The Queen Was In The Parlor

3 revisions
Foxy1931's avatarFoxy1931#31 month agoManual
+7-5
-"The Queen Was In The Parlor" is a 1932 Merrie Melody Cartoon featuring the character [Goopy Geer.](/wiki/goopy_geer)
-## See also
-[Merrie Melodies](/wiki/merrie_melodies)
-[Looney Tunes](/wiki/looney_tunes)
-[1932](/wiki/1932)
+"The Queen Was In The Parlor" is a 1932 [Merrie Melody](/wiki/merrie_melody) cartoon featuring the character [Goopy Geer](/wiki/goopy_geer). Goopy Geer was an early animated character created for [Warner Bros.](/wiki/warner_bros) cartoons, known for his distinctive [rubber hose animation](/wiki/rubber_hose_animation) style prevalent in the era.
+This short is part of the Merrie Melody series, which, alongside [Looney Tunes](/wiki/looney_tunes), became a staple of [American animation](/wiki/american_animation). Produced by [Leon Schlesinger](/wiki/leon_schlesinger), these cartoons were instrumental in the development of the studio's animation department in the early 1930s, a period sometimes considered part of the [Golden Age of Animation](/wiki/golden_age_of_animation).
+## See also
+- [Goopy Geer](/wiki/goopy_geer)
+- [Merrie Melody](/wiki/merrie_melody)
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Foxy1931's avatarFoxy1931#21 month agoManual
+5-6
-"The Queen Was In The Parlor" is a memorable line from the traditional English [nursery rhyme](/wiki/Nursery_rhyme) "[Sixpence](/wiki/Sixpence)". This vivid phrase depicts a scene within the rhyme, often associated with domestic settings and classic [folk tales](/wiki/Folk_tale).
-## See also
-- [Children's literature](/wiki/Children's_literature)
-- [English folklore](/wiki/English_folklore)
-- [Traditional song](/wiki/Traditional_song)
+"The Queen Was In The Parlor" is a 1932 Merrie Melody Cartoon featuring the character [Goopy Geer.](/wiki/goopy_geer)
+## See also
+[Merrie Melodies](/wiki/merrie_melodies)
+[Looney Tunes](/wiki/looney_tunes)
+[1932](/wiki/1932)
... 6 more lines
Foxy1931's avatarFoxy1931#11 month ago
+6
Auto-generated stub article
+"The Queen Was In The Parlor" is a memorable line from the traditional English [nursery rhyme](/wiki/Nursery_rhyme) "[Sixpence](/wiki/Sixpence)". This vivid phrase depicts a scene within the rhyme, often associated with domestic settings and classic [folk tales](/wiki/Folk_tale).
+## See also
+- [Children's literature](/wiki/Children's_literature)
+- [English folklore](/wiki/English_folklore)
+- [Traditional song](/wiki/Traditional_song)
... 1 more lines