Porky Pig is a talent agent auditioning various corn ball performers. A fox keeps interrupting and promising Porky the act of the century. Unfortunately, the act is fatal and can only be don... Read allPorky Pig is a talent agent auditioning various corn ball performers. A fox keeps interrupting and promising Porky the act of the century. Unfortunately, the act is fatal and can only be done once.Porky Pig is a talent agent auditioning various corn ball performers. A fox keeps interrupting and promising Porky the act of the century. Unfortunately, the act is fatal and can only be done once.
- Various
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Fox
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Various
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Various
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Sinatra and Crosby birds (singing)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Porky Pig is not a great character when he is by himself, usually he needs a good partner to really make a short film work. Here he has no direct partner but the film is structured to be a series of auditions that Porky watches. In this regard the film is both good and bad; when the auditions are funny then the cartoon works pretty well. However others are not as good and it feels surprisingly episodic (considering it is a short!) and not that great.
Like I say, I'm not convinced that Porky can carry a film by himself and, on the basis of this, it doesn't matter what you do with him he can't. In fairness he has almost nothing to do here apart from watch and occasionally say the odd amusing line. The support characters vary moment to moment, but there are a few good spoofs in there. The final act is OK but not as funny a punchline as I think the writers thought.
Overall this is an average cartoon; it seems very broken up with some of it working and other bits not working as well. Porky is poor here with nothing for him to really do but generally that is the story of many of the characters. Amusing enough as long as you don't expect belly laughs.
OK, so I admit that I don't know whether or not this cartoon was based on a real experience. But either way, it's great to watch, hearing Porky grouchily stutter comments about the hokey acts that he has to watch. You're sure to like it.
"I can only do it once". Well, you can watch this cartoon many times and still like it.
Did you know
- TriviaTwo gags in the cartoon would later be reused in Show Biz Bugs (1957), also directed by Friz Freleng: 1) Crawford Coo's trained pigeon act. Coo would place many obstacles on the table for the pigeons to take and open the cage only for them to fly out of the window. Daffy Duck attempted a similar act in the later cartoon. 2) A fox would demonstrate his act by blowing himself up. After drinking many chemicals and flammables, he swallows a match, blows up, and shows up as a ghost admitting he can only do it once. Daffy Duck took on this act in a nearly verbatim fashion.
- GoofsWhen the dog is doing his diving into the water glass act he's on a diving board in Porky's office and when he jumps off the diving board there are clouds and blue sky seen in the back meaning he ended up outside when he should have still been in the office.
- Quotes
[a two-headed man walks into Porky's office]
Porky: Boy, two-headed! This ought to be a sensational act!
Two-headed man: [cleaning out the dustbin] Act-schmact. I'm the janitor.
- ConnectionsEdited into L'Île fantastique de Daffy Duck (1983)
- SoundtracksApril Showers
(uncredited)
Music by Louis Silvers
Lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva
Sung by John Woodburry (as Bing Crosby parrot & Frank Sinatra chicken) and Mel Blanc (as Al Jolson duck)
Details
- Runtime
- 7m
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1