Get Rich Quick Porky

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Directed byRobert Clampett
Story byBob Clampett (uncredited)
Produced byLeon Schlesinger
StarringMel Blanc as Porky Pig and the dog
Earle Hodgins as John Gusher
Cal Howard as Gabby Goat
Shirley Reed as the gopher
Billy Bletcher as the driver
(all uncredited)[1]
Get Rich Quick Porky
Title card
Directed byRobert Clampett
Story byBob Clampett (uncredited)
Produced byLeon Schlesinger
StarringMel Blanc as Porky Pig and the dog
Earle Hodgins as John Gusher
Cal Howard as Gabby Goat
Shirley Reed as the gopher
Billy Bletcher as the driver
(all uncredited)[1]
Edited byTreg Brown (uncredited)
Music byCarl W. Stalling
Animation byCharles Jones
Uncredited:
John Carey
Norm McCabe
Robert Cannon
Jerry Hathcock
Bill Hammer[1]
Layouts byChuck Jones (uncredited)
Backgrounds byArt Loomer (uncredited)
Color processBlack-and-white
Color (1968 color edition and 1992 computer colorized version)
Production
companies
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
The Vitaphone Corporation
Release date
  • August 28, 1937 (1937-08-28)
Running time
7 minutes
LanguageEnglish

Get Rich Quick Porky is a 1937 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon directed by Bob Clampett.[3] The short was released on August 28, 1937, and stars Porky Pig.[4] This cartoon marks the final appearance of Porky's sidekick Gabby Goat in a classic Warner Bros. cartoon short; he would return decades later in the New Looney Tunes television show on Cartoon Network.

Chuck Jones, later to be famed as a director, is credited as animator on the short, whose working title was The Oily Bird Gets Porky.[1][5] Get Rich Quick Porky marked the fourth and final short Clampett, Jones and Robert Cannon worked on while on loan from Leon Schlesinger Productions to Ub Iwerks' Animated Pictures Corp.[2] Iwerks had directed Porky and Gabby and Porky's Super Service before quitting the project. Clampett assumed official directorial duties in his stead, with Jones assisting him by drawing the character layout drawings.[5]

Unlike the two Iwerks films and Porky's Badtime Story, which were written at Schlesinger primarily by Cal Howard, the storyboard for Get Rich Quick Porky was devised entirely by Clampett himself at the Iwerks studio.[5] Howard did work on Get Rich Quick Porky as the voice artist for Gabby Goat.[1] Following completion of the short, Clampett, Jones, and Cannon returned to the Warner Bros. Sunset Boulevard studio lot where the Schlesinger studio was based.[5] Under the auspices of a new subcontracting setup run by Leon Schlesinger's brother-in-law, Ray Katz, Clampett would be given his own unit, with Jones as his lead animator until the latter became a director as well in 1938.[5]

Plot

References

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