Screwy Squirrel

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Screwy Squirrel
MGM Cartoons character
First appearanceScrewball Squirrel
April 1, 1944
Last appearanceLonesome Lenny
March 9, 1946
Created byTex Avery
Designed byClaude Smith
Voiced byWally Maher (1944–1946)
William Hanna (1944)
Pinto Colvig (1945)
Charlie Adler (1993)
Jeff Bergman (2004)
Paul Reubens (2013)
Sean Kenin (2019–2021)
In-universe information
AliasScrewball Squirrel
Screwy the Screwball Squirrel
SpeciesAmerican red squirrel
GenderMale

Screwy Squirrel (also known as Screwball Squirrel) is an animated cartoon character, an anthropomorphic squirrel created by Tex Avery for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Among some of the more outrageous cartoon characters, Screwy's feats include pulling objects out of thin air, doubling himself, and breaking the fourth wall, all the while uttering a characteristic cackling laugh. The character was not as successful as Avery's Droopy was at this time, appearing in only five cartoons: Screwball Squirrel (1944), Happy-Go-Nutty (1944), Big Heel-Watha (1944), The Screwy Truant (1945), and Lonesome Lenny (1946).[1]

Biography[edit]

The character was known for being brash and erratic, with few sympathetic personality characteristics such as Bugs Bunny's nobility and Daffy Duck's pathos. (Both of those characters are also creations of Tex Avery.)[2] Most of his cartoons saw him paired with Meathead Dog (voiced by screenwriter Cal Howard in Screwball Squirrel, Tex Avery in Happy-Go-Nutty and Pinto Colvig in The Screwy Truant) as his adversary. Meathead's physical appearance differed in between the three shorts in which he appeared (with his ears changing color from grey-blue to black in Happy-Go-Nutty, and donning a new color palette in The Screwy Truant), but otherwise the character remained the same.

Screwy's shorts revolve around his infliction of various forms of torture on Meathead – or another enemy – for seven minutes. In The Screwy Truant, one gag sees Screwy hitting Meathead over the head with everything he can find in a trunk labeled "Assorted Swell Stuff to Hit Dog on Head". When he finishes, Meathead remarks, "Gee whiz! He hit me with everything but the kitchen sink!" Screwy responds with, "Well, don't want to disappoint you, chum", then pulls out that very item and bashes him over the head with it.[1]

The final cartoon in the series, Lonesome Lenny (a broad parody of the characters of George and Lenny from the John Steinbeck novel Of Mice and Men), ends with a scene indicating that Screwy has been killed off as a regular MGM character. The 1946 cartoon begins with a wealthy woman purchasing the squirrel at a pet shop with the intention of giving him to her large dog Lenny as a companion. Pampered and dim-witted, Lenny is unaware of his brute strength; and later, when he hugs Screwy, he accidentally crushes him to death. In the cartoon's closing scene, the dog is now all alone and lying on the floor in his owner's mansion. After casually squeezing and pulverizing a big chew bone with his paw and crumpling his metal food bowl, he sits up, turns to the audience, and says, "You know, I had a little friend once, but he don't move no more." Lenny then reaches into a side "pocket" in his fur and pulls out the flattened body of Screwy. The squirrel is motionless and his eyes are closed. Seemingly dead, Screwy suddenly opens one eye and brings a sign out from behind his back that reads, "SAD ENDING, isn't it?" That gesture cast some doubt at the time on the finality of the crazy squirrel's demise. A similar "death" gag is presented at the conclusion of the 1957 Warner Bros. cartoon What's Opera Doc?, which was directed by Chuck Jones. In that cartoon, however, as a dead Bugs Bunny is being carried away by a guilt-ridden Elmer Fudd, the rabbit awakes to speak to the audience about the opera parody's sad ending.

It is said that the reason why Screwy was killed off in his last cartoon was that Tex Avery grew to openly dislike the character. Animator Mark Kausler used to send Avery letters about his rendition of Screwy, only for Avery to throw away anything related to the character.[3]

Later appearances[edit]

Meathead Dog makes a cameo appearance in the 1988 film Who Framed Roger Rabbit. He is seen sniffing around at R. K. Maroon's Cartoon Studio in the film's beginning. Screwy is mockingly mentioned by one of Eddie Valiant's bar patrons Angelo: "Who's your client, Mr. Detective of the Stars? Chilly Willy, or Screwy Squirrel?"

In 1993, Hanna-Barbera resurrected Screwy in new animation for the series Droopy, Master Detective as part of Fox Kids' programming block of Saturday morning cartoons.[4] Those new cartoons featured the character's name as Screwball—never Screwy—and pitted him not against Meathead but against a pair of typical Hanna-Barbera authority figures, a human park attendant named Dweeble and his oafish dog Rumply. "Screwball" himself wore a T-shirt and often a "Napoleon-style" bicorne hat.

On April Fools' Day in 1997, Cartoon Network broadcast an edited version (minus one blackface gag) of the 1944 Screwy Squirrel cartoon Happy-Go-Nutty repeatedly from 6 AM to 6 PM, as part of an April Fool's joke that the cartoon character had seized control of the network.[5]

On April Fool's Day in 2012, Cartoon Network broadcast Screwy Squirrel's debut cartoon The Screwball Squirrel, at 6:00 am and 11:45 am respectively, which marked the first time that a cartoon by Tex Avery was broadcast on the network since The Tex Avery Show.

In 2013, both Meathead and Screwy Squirrel make appearances as residents of "Fairy Land" in Tom and Jerry's Giant Adventure retaining most of their traits. Screwy Squirrel was voiced by Paul Reubens and Meathead is voiced by John DiMaggio.

In 2019, Screwy Squirrel makes an appearance as a landlord of an apartment building called Screwy Arms Apartments, in the third season of The Tom and Jerry Show episode called "Double Dog Trouble". He also makes various cameos in the series. Screwy is voiced by Sean Kenin.

American animator and producer Bruce W. Smith briefly began developing a series for Warner Bros. starring the titular character. In Smith's proposed storyline, which was never produced, Screwy thinks he is in Hollywood, California, but in reality he is in Hollywood, Alabama.[6][7]

Voice actors[edit]

Cartoons[edit]

# Title Release Date
1 Screwball Squirrel April 1, 1944
2 Happy-Go-Nutty June 24, 1944
3 Big Heel-Watha (Buck of the Month) October 21, 1944
4 The Screwy Truant January 13, 1945
5 Lonesome Lenny March 9, 1946

Comics[edit]

List of comics appearances[edit]

  • Our Gang Comics #12–14 (1944) (Dell Comics)
  • Tom & Jerry's Winter Carnival #1 (1952), #2 (1953) (Dell)
  • Tom & Jerry's Winter Fun #3 (1954), #6 (1957), #7 (1958), #8 (1958) (Dell)
  • Tom & Jerry's Summer Fun #1 (1954), #2 (1955) (Dell)
  • Tom and Jerry #213 (1962), #231, #232 (1966), #258 (1971)
  • Golden Comics Digest #3, #5 (1969), #8 (1970), #18 (1971), #22, #25 (1972), #28 (1973), #41 (1975) (Gold Key Comics)
  • Tex Avery's Wolf and Red various issues (1995) (Dark Horse Comics)
  • Tex Avery's Screwball Squirrel (1995) (Dark Horse Comics)
  • Tex Avery's Droopy various issues (1995) (Dark Horse Comics)
  • Comics and Stories various issues (1996) (Dark Horse Comics)

Some earlier comics style the character's name as "Skrewy Squirrel" or "Skrewy the Screwball Squirrel." Additional titles, not listed here, include the character in one-page gag or puzzle features.

Home media[edit]

Several Screwy Squirrel cartoons were released as bonus features on classic Warner Bros. titles including:

In March 2020, Screwball Squirrel, The Screwy Traunt, Big Heel-Watha and Lonesome Lenny were released on Blu-Ray, fully restored and uncut, by Warner Archive as part of Tex Avery Screwball Classics: Volume 1.[10] Happy Go Nutty was released on October 5, 2021 as part of Tex Avery Screwball Classics: Volume 3- completing Screwy’s filmography.[11]

Other appearances[edit]

A voice clip of Wally Maher as Screwy Squirrel from the character's debut short was recycled for the character of Dweezil the cat in the video game Putty.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Adamson, Joe, Tex Avery: King of Cartoons, 1975, Da Capo Press
  2. ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 134–135. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  3. ^ Yowp (December 19, 2011). "Tralfaz: Screwy Squirrel and the Sam Prototype". Tralfaz. Retrieved November 3, 2022.
  4. ^ Erickson, Hal (2005). Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. pp. 288–290. ISBN 978-1476665993.
  5. ^ Markstein, Donald D. "Screwy Squirrel". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Retrieved August 8, 2022.
  6. ^ @BruceAlmighteee (March 19, 2021). "#ThrowbackThursday I was at WB for a..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  7. ^ @BruceAlmighteee (March 19, 2021). "The idea: animated documentary-styled..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  8. ^ Tim, Lawson (2004). The Magic Behind the Voices: A Who's Who of Cartoon Voice Actors. Univ. Press of Mississippi. p. 10. ISBN 978-1-60473-685-4. Retrieved February 23, 2020.
  9. ^ "Screwy Squirrel". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved August 14, 2020.
  10. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on August 9, 2020. Retrieved April 19, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ "Some Advance Notes on "Tex Avery Screwball Classics" Volume 3 |". cartoonresearch.com. Retrieved September 8, 2021.

External links[edit]