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  1. Tortoise Beats Hare is a Merrie Melodies short film directed by Tex Avery and released on March 15, 1941. [2] [3] The short, loosely based on Aesop's fable The Tortoise and the Hare, stars Bugs Bunny and, in his first appearance, Cecil Turtle.

  2. Tortoise Beats Hare: Directed by Tex Avery. With Mel Blanc. An upset Bugs challenges the slick Cecil Turtle to a race.

    • (1.7K)
    • 1941-03-15
    • Tex Avery
    • 7
  3. Apr 24, 2023 · This ad from a paper in Cumberland, Maryland tells us where “Tortoise Beats Hare” was playing on July 14th 1941. Tortoise Beats Hare premiered in New York on Broadway in The Rivoli and Hollywood Theater on March 12, 1941, billed with Frank Capra’s production of Meet John Doe.

  4. MY BOOKS: https://www.mcleanamy.co.uk/ What's your review of the 1941 Warner Bros Merrie Melodies animated cartoon short film Tortoise Beats Hare, based on Aesop's fable the Tortoise...

    • 2 min
    • 5.1K
    • Amy McLean
    • Plot
    • Production Details
    • Notes

    Bugs wanders onto the title card, absentmindedly reading the title card with gross mispronunciations. Once he finally reads the title of the cartoon, he becomes outraged, accusing the makers of not knowing what they are talking about. He tears apart the title card and rushes to find Cecil Turtle's house. When he confronts Cecil, he strongly insists...

    Mel Blanc supplies Cecil's drowsy drawl, which is like a slowed-down version of Blanc's later characterization of Barney Rubble. "Tortoise Beats Hare" is a takeoff on the Aesop fable "The Tortoise and the Hare", but even more directly, it is Avery's parody of the 1934 Disney Silly Symphony, "The Tortoise and the Hare". Max Hare, from the earlier Di...

    The working title was "Tortoise + Hare".
    This cartoon premiered in The Rivoli and Hollywood Theater on Broadway on 12 March 1941 before being released theatrically on 15 March.
    When Bugs sees Cecil sitting at the finishing line, he calls him a "blankety, blank, blank turtle", which is meant to reference curse words, a violation of the 1934 Hays Code.
    This was Tex Avery's 54th cartoon and Bugs Bunny's third appearance.
  5. Bugs Bunny challenges slick Cecil Turtle to a race.

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  7. This short enters a crowded field as there's plenty of attempts to tell the story of the Tortoise and the Hare, so it was really in their interest to come at this in a new way. Of course, the moral approach is that this is a story of how overconfidence is a downfall, so the Looney Tunes approach is just about how to best cheat.

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