Mr. Magoo turns 60
Funny, he seems a bit older than that.
Oh, the wonderful press releases we get here at the Phoenix. Like this one: "The
hilarious Mr. Magoo proves that with a little confidence everything will
eventually go your way. Join Mr. Magoo in celebrating his 60th anniversary tomorrow, September 29th! We invite
you to write about this special occasion."
How can I resist?
I've always had a particular fondness for nutty ol' near-sighted Quincy Magoo. (Not this one, though.) Jim Backus's voice -- be it as Mr. Magoo or Thurston Howell III -- always brings back Froot Looped memories of camping out to watch WLVI and WSBK at Nana's house in Framingham. Y'know, back when there was such a thing as Saturday morning cartoons.
But I had no idea that the doddering old man was initially envisioned as more of an curmudgeonly Archie Bunker type.
From Wikipedia:
"Mr. Magoo's first appearance was in the theatrical short
cartoon The Ragtime Bear (1949), scripted by Millard
Kaufman. His creation was a collaborative effort; animation director John Hubley
is said to have partly based the character on his uncle Harry Woodruff, and W. C.
Fields was another source of inspiration.... The Magoo character was originally conceived as a
mean-spirited McCarthy-like reactionary whose mumbling would
include as much outrageous misanthropic ranting as the animators could get away
with. Kaufman had actually been blacklisted, and Magoo was a form of protest.
Hubley was an ex-communist who had participated in the 1941 strike. Both he and
Kaufman had participated in the blacklist front and perhaps
due to the risk of coming under more scrutiny with a hit character, John Hubley,
who had created Magoo, handed the series completely over to creative director, Pete Burness. Under Burness,
Magoo would win two Oscars for the studio with When
Magoo Flew (1955) and Magoo's Puddle Jumper
(1956). Burness scrubbed Magoo of his politicized mean-ness and left only a few
strange unempathic comments that made him appear senile or somewhat mad. This
however was not entirely out of line with the way McCarthy came to be perceived
over that same era."
Who knew?
Of course, Mr. Magoo wasn't really a kids' cartoon character. That's why he advertised beer.
And, for that matter, why the Flintstones hawked cigarettes.