Tim's Toons: In celebration of Bugs Bunny's 75th birthday
Thursday, July 23, 2015 at 9:38PM
Tim Brayton in Bugs Bunny, animated films, short films, zoology

Tim here. We're coming hard upon one of the most important birthdays in animation: Bugs Bunny is turning 75 this week. It was on July 27, 1940, that the world first got to see the Merrie Melodies short A Wild Hare, written by Rich Hogan and directed by the legendary Tex Avery. And it was in this short that the unnamed comic rabbit character that the cartoonists at Warner Bros. had been noodling around with for a few years reached the final form of his personality. Though not, in fairness, anything close to his final design.

An ever-changing face notwithstanding, it was here that voice actor Mel Blanc premiered the sarcastic Bronx accent and the instant catchphrase, "Eh, what's up, Doc?", that separated the one true Bugs from the Bugs-like characters tormenting the primitive form of Porky Pig and Elmer Fudd in a few cartoons up to that point. And while refinements were still to be made – he wasn't yet an effortless in-command wit, but still a manic slapstick creation; it would also be five years before he'd take his first wrong turn at Albuquerque – it's remarkable how stable the character has been through all of the intervening decades.

 

In contrast to Mickey Mouse, his counterpart at Disney, Bugs's transformation into corporate mascot & spokesanimal was never turned into the kindly old uncle or boring boss, obliged to put on an amicable face while his sidekicks got to be the funny ones. Throughout all of his appearances between 1940 and 1964, he remained a consummate wiseass, tormenting his enemies because it delighted him to prove that he was always smarter than they were. True, most of his appearances subsequent to his first retirement, such as his occasional cameo roles in the '90s TV series Tiny Toon Adventures, or his supporting performance in the dodgy theatrical features Space Jam and Looney Tunes: Back in Action have rendered him as a respectable voice of authority, a depressingly tame version of his old self. But that same fate has befallen all of the Looney Tunes menagerie in those same vehicles; it's a matter of corporate tinkering ruining legacy properties more than Bugs being particularly defanged.

So it's fair to say that the character's legacy relies entirely on thse first 24 years; but what a legacy! Bugs was the first cartoon star inducted into the National Film Registry, in 1992, on the basis of 1957's What's Opera Doc?; he was the first cartoon character to be featured on a U.S. postage stamp.

The character's charm has nothing to do with his skills as an advertising object, or the anchor for Warner's merchandising efforts, of course. Bugs lives on, simply put, because he's a great cartoon character. He always wins, but he's never the aggressor: the writers and directors who shaped him in the '40s took great pains to make sure he was always put in a defensive position before he started to unload on his foes. He has intelligence and creativity enough to get him out of every scrape that fate throws at him, while also throwing off smug, devastating quips that make it clear that he knows just how great he is. If the easily flustered loser Daffy Duck is the person most of us are, Bugs Bunny is the cool, unflappable wit that we aspire to be.

So after 75 years, thanks be to Bugs, one of the great raconteurs and winners in the annals of American cartooning. As a present, may I offer this list of five essential Bugs Bunny shorts, some of the greatest achivements in the medium:

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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