Wuvwy Music
Last weekend, Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd, who in their
heyday often ended up in concert halls through chaotic means, shared a
stage with the New York Philharmonic. This time, they went deliberately. The
conductor George Daugherty, who has conducted his program “Bugs Bunny at the
Symphony” with various orchestras worldwide since 1989, pairs original Warner
Bros. cartoons like “What’s Opera, Doc?” and “Corny Concerto” with live,
synchronous performances of their music, by Carl Stalling and Milt Franklyn.
This was the program’s first outing with the Philharmonic, and the four shows
at Avery Fisher Hall had sold out quickly. Before the Friday-night concert, in
the lobby, people of all ages, some in ball gowns, some in Viking helmets,
lined up to pose with an energetic Bugs Bunny. He was probably excited to be
back in town: though people associate him with Albuquerque, Bugs is a New Yorker.
Recently, Daugherty told me how Looney Tunes came to the
symphony hall. “Back in 1989, I was doing a lot of what we like to refer to as
‘normal’ conducting,” he said—for ballets, opera companies, and symphony
orchestras. Even then, attracting new audiences was a concern. “I wanted to
find ways to pull people into the concert hall who didn’t normally come, and at
the same time celebrate varieties of American symphonic and film music that
didn’t normally get put on a concert stage,” he said. “I had loved these
cartoons as a child, and I had no idea at the time that I was listening to
Wagner and Rossini and von Suppé and Smetana and Tchaikovsky and Liszt and
Strauss—all of the classical composers that were borrowed from.”
That’s a common experience, even for classical musicians:
often enough, Bugs came first. “I’ve seen the same thing everywhere,” Daugherty
said. “I look at this serious, world-renowned orchestra and I see musicians
singing, ‘Oh, Brunhilde, you’re so wuv-wy, yes I know it, I can’t help it.’
They grew up on this music, too.”
When Daugherty brought the cartoons-and-live-music idea
to Warner Bros., in 1989, it was met with enthusiasm; the studio opened its
archives. But the logistics were challenging. For one, Daugherty and his team
discovered that many of the scores hadn’t been saved. “We had bits and pieces
of some, we had almost complete versions of others,” he said. “We had a
team of eleven music transcribers in the graduate film-scoring program at U.S.C.,
working for months with headphones and Walkmen.” They wanted to keep the
original dialogue and sound effects but remove the music, but because the
tracks were recorded in mono, on 35-mm. magnetic film, there was no easy way to
separate them. Daugherty and his colleagues came up with crude methods
involving phasing and shaving.
“Daffy cartoons are one of our biggest challenges,”
Daugherty said. “Bugs Bunny’s voice and Elmer Fudd’s voice fall into a sonic
area that’s not even near the music. Daffy has a higher-pitched voice—I don’t
want to say it’s abrasive, but it’s very abrasive—that falls right between the
woodwinds and the brass. And so when we start shaving the music away under
Daffy, we start shaving Daffy’s voice away. We had to come up with some alternate
techniques to deal with Daffy. Conservatory did not prepare me for any of
this.”
Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes cartoons were originally
created to be shown before movies, “with two thousand other people cheering and
laughing and applauding,” Daugherty said. “They’re trying for an audience
reaction.” They were musically cinematic, too. Stalling, the cartoons’
composer, and Franklyn, their orchestrator (and composer, after Stalling’s
retirement), both grew up playing the piano for silent movies in their home
towns. “In the small towns, somebody was just sitting down at the piano or the
organ and improvising the scores—adding classical things and their own music,”
Daugherty said. That style took symphonic form in Stalling’s Warner Bros.
compositions.
Because so many musicians had fled prewar Europe and come
to the United States, the classical-music scene in Hollywood in the thirties
and forties, Daugherty told me, was the second-best in the world. “If
musicians couldn’t get into the Metropolitan Opera orchestra or the New York
Philharmonic, they headed for Hollywood,” he said. “Every studio had a
phenomenal symphony orchestra. At the same time, Erich Korngold and Bernard Herrmann were
composing scores.” At Warner Bros., Daugherty said, “the same orchestra
that played for ‘Casablanca’ and ‘Now, Voyager’ and ‘The Maltese Falcon’ played
for the cartoons.”
At Avery Fisher Hall, Elmer Fudd told everybody to turn
off their cell phones. When the orchestra played the Warner Bros. theme, the
audience cheered. (Daugherty had told me, “The first time the slide guitar
plays—you know,wroiiing! Ba-ba-da-ba
ba!—the audience becomes electrified. It’s like the opening note of a
violin concerto played by Josh Bell or something.”) The first cartoon was “Baton Bunny,” from 1959, in which
Bugs is a conductor in a bright-yellow coat. When a man coughs, Bugs holds up a
sign that says “THROW THE BUM OUT!” Onstage and off, when Bugs tapped his
baton, percussion mallets were raised; in the cartoon, they had marshmallows on
the ends. When Bugs raised his arms dramatically, folding his hands down just
so, Daugherty did it, too. In the cartoon, a fly buzzed around and enraged the
conductor, whose limbs became a wild scribble. Onstage, the musicians reacted
in kind.
In “Show Biz Bugs,” Bugs
was the co-star and antagonist to Daffy Duck. In purple tuxes and top hats,
they tap-danced—paws and flippers—to “Tea for Two.” Here, and throughout, there
was plenty of TNT. (“If you strike this note, instead of a xylophone you’ll be
playing a harp!” Daffy Duck growls.) In “Rhapsody
Rabbit,” Bugs answers a ringing phone, says, “What’s up, Doc? Who?
Franz Liszt? Never heard of him,” and plays “Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2” and
boogie-woogie while he’s bedevilled by a mouse. (He tries TNT under the keys.)
Daugherty then introduced the band. “Ladies and
gentlemen, the New York Philharmonic!” he yelled. He was briefly distracted by
a family in one of the front rows. “This little kid is putting earplugs in,” he
said. (Later, he told me, of the same family, “During ‘The Ride of the
Valkyries,’ a woman got up and passed out little Cheerios treats to her kids,
in Tupperware, and popped the lid off, and shook them, and then she poured milk
on them.” He was flummoxed. It was as if Daffy had come to pester Bugs on his
big night.)
When I was a kid, I tended to find the Road
Runner-and-Wile E. Coyote cartoons tedious. But when their cartoon “Zoom and Bored” came on, I found
myself laughing hard. Now I understood: sometimes, when you try to drop an
anvil on somebody, you drag yourself down with it and crash through the
pavement, and your enemy still eats the birdseed. Other adults in the audience,
I felt, were laughing with the same sense of recognition.
There were cartoons featuring Porky Pig and Pepé Le
Pew—and even, “through the magic of corporate mergers,” Tom and Jerry—but the
stars of the night were Bugs and Elmer. In “The Rabbit of Seville,” Elmer Fudd
chased Bugs into the concert hall, where they proceeded to take part in an
opera. “Let me cut your mop, let me shave your crop,” Bugs sang. (It hadn’t
occurred to me before how funny it was that Elmer Fudd, the customer, is bald
and clean-shaven.) Bugs massaged his head, then made a salad on it and
showed him the hand mirror. Fudd was enraged, and we were delighted.
(Especially those of us who have had to perform the post-haircut
feign-joy-at-the-hand-mirror ritual many dozens of times.) Later, Bugs put
Figaro Fertilizer on Elmer’s head, and flowers grew out of it. Later, they got
married: “The Marriage of Figaro.”
Daugherty told the crowd about the distinctive
cartoon-opening “boiiing!”When he was trying to reconstruct the music, he
said, he knew that noise came from a slide guitar but couldn’t find one that
sounded right—not Hawaiian, not country-and-Western. “One day at the Warner
Bros. music department, we found this,” he said. A musician held up a wooden
guitar. “This is the nineteen-thirties original Warner Bros. slide guitar,”
Daugherty said, and the crowd oohed. He said they’d also found a document in
the archives on which the ingenious director Chuck Jones had written out, in
crayon, all eight of the Wagner operas used in “What’s Opera, Doc?,” which
blasts through them in a wildly un-Wagnerian six minutes and twenty-three
seconds.
“Corny
Concerto,” a 1943 slapstick parody of “Fantasia,” has
a frame in which Elmer Fudd conducts the Strauss waltzes “Tales from the Vienna
Woods” and “Blue Danube,” at Corny-Gie Hall. As gorgeous strings cascade and
the “wippwing wefwain of the woodwind wolls awound and awound,” Porky Pig, in a
Fudd-ian hunter role, races around trying to kill Bugs, who outsmarts him and
then dances into the sunset in a tutu. “Blue Danube” features swans, a vulture,
TNT, and a harp.
The final two were heavy hitters. The crowd favorite “Long-Haired Hare”begins with Bugs
playing the banjo and singing outside the house of the famous tenor Giovanni
Jones, whose “Largo al factotum” turns into “Rainy Night in Rio.” (“What do
they do in Mississippi when skies are drippy?” he sings, dancing around his living
room.) War ensues (“Music hater!” Bugs says, wearing his broken banjo around
his neck), culminating in a face off at the Hollywood Bowl. Disguised as
Leopold, the great conductor, Bugs exacts operatic revenge, then plays a
victory tune on his banjo.
The grand finale was “What’s Opera, Doc?” As Daugherty
had told me, the power of the music from those eight Wagner operas is part of
its wit. “They didn’t make the music cartoony,” he said. “All of the themes from
‘Die Walküre’ and ‘Tannhäuser’ and ‘The Flying Dutchman’ are gigantic
orchestrations. They kept the Wagnerian grandeur of the music, and when Bugs
and Elmer start singing along with it, it’s absolutely side-splitting.” The
direction, by Chuck Jones, visually contrasts massive, powerful forms with puny
ones, as well. Few warriors are less intimidating than Elmer Fudd in a Viking
helmet; few sights are as pleasing as Bugs as Brünnhilde, lithe and batting his
eyelashes atop a white horse with a pink mane. “Oh, Brünnhilde, you’re so
wuvwy,” Fudd sang. The Philharmonic played with precision and thunderous power;
in the audience, several voices, old and young, could be heard singing “Kill
the wabbit, kill the wabbit.”
by SARAH
LARSON
Source - newyorker.com
