodice that highlighted her cleavage. No other woman cartoon character at the time had a fully-developed figure. But the people behind her creation and popularity exhibited a lack of accountability that nearly resulted in an important figure being muted.Fans of Betty Boop considered her a unique character because she represented a sexual woman versus being only comical or child-like. She’s still fun to watch, that can’t be taken away from her. Not to mention, Flapper culture and the Roaring 20s saw white people find enjoyment of Swing and Jazz music, two styles built off the backs of Black people, without considering the Black people who weren’t as famous as Louis Armstrong (at least there was the Harlem Renaissance).Īs it stands, Betty Boop is a symptom of that intrinsic mentality that plagued Pre Civil Rights Movement America. Even if the cartoons did wonders in boosting the profiles of Black performers such as Armstrong, the animosity towards the people still exist, getting in the way of how I enjoy the cartoons today. There’s plenty of coding to be unearthed with them: case in point, the Louis Armstrong featured “I’ll Be Glad When You’re Dead You Rascal You.”īetty gets captured by “African savages” and her companions have to save her. The point of the cartoons is to portray a curious, fashionable white woman interacting with the unknown world. Not to speculate too much, but Betty Boop probably wouldn’t have been the icon she is today if the studio found out about Esther Jones before Helen Kane did. Other than that, she has mostly been lost and forgotten to time.Įven if Esther Jones is the unspoken origin of Betty Boop, Fleischer Studios had no way of knowing that before the court case. Since then, there are pictures and grainy audio that give a sense of how she performed. Helen Kane’s court case revealed that Jones did much of her performing on the New York cabaret scene during the 20s. What of Baby Esther Jones though? Not much is really known about her unfortunately. Fleischer Studios may have been able to keep their riches and continue to grow, but this was the beginning of the end for Helen Kane all because she was reaping the spoils of a Black woman’s hard work. ![]() Jury claimed that she couldn’t claim any parts of Betty Boop’s character as her own since she appropriated from Jones. Unfortunately there isn’t any footage of Esther Jones performing, but this information became public knowledge in Helen Kane’s own lawsuit. Only one problem, Helen Kane’s based most of her persona on a Black woman. An animation studio fronted by a powerful man reaping the spoils of a woman’s hard work? Everybody should’ve been in Helen Kane’s corner. Fleischer Studios even produced a cartoon of Betty performing “I Wanna Be Loved By You,” the song Helen Kane made famous. On paper, this could’ve been an open and shut case: there are dozens of videos of Helen Kane doing the “Boop Boop a Doop” shtick Betty is known for. As the cartoons got popular, Helen Kane felt entitled to a piece of the pie, suing Max Fleischer and Paramount Studios for $250,000. When Betty Boop first went into production, animator Grim Natwick admitted to finding inspiration in Kane whilst designing the character, admiring her baby voice and nasal singing. She was Paramount’s breadwinner from 1929-1931, making at least seven films under the company at a salary of $8000 a week. Before The Hays Code however, was a case of legal controversy surrounding the origins and influence of the character.Įnter: Helen Kane. Thankfully, her run from 1932 to 1939 was seminal enough to establish her as a cultural icon of sorts. Subject to controversy because American society in the 1930s couldn’t fathom a woman being flirtatious, adventurous, and self-determined in any capacity, Betty Boop’s momentum couldn’t make it to the 40s as Fleischer Studios tried to adapt to the standards brought forth by The Hays Code.
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