| A Witch's Tangled Hare | |
|---|---|
Lobby card | |
| Directed by | Abe Levitow |
| Story by | Michael Maltese |
| Produced by | John W. Burton |
| Starring | Mel Blanc (all other voices) June Foray (Witch Hazel - uncredited) |
| Music by | Milt Franklyn |
| Animation by | Keith Darling Ken Harris Ben Washam Richard Thompson |
| Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures The Vitaphone Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 6:23 |
| Language | English |
A Witch's Tangled Hare is a 1959Warner Bros.Looney Tunes theatrical cartoon short directed byAbe Levitow.[1] The short was released onHalloween of 1959, and starsBugs Bunny.[2]Mel Blanc provides the voices for Bugs Bunny and Sam Crubish, while an uncreditedJune Foray voicesWitch Hazel. The cartoon makes a number of references to various plays written byWilliam Shakespeare (includingHamlet,Macbeth,Romeo and Juliet, andAs You Like It).
The cartoon opens with a writer, who looks similar toWilliam Shakespeare, coming across a castle with a mailbox with "Macbeth" written on it. At this, he begins to write a play based on this title. He hears the loud screeching laugh of Witch Hazel and watches her stir hercauldron. The witch has Bugs Bunny sleeping on a platter and wakes him up. He believes the cauldron to be a bath and readily climbs in, only realizing his mistake after reading her open recipe book. Bugs quickly jumps out of the boiling cauldron and first angrily confronts, then runs away from Witch Hazel towards the castle when she tries to attack him with ameat cleaver. Witch Hazel pursues Bugs Bunny on her flying broomstick. We then see the poet again trying to write after Bugs and the witch have departed.
At the castle, Witch Hazel and Bugs run into each other and they have a little laughing contest, then Bugs runs up a tall tower, saying "You hoo! Granny! Here I am!" and Witch Hazel says after that "And here I come!" while she is on her broomstick, but it goes backwards; Witch Hazel then says "Oh we women drivers! I had the silly thing in reverse!" Then she flies up to the tower, saying in baby talk "Hello", where Bugs gives her aheavy weight and says, "Good-bye!" As the witch falls down with it, she cries out "Good grief!" then Bugs says, "Good riddance!" She crashes to the ground with her broom destroyed and the chase continues. Bugs acts asRomeo to try to trick Witch Hazel, who starts to quoteJuliet's lines fromthe play, but soon the two improvise. Witch Hazel jumps out of the castle window as Bugs pretends that he will catch her and instead rapidly runs off.
As Bugs runs out from the castle he runs into the poet, who is crying because he says that he will never be a writer. Bugs finds out that he is not William Shakespeare, but is actually called Sam Crubish. Witch Hazel hears this and it appears that the two know each other, but have not seen each other in a while because Crubish never showed up to meet her family at what Crubish incorrectly thought was Apartment 2B. Sam and Witch Hazel leave talking about who made the mistake of saying "2B" and the cartoon closes with Bugs Bunny quoting the famous line fromHamlet – "To be, or not to be, that is the question."
| Preceded by | Bugs Bunny Cartoons 1959 | Succeeded by |