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Cured Duck

Cured Duck

Directed by

Produced by

Written by

Starring

Clarence Nash
Gloria Blondell
John Dehner
Doodles Weaver
Wendell Niles

Language

English
Preceded byFollowed by
Duck PimplesOld Sequoia
Cured Duck is aDonald Duck andDaisy Duck animated short.

Synopsis[]

Is there any cure for Donald's temper? Daisy seems to think so, and refuses to go out with him up until he learns to control it.

Plot[]

Donald decides to visit Daisy at her home. Daisy is first annoyed by Donald blowing smoke from his cigar into her face. Daisy asks Donald to open the windows. Donald struggles and strains to open it, but it won't budge. Donald strains so hard his face sweats, turns red with anger and he nearly tears the house apart with his straining, but still the window doesn't move. This causes Donald to enter an uncontrolled and maniacal rage. He smashes the window, tears down curtains, rips a refrigerator off its base, destroys a sofa, destroys some dishes, and even rips telephones and power lines through the wall, virtually wrecking the house. Daisy is appalled at his behavior and shows Donald that he just needed to turn the little knob atop the frame to open it. Disappointed, she tells him, "Temper, temper, shame on you. You never see me lose my temper, do you?" Upset at how easily he got angry, she orders Donald to leave and she refuses to go out with him up until he can control his temper.

While trudging through the streets, Donald sees an ad in a newspaper, from the Tootsberry Institute, promising a way to cure temper issues. They send an "anger control machine" to Donald which promises that if Donald can take its taunts for 10 minutes and still control his temper, he'll be cured forever. The machine abuses Donald in numerous ways, from punching him, clipping the buttons off his sailor suit (a clever, in-universe explanation for why his buttons never re-appear after this cartoon: they were eliminated to increase animation pencil mileage), pummeling his feet with a brick and even blaring loud sounds into his ear. After 10 minutes, Donald is still standing and hasn't lost his temper. At this point, the machine declares that he's done it!

Donald eagerly races back to Daisy's, to tell her that he's changed. She decides to test this by having him open the window. Donald manages to turn the little knob atop the window, but still struggles to get it open. He eventually uses a fire cleaning tool to hold the window open again, but it still falls down. Just when it seems he's succeeded, the glass in the window pane falls out and smashes over his head. But even though this happens, Donald still remains in good spirits. Daisy is pleased and decides to go out with Donald. She rushes upstairs and returns wearing a strange-looking hat for their date. Donald laughs at her hat, only to have her lose her temper - for the first time ever - and begins hitting Donald with her broom.

Voice Cast[]

Trivia[]

  • This is the second episode where Donald tries to find a way to cure his temper, the first one wasSelf Control. However, this one differs fromSelf Control in that Donald has better luck learning to control his temper (he returns to his old angry self at the end ofSelf Control). His curing inCured Duck seems to be more successful, Donald doesn't have any extreme temper outbursts in cartoons following this one (though he still seems to be easily agitated).
  • The music that plays when Donald tears the house apart after trying to open the window, which is the "Storm" section from Rossini's "William Tell Overture", was played before twice in two earlierMickey Mouse cartoons, first in the climax ofThe Band Concert when the father tornado disrupts Mickey's band concert at the park, and again in the climax ofThe Little Whirlwind when the mother tornado chases down Mickey and destroys the area.
  • The ending of this cartoon evidently proves that Daisy herself has a temper even worse than Donald's, hence this makes Donald not the only Duck that needs anger management training.
  • This is the final cartoon where Donald's usual blue sailor shirt has four white buttons on it. Starting withDonald's Double Trouble, the white buttons have been abandoned from his sailor shirt.
  • This is the second time Donald is shown smoking, the first time was inDonald's Better Self.
  • In some scenes, Daisy's bangle is seen on her right wrist instead of her usual left.
  • When Daisy furiously takes out her temper at Donald at the ending, her voice becomes increasingly high-pitched and sped-up. This would be repeated again in the ending ofDonald's Double Trouble.
  • The scene when Donald starts wrecking the house in anger became an Internet meme.

Censorship[]

On most television airings of this cartoon on the United States, including onDisney Channel and it's sister channelToon Disney, the opening scene where Donald is seen smoking a cigar as he walks over to Daisy's house is cut. In the edited version, the cartoon instead begins with Daisy getting herself ready before Donald arrives at her house.

Releases[]

Television[]

Home video[]

Gallery[]

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1930s
(co-starring) • (co-starring)
1940s
(co-starring) • (co-starring) • (co-starring) • (co-starring)
1950s
1960s-Present
Educational Shorts
Songs
See Also


- -
1940s
1950s
See Also
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