词条 | Stage Hoax |
释义 |
| name = Stage Hoax | image = Stagehoax TITLE.jpg | caption = | director = Walter Lantz | story = Walter Lantz | animator = Ray Abrams Don Patterson Laverne Harding Paul J. Smith | background_artist = Fred Brunish | starring = Grace Stafford Dal McKennon | music = Clarence Wheeler | producer = Walter Lantz | studio = Walter Lantz Productions | distributor = Universal International | released = April 21, 1952 | color_process = Technicolor | runtime = 6' 39" | country = United States | language = English }} Stage Hoax is the 40th animated cartoon short subject in the Woody Woodpecker series. Released theatrically on April 21, 1952, the film was produced by Walter Lantz Productions and distributed by Universal International. PlotWoody Woodpecker, tired and perspiring, is walking down a dusty road of the old West carrying a heavy suitcase. Hearing a stagecoach approaching, he stands in the road thumbing a ride, but the stage passes him by in a swirl of dust. He opens his suitcase, which contains an assortment of artificial limbs used to display women's stockings, wigs, dresses, etc. Woody transforms himself into a young woman by putting on artificial limbs, a wig and a dress. Wally Walrus, driver of a stagecoach, approaches Woody in the road. Woody coyly lifts his skirt to display the shapely limbs. Wally quickly stops the stage, and Woody enters. Woody, in the coach's dining room, orders a sumptuous meal from Wally, now acting as a waiter. Woody's wig falls off. Wally realizes his mistake, and he hands Woody a check for $30. Woody and Wally argue over the price, and Wally pulls a lever, which ejects Woody over the stagecoach roof. Woody jumps from the stagecoach and runs away. Woody then drives the stagecoach and meets the real "Buzz Buzzard the Bandit" astride a horse. Buzz forces Woody to drive to his hideout cottage. Woody, again disguised as a woman, causes Buzz's heart to flutter as he hastens to put his house in order, dress in "full dress and silk hat," and get ready to welcome Woody. A giant commotion emanates from the cottage. Woody rushes out the door with Buzz in full chase. They then run back into the carriage where more clutter happens then Buzz stumbles out now wearing the wig and high heels and Wally who heard the commotion sees Buzz and runs after him due to him looking like a woman, Woody throws reins onto both of them and they end up towing the carriage with Woody riding on it. Notes
References1. ^*Cooke, Jon, Komorowski, Thad, Shakarian, Pietro, and Tatay, Jack. "1952 {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080723102806/http://lantz.goldenagecartoons.com/1952.html |date=2008-07-23 }}". The Walter Lantz Cartune Encyclopedia {{DEFAULTSORT:Stage Hoax}}{{WoodyWoodpecker-film-stub}} 18 : 1952 animated films|1950s short films|1950s Western (genre) films|Films directed by Walter Lantz|Walter Lantz Productions shorts|Woody Woodpecker films|Western (genre) comedy films|1950s American animated films|American Western (genre) films|1952 films|Universal Pictures short films|Universal Pictures animated short films|Animated films about animals|Animated films about birds|American animated short films|American comedy films|American films|Comedy short films |
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