- Sunday Go to Meetin' Time
Infobox Hollywood cartoon
cartoon_name = Sunday Go to Meetin' Time
series =Merrie Melodies
caption = Nicodemus tries to steal a chicken. "Sunday Go to Meetin' Time" features African American characters who look and act likeblackface minstrel show andcoon song stereotypes.
director =Friz Freleng
story_artist =Allen Rose
animator =
voice_actor =
musician =
producer =Leon Schlesinger
distributor =Warner Bros. Pictures
The Vitaphone Corporation
release_date =August 8 ,1936 (USA)
color_process =Technicolor
runtime = 7 min (one reel)
movie_language = English
imdb_id = 0028323"Sunday Go to Meetin' Time" is a "
Merrie Melodies " animated cartoon directed byFriz Freleng , produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions, and released to theatres onAugust 8 ,1936 byWarner Bros. Pictures andThe Vitaphone Corporation . The plot follows the misadventures of a black man in the stereotypicalminstrel show andcoon song mold. He sneaks out of church and soon finds himself in hell. There, he learns the error of his ways, and when he wakes up again in the living world, he makes haste to the church. The short's stereotypical portrayal of black characters promptedUnited Artists to withhold it from distribution in 1968, making it one of the infamousCensored Eleven .ummary
"Sunday Go to Meetin' Time" has a religious and racist theme. This is because "churches were more easily portrayed in predominantly black settings due to the vivacity of their worship rituals." Instead of celebrating these customs, however, the film ridicules them. [Bdeir.] Ringing bells in a lazy town announce that it is time to go to church. A black preacher with caricatured enormous lips greets his parishioners as he sings the song for which the short is named. A
minstrel show dandy and his gal jazz up the song as they dance their way to church. A succession of gags featuring stereotyped black characters follows: Amammy and old uncle shine the heads ofpickanniny children; a woman steals a bra off a clothesline to use as a bonnet for her twin children. Lindvall notes that mammies were "ubiquitous in films dealing with black culture".Lindvall 128.]Freleng introduces the cartoon's protagonist, Nicodemus, when his mammy wife finds him playing dice. She exclaims, "You good for nothing! Get yourself to that church. The Devil's gonna get you sure as you're born!" and drags him off by the ear. Nevertheless, Nicodemus slinks out the door, opting to steal some chickens instead. A knock on the head sends him to the "Hades Court of Justice". A demon there reviews his crimes: "Shooting craps, stealing chickens, missing church, raisin' dickens!" and sends him deeper into hell. Big-lipped demons carry him to the Devil himself, who sings to Nicodemus that "you've got to give the Devil his due." The boss orders some demons to "give 'em the works," but Nicodemus wakes to find the prods of pitchforks are really the pecks of chickens in the land of the living. He hears the church bells and makes haste to the meeting house.
Distribution
Warner Bros. released "Sunday Go to Meetin' Time" in American theaters onAugust 8 ,1936 . Since 1968, the cartoon has been withheld from distribution. At that time,United Artists owned the rights to most "Looney Tunes" and "Merrie Melodies" cartoons. "Sunday Go to Meetin' Time" and ten other cartoons were deemed to feature racist depictions of African Americans that were too integral to the films for simple cuts to make them palatable for modern audiences. The cartoon has never been released on laserdisc, home video, or DVD. These eleven cartoons make up the so-calledCensored Eleven . [The Straight Dope.]Credits
*Produced by
Leon Schlesinger
*Directed byFriz Freleng
*Written byAllen Rose Notes
References
*Bdeir, Ayah (Fall 2004). " [http://web.media.mit.edu/~ayah/MediaTheories/ That's all Sheikh: Arab representation in U.S. cartoons] ". CMS. 790. Media Theories and Methods I - Comparative Media Studies - Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Accessed
22 June 2007 .
*Lindvall, Terry, and Ben Fraser (1998). "Darker Shades of Animation: African-American Images in Warner Bros. Cartoons". "Reading the Rabbit: Explorations in Warner Bros. Animation". Rutgers University Press.
*Straight Dope Science Advisory Board (February 5 ,2002 ). " [http://www.straightdope.com/mailbag/mbannedbugs.html Did Bugs Bunny appear in a racist cartoon during World War II?] " The Straight Dope. AccessedJune 21 ,2007 .External links
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