Interesting facts about Soviet cartoons. Three of the most incredible Disney theories Tarzan auditioned for the role of Tarzan

Tarzan, adopted by the monkeys, is one of the most famous literary characters. Lord of the Jungle is the subject of twenty-four novels by Edgar Rice Burroughs, as well as official sequels by Fritz Leiber, Joe Lansdale, Philip José Farmer, Robin Maxwell and Will Murray. In addition, Tarzan has been the protagonist of a radio program, a newspaper section of comics, a host of comic books, a host of television series, and a myriad of films.

However, not much is known about this semi-mythical man. Burroughs' novels are full of curious, incredible details that are rarely shown on screen. Well, since the new film "The Legend of Tarzan" is released in July 2016, it's time to remember the very Tarzan who appeared before the reader on the pages of the original novels.

Name origin

Tarzan's "father"

In the world of Edgar Rice Burroughs, the great apes speak their own unique language. In the primate dialect, "tar" means "white" and "zan" means "skin." Put the two words together and voila! - Get Tarzan. In the book, Kala, Tarzan's monkey foster mother, calls him that - for his pale, smooth skin.

However, this name came to Burroughs' mind not out of the blue. In 1910, while living in Chicago, he fell in love with the Southern California community of Tarzana and even purchased land there. A few years later, the writer thought about the name for the boy raised by monkeys, and remembered Tarzan. Burroughs removed the last vowel, and the legend was born.

It is noteworthy that in those days the name of Tarzan was unofficial. Actually, the community did not have any official name at all - until in 1930 it was given the status of a settlement and a post office was built in it. This gave rise to the myth that the town was named after the famous adoptive monkey, although in fact it is just the opposite.

Tarzan wasn't raised by gorillas

Turns out Kala didn't look like that

Everyone knows that Tarzan was raised by gorillas. That's his story, right? Alas, this is a common misconception. And so widespread that it even went into films.

In fact, Tarzan was raised by monkeys unknown to science. They resemble gorillas in strength and size, but differ in other respects. These primates walk mostly upright, hunt animals, eat meat and use colloquial speech. They call themselves "mangani". Burroughs describes them as "huge", "fierce", and "terrible". He adds that "they are close relatives of gorillas, but smarter than them." Thanks to their intelligence and strength, mangani are "the most fearsome of all human ancestors."

The mangani gorillas are called "bolgani". And believe it or not, Tarzan fights with these huge primates. In Tarzan of the Apes, Burroughs describes Tarzan's first encounter with a large gorilla:

Before he had time to take a few steps towards the thickets, a huge figure stepped forward from the low, gloomy undergrowth. At first Tarzan decided that this was one of his people, but in the next moment he realized: Bolgani, a hefty gorilla.

How close! You can't run away anymore... You'll have to fight for your life. These huge beasts were the mortal enemies of his tribe. Little Tarzan knew that both tribes never asked for or bestowed mercy.

Lost Civilizations

Burroughs masterfully dreamed up lost worlds

Fantastic stories about Africa were written before Edgar Rice Burroughs, and they undoubtedly influenced him. An important contribution to such literature was made by Henry Rider Haggard, who in his numerous novels (“She”, “King Solomon's Mines” and others) vividly described the lost cities.

Burroughs began writing forty years later than Haggard, but by that time a huge part of Africa was still unexplored and not mapped. The so-called dark continent could well hide unknown civilizations from people, and Burroughs let his imagination run wild. For the adventures of Tarzan, Burroughs composed more than a dozen such worlds.

For example, Opar is the ruins of an ancient outpost of Atlantis. They are inhabited by ape-like men and the most beautiful women. Countless riches are hidden in Opar: gold bars and precious stones. Tarzan makes raids there to replenish his own treasury. There is an assumption that the name "Opar" was inspired by the image of the rich biblical city of Ophir.

Another world is the City of God, one of Burroughs' most extraordinary creations. The ruler of this settlement is a British geneticist who calls himself "God", who managed to put his mind into the body of a gorilla. He also endowed the tribe of gorillas subject to him with a human mind, instilled in them the personalities of Henry VIII and members of his royal court. Perhaps it was this omnipotent primate that became the prototype of the gorilla Grod, the supervillain from DC Comics comics.

Of course, we have listed only a small fraction of the worlds invented by Burroughs. In the novel "Tarzan and the Ant-Men" our hero discovers two warring cities inhabited by 46-centimeter people. In Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle, there is a whole valley with crusaders who were brought there back in the 12th century. And in Tarzan Triumphant, a city of religious fanatics suffering from epilepsy is described - they consider their seizures a divine gift.

There's also Pal-ul-don, the city of dinosaurs, and let's not forget the lost city of madmen who breed and eat lions and worship parrots and monkeys. The population of the cities of Kayi and Zuli is controlled by a sorcerer with the help of a mysterious gem. And in the castle, built in the Portuguese style, the descendants of the conquistadors and local Africans live. This is the only lost world in Tarzan Africa where non-white people are in power.

british lord

What did a civilized Tarzan look like?

Although Tarzan mostly spends his life flying vines through the jungle, he is actually a British lord. If you've watched Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes, released in 1984, then you already know the backstory. However, Tarzan's aristocratic background is described in the first novel.

Tarzan's parents, John and Alice Clayton, were Lord and Lady Greystoke. In the first book, they die, and Tarzan claims his inheritance only at the end of the novel Tarzan Returns to the Jungle. However, "lord" is not really a title, but an English form of address for a duke, marquis, earl, viscount, or baron. So what is Tarzan's title? Burroughs reveals this secret in the nineteenth chapter of Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle, in the scene where the knight from Nimmer meets Tarzan:

“My name is Tarzan,” said the ape-man.

- What is your title? asked Sir Bertram.

Tarzan was puzzled by the knight's strange mannerisms and attire. However, he looked quite friendly and clearly considered himself an important person. Hence, the high position of Tarzan should command the respect of Sir Bertram.

"Viscount," the ape-man admitted, as calm as ever.

It turns out that Tarzan, named after his father, should be called in full John Clayton, Viscount Greystoke. However, in Tarzan Lives, an informal "biography" of the lord of the jungle, Philip José Farmer notes that the title of viscount has only been in use in England since the 15th century. In other words, the title was unknown to the Knights of Nimr. Farmer speculates that Tarzan held the older title of earl. Although this is not the official version, the film Greystoke supports it.

The hero does not live in a tree house at all

Another myth about Tarzan

Ever since the 1930s, when Johnny Weissmuller played Tarzan, we've often been shown Tarzan and Jane's home in movies: a simple but well-designed treehouse. Oddly enough, this is not the case in the books. Tarzan's house, built in the English style, is first described in Burroughs's novel Eternal Beloved, where Tarzan is assigned a minor role:

In the south of Uziri, the land of the Waziri, lies a rocky mountain range, at the foot of which lies a wide plain. Antelopes, zebras, giraffes, rhinoceros and elephants are found in abundance here, and here - each in his own way - lions, leopards and hyenas prey on fat, fat antelopes, zebras and giraffes. There are also buffaloes - violent, ferocious animals, which, according to Clayton, are more terrible than the lion himself.

It was truly a hunter's paradise, and almost every day another party left the Greystokes' spacious, squat bungalow in search of prey and adventure.

We learn more details about housing from the novel "Son of Tarzan". According to Burroughs, Tarzan lives in "a bungalow overgrown with flowers, behind which you can see the barns and outbuildings of a solid African farm."

When Tarzan is not distracted by fights with wild animals and the search for lost cities, he behaves like an economic homebody. Marvelous.

Edgar Rice Burroughs killed Jane

A beautiful couple was waiting for a tragic end

The first actress to play Jane Porter was Enid Markey in Tarzan of the Apes. Miss Markey, as a sin, was a brunette, which went against Burroughs's ideas about Jane. In his novels, Jane is blonde (and not English; she is from Maryland). Not only that, Burroughs couldn't stand Mark's acting. And, apparently, he could not stand it so much that in the next novel he got rid of Jane.

In the first chapter of "Tarzan the Indomitable" our hero returns home after a long absence. There, trouble awaits him: the First World War began, German soldiers looted and burned his house, killed many servants and friends. And worst of all, they killed Jane.

Here is how Burroughs describes it:

For a long time Tarzan stood like that and looked at the lifeless body, burned beyond recognition, then he lifted him up in his arms. Turned over and saw the terrible marks of death. At the same moment, he was pulled into the deepest pool of sadness, horror and hatred.

And Tarzan did not need evidence in the form of a broken German rifle in the back room or a bloody uniform cap on the floor - he already knew who was guilty of this nightmarish, senseless crime.

For a moment Tarzan suddenly woke up with a desperate hope that this blackened dead body was not his wife, but then his eyes saw the familiar rings on his fingers, and the last faint ray of hope left his soul.

This tragic scene incites Tarzan to ruthless revenge. The ape-man hunts down and exterminates all the German soldiers in a row - it does not matter to him whether they are involved in what happened. This is a kind of death of Tarzan, whose deeds have always been distinguished by nobility.

Of course Jane didn't die. The story was printed gradually, with a continuation, and before the release of the last chapter, Burroughs changed the fate of Jane - though no one knows why. At the end, Tarzan finds out that Jane was not actually killed, but was kidnapped. The body he found belonged to a maid: she was burned beyond recognition in order to inspire the monkey man as if he had a dead wife in front of him. The reason for such an ingenious hoax remained undisclosed and formed an impressive hole in the plot. But fans of the novel didn't care.

Jane is back.

Tarzan auditioned for the role of Tarzan

Why not Tarzan? But Burroughs was against

Edgar Rice Burroughs had a difficult relationship with Hollywood. He loved filming and the extra money, but he hated the changes that films brought to his character. Burroughs especially disliked Elmo Lincoln, the first movie Tarzan who was afraid of heights. In addition, Lincoln was a fleshy man, with a chest of 132 centimeters in girth, in contrast to the bookish Tarzan - lean and athletic.

Dissatisfied was the author and the most famous actor-Tarzan, Johnny Weissmuller (pictured). Burroughs wanted his character to express himself clearly and clearly, and Weissmuller's ape-man could not really connect two words in English.

The writer got back in the novel "Tarzan and the Lion Man", where our hero rescues a film crew in the African jungle. Along the way, Burroughs makes fun of actors, directors, and the film industry as a whole. He strikes a fatal blow in the final chapter. Tarzan arrives in Hollywood and is introduced to a casting director.

The casting director gave Clayton an appraising look.

- Look good to me. I'll take you to Mr. Goldin. He is the director of the picture. Do you have experience?

- As Tarzan?

- Not really. I mean, were you in a movie? the director laughed.

“Well, maybe you can. You don't have to be Barrymore to play Tarzan. Let's go up to Mr. Goldin's office.

They had to wait in the reception area, then the secretary let them in.

— Hello, Ben! - the director of the director of the picture greeted. “I think I found the one I need. This is Mr. Clayton, Mr. Goldin.

— Whose role?

For the role of Tarzan.

- Yeah. Mm…

Goldin surveyed Clayton with a critical eye, then put out his palms and waved them as if chasing a fly.

“Not the type,” he snapped. “Absolutely not the same.

Ape man is proficient in martial arts

In the jungle, kung fu will not hurt

If a person is strong and agile enough that he does not run away from a fight with huge primates, he does not need additional skills. Not needed, but they are. According to Joe Lansdale's novel Tarzan's Forgotten Adventure, the ape-man at one time studied kung fu at the Shaolin Temple. However, in our article we will confine ourselves to the works of Burroughs.

So did Edgar Rice endow Tarzan with mastery in the martial arts? In Tarzan and His Beasts, Burroughs describes this in general terms:

With a muffled grunt, the beast rushed at Tarzan, but in the lair of civilized people, the ape-man, among other things, learned about some skillful methods of warfare unknown to the forest people.

If a few years ago Tarzan would have responded to a fierce throw with no less ferocious force, now he dodged the frontal attack of the enemy and struck him with a powerful blow with his right right in the very stomach.

Apparently, Tarzan learned to box and certainly learned the wisdom of hand-to-hand combat. Perhaps he even mastered savate - French kickboxing - after all, a Frenchman, Paul d'Arnot, introduced Tarzan to civilization. But what about martial arts? Surely only one thing is known: jiu-jitsu. In Tarzan the Indomitable, Burroughs writes:

The girl saw that the ape-man was not at all ready to attack. Now he will collapse dead! The giant primate was already looming over the opponent, stretching its paws towards him, but then Tarzan made a movement, and it was so lightning fast that even Ara-lightning would have put to shame. Swiftly, like the head of a Gista snake, the man-beast's left hand darted forward and grabbed the enemy's left wrist. A sharp turn, and the right hand of the primate is clamped under the right hand of the opponent. It was the jiu-jitsu hold that Tarzan had learned from civilized men, a hold that could easily break large bones; a grip that rendered the formidable primate utterly helpless.

Tarzan and Jane are immortal

Immortal family?

In the novel Tarzan's Quest, the ape-man comes into conflict with the hostile Kavoorou tribe, who are terrorizing the jungle and kidnapping women. They even stole Jane. It turns out that the cavouras are immortal: they created a pill that gives eternal youth. In the twenty-eighth chapter, the high priest of the tribe explains to Jane:

“You will serve the only purpose for which women are fit. A man can achieve godliness only in solitude. The woman weakens and destroys him. Take a look at me! Look at my priests! Do you think we are all young? This is wrong. Hundreds of rains have come and gone since the last neophyte entered our holy order. How did we get such immortality? Through a woman. We all took a vow of celibacy. And this vow was sealed with the blood of women; we shall be punished by our own blood if we break it. For a Cavouru priest to succumb to a woman's lure is disastrous.

"Still, I don't understand," Jane shook her head.

- You'll understand. Long ago I learned the secret of immortal youth. It lies in an elixir that is brewed from many ingredients: the pollen of some plants, the roots of others, the cerebrospinal fluid of a leopard and, most importantly, from the cervical glands and the blood of women - young women. Now I understand?

Tarzan saved Jane, and they returned home with a box of magic pills, which they distributed to their friends. They even treated Tarzan's monkey companion, Nkima. So, of course, it is strange that Tarzan and Jane did not save a couple of immortal pills for their son Korak and his wife Meriam. However, they were not in this book, so the dog is with them.

The hero flew to the center of the earth

Where fate did not bring Tarzan!

In addition to the Tarzan books, Burroughs wrote other books, including the Pellucidar series. Her heroes, adventurers David Innis and Abner Perry, built an experimental drilling rig and discovered a cavity inside the Earth. Moreover, this cavity was illuminated by its own internal sun. The amazing world was inhabited by dinosaurs, primitive people and many intelligent non-human races.

In Tarzan's Adventures at the Center of the Earth, the ape-man and his comrades go in search of Innis and Perry. Wealthy Tarzan finances the construction of a special airship called "O-220". On this aircraft, they dive into a giant hole at the North Pole, go through a tunnel and find themselves in the center of the Earth.

The idea of ​​a hollow earth is a real pseudo-scientific idea that was put forward in the eighteenth century. It is not clear whether Burroughs seriously believed in it, but it was remarkably useful for his writings. And not only in novels about the Earth. In The Moon Girl, the Moon is also described as hollow and inhabited from the inside by ancient civilizations.

Despite the mass of film adaptations, the figure of Tarzan is still more mysterious than we can imagine. I wonder if the creators of the new film will be able to reveal his character from a new, unknown side?

Original entry and comments on

We all know what cartoons are. Many of us loved them as children, and many of us still love them. Over the years, the creation technology has undergone many changes. The most popular in our time have gained cartoons made on the basis of computer animation, although you can still find many hand-drawn cartoons. Many different cartoons have a lot of interesting facts. Here are a few of them:

1. Initially, Walt Disney wanted to name the mouse Mortimer, but his wife insisted that he give him the name Mickey Mouse. This character appeared in 1928 and was voiced by Walt Disney himself.

2 . Disney's Aladdin's appearance was borrowed heavily from Tom Cruise, Genie's appearance from Robin Williams, and Mermaid's appearance from actress Alice Milano.

3. In the animated series "Chip and Dale Rescue Rangers" there is such a character as Gadget. Her real name is Gadget.

4. Before starting production on The Lion King, the film crew traveled to the Savannahs to study the behavior, movements and lifestyle of the animals in more detail.

5. Walt Disney received "" every year, and for the cartoon "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" he was awarded 1 big and 7 small Oscars.

6. The most unsuccessful Disney cartoon is The Black Cauldron (1985), although this cartoon has been worked on for almost 10 years.

7. The most expensive cartoon in history is Tarzan (1995). More than $145 million was spent on its production.

8. In the cartoon "The Little Mermaid" (1989), the main character Ariel has 6 more sisters and all of them have a name beginning with the letter "A": Aquata, Alana, Arista, Attina, Adela, Andrina.

9. The Island of Pleasure in the cartoon "Pinocchio" (1940) is insanely similar to the Island of Fools in the Russian Dunno on the Moon. Only in "Pinocchio" gouging turned into donkeys, and in "Dunno" into sheep.

10. The Prince of the Forest in the Bambi cartoon appeared so rarely, only because it was very difficult to draw and animate his branched horns.

11. The very first cartoon character is a dinosaur named Gerty. The appearance of this character dates back to 1910.

12. The creator of SpongeBob SquarePants was an active student of marine biology in college, and he also worked as a chef at a seafood restaurant.

13. In the original version of the cartoon "Volt" the name of the protagonist sounds like "Bolt" (Bolt), which translates as "Lightning". At the Russian box office, they thought that the name Bolt did not sound very good, so they translated it as Volt.

14. Dumbo the Elephant is the only main character in a Disney cartoon who doesn't say a word.

15. Initially, Volka in "Well, you wait!" Vladimir Vysotsky was supposed to voice, but the artistic council forbade him and Anatoly Papanov was invited to this role.

16. The actors who voiced the cartoon Shrek never met during the recording of the lines. Each dubbed their character separately.

17. In 2007, Scrooge McDuck was ranked number one on Forbes magazine's list of the richest fictional character.

18. Arnold Schwarzenegger admitted that he hates Japanese animation ().

19. In 2013, the cartoon "Kin-dza-dza" based on the 1986 film of the same name was released. In the original film, Uef was played by Yevgeny Leonov, in the cartoon the same character was voiced by his son Andrey Leonov.

20. In the cartoon "A Christmas Carol" (2009), Jim Carrey played 4 characters: Scrooge and 3 Christmas spirits.

21. In The Lion King 2: Simba's Pride, Kovu was originally conceived as Scar's son, but this idea was swept aside to avoid hints of incest, because then Kovu would have been Kiara's cousin uncle.

22. The names of some characters from The Jungle Book were coined according to the name of their species in Hindi: Baloo is a bear, Bagheera is a panther, Hathi is an elephant, Shere Khan is the Tiger King.

23. In many animated series, years pass, but the children never grow up and do not move into new classes. This happens in the animated series "Hey Arnold", "The Simpsons", "South Park", etc.

24. In the cartoons Dobrynya Nikitich and the Serpent Gorynych and Ilya Muromets and the Nightingale the Robber, Ilya and Dobrynya are voiced by Valery Solovyov. But in parts 4 and 5 (when the heroes get together), so that the voices differ, Dmitry Bykovsky was invited to voice Ilya Muromets.

25. Lorax in the cartoon of the same name was dubbed into Russian by Denis de Vito, who voiced him in the original version.

26. Toy Story is executive produced by Steve Jobs.

27. Some Disney characters bear a strong resemblance to Aladdin: Emperor Kusku from The Emperor's Adventures, Prince Naveen from The Princess and the Frog, Flynn Rider from Rapunzel.

28. The last cartoon filmed during Walt Disney's lifetime was The Sword in the Stone (1963).

29. One of the animators of the cartoon "The Fox and the Dog" (1981) was the future director Tim Burton.

30. Who Framed Roger Rabbit is unique in that it was one of the first films to combine live action with cartoon characters.

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website - interesting and funny facts about everything in the world.

In 1937, the cartoon "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" was released. To pay for its creation, Walt Disney had to mortgage his own house. As a result, the budget of the cartoon amounted to a record amount for those times of 1 million 488 thousand 423 dollars. At the box office, "Snow White" grossed 416 million, and in the same year, Disney received an Oscar for it. The most interesting thing is that at the awards ceremony he was awarded as many as 8 statuettes: one regular and seven small ones.

Walt Disney came up with the image of Mickey Mouse while watching his pet mouse on the farm.

At first, they wanted to name the famous Disney mouse Mortimer. But the wife of Walt Disney ridiculed this name and called it too pretentious. I had to urgently rename the character to Mickey. Interestingly, Walt Disney voiced Mickey Mouse directly.

Interesting fact: Mickey and Minnie Mouse were married in real life. Wayne Allwine, who voiced Mickey, married Russi Taylor, who voiced Minnie, in 1991.

Disney's Aladdin was "copied" from Tom Cruise, and Genie from Robbie Williams.

In 2007, Scrooge McDuck became an honorary citizen of the Scottish city of Glasgow. An interesting fact: in the same year, he entered the list of the richest fictional characters published by Forbes magazine at number 1.

The entire Disney creative team, while working on the cartoon "The Lion King", visited the African savannah to make the images of the characters as believable as possible.

An interesting fact: after the release of the cartoon "The Lion King" Walt Disney was sued ... for defamation of hyenas!

Pumbaa became the first Disney cartoon character to shamelessly fart on screen.

In the cartoon "Hercules" there is a scene where the main character poses for a picture on a vase. At the same time, he is dressed in a lion's skin. If you look closely, you can see that this skin belongs to Scar, the villain from The Lion King. The explanation is simple: Andres Deja, the animator who worked on both cartoons, just decided to play a little tricky.

The Disney cartoon "Hercules" is based on the myths of Ancient Greece, so all its heroes have ancient Greek names: Pegasus, Hades, Zeus, etc. There is only one exception - Hercules himself, because. his name is ancient Roman.

The only main character in Disney cartoons who didn't say a word is Dumbo the elephant.

The most expensive cartoon in the world is Tarzan, created in 1995. Its creation cost the manufacturers $145 million.

The famous song from the cartoon "Plasticine Crow" at first did not have its own special sound. The “cartoonishness” of the song was due to the fact that its original version did not fit in the allotted 5 minutes, and the recording was sped up. It turned out just great!

Actor Oleg Anofriev voiced all the male characters in the cartoon "The Bremen Town Musicians". It was originally planned that other actors would also take part in the voice acting, for example, Oleg Yankovsky and Zinovy ​​Gerdt, but they could not arrive at the studio on time. Therefore, Anofriev had to take the rap for everyone at once. It is interesting that the actor even tried to play the part of the Princess, but could not give the desired timbre. As a result, the Princess was voiced by the singer Elmira Zherzdeva.

Wolf from "Well, wait a minute!" voiced by Anatoly Papanov, although it was supposed to be done by Vladimir Vysotsky. Vysotsky was forbidden to voice the wolf by a special decision of the artistic council.

Russian-speaking fans of the animated series "Chip and Dale Rescue Rangers" know the inventor mouse as Gadget. However, in the original version, her name is Gadget!

The creator of SpongeBob studied marine life in college and worked as a chef at a seafood establishment.

An interesting fact: the actors who voiced the characters from Shrek never saw each other while working on the cartoon. The replicas of each character were recorded separately.

The executive producer of the cartoon "Toy Story" is Steve Jobs himself!

Tarzan, adopted by the monkeys, is one of the most famous literary characters. Lord of the Jungle is the subject of twenty-four novels by Edgar Rice Burroughs, as well as official sequels by Fritz Leiber, Joe Lansdale, Philip José Farmer, Robin Maxwell and Will Murray. In addition, Tarzan has been the protagonist of a radio program, a newspaper section of comics, a host of comic books, a host of television series, and a myriad of films.

However, not much is known about this semi-mythical man. Burroughs' novels are full of curious, incredible details that are rarely shown on screen. Well, since the new film "The Legend of Tarzan" is released in July 2016, it's time to remember the very Tarzan who appeared before the reader on the pages of the original novels.

Name origin

Tarzan's "father"

In the world of Edgar Rice Burroughs, the great apes speak their own unique language. In the primate dialect, "tar" means "white" and "zan" means "skin." Put the two words together and voila! - Get Tarzan. In the book, Kala, Tarzan's monkey foster mother, calls him that - for his pale, smooth skin.

However, this name came to Burroughs' mind not out of the blue. In 1910, while living in Chicago, he fell in love with the Southern California community of Tarzana and even purchased land there. A few years later, the writer thought about the name for the boy raised by monkeys, and remembered Tarzan. Burroughs removed the last vowel, and the legend was born.

It is noteworthy that in those days the name of Tarzan was unofficial. Actually, the community did not have any official name at all - until in 1930 it was given the status of a settlement and a post office was built in it. This gave rise to the myth that the town was named after the famous adoptive monkey, although in fact it is just the opposite.

Tarzan wasn't raised by gorillas

Turns out Kala didn't look like that

Everyone knows that Tarzan was raised by gorillas. That's his story, right? Alas, this is a common misconception. And so widespread that it even went into films.

In fact, Tarzan was raised by monkeys unknown to science. They resemble gorillas in strength and size, but differ in other respects. These primates walk mostly upright, hunt animals, eat meat and use colloquial speech. They call themselves "mangani". Burroughs describes them as "huge", "fierce", and "terrible". He adds that "they are close relatives of gorillas, but smarter than them." Thanks to their intelligence and strength, mangani are "the most fearsome of all human ancestors."

The mangani gorillas are called "bolgani". And believe it or not, Tarzan fights with these huge primates. In Tarzan of the Apes, Burroughs describes Tarzan's first encounter with a large gorilla:

Before he had time to take a few steps towards the thickets, a huge figure stepped forward from the low, gloomy undergrowth. At first Tarzan decided that this was one of his people, but in the next moment he realized: Bolgani, a hefty gorilla.

How close! You can't run away anymore... You'll have to fight for your life. These huge beasts were the mortal enemies of his tribe. Little Tarzan knew that both tribes never asked for or bestowed mercy.

Lost Civilizations


Burroughs masterfully dreamed up lost worlds

Fantastic stories about Africa were written before Edgar Rice Burroughs, and they undoubtedly influenced him. An important contribution to such literature was made by Henry Rider Haggard, who in his numerous novels (“She”, “King Solomon's Mines” and others) vividly described the lost cities.

Burroughs began writing forty years later than Haggard, but by that time a huge part of Africa was still unexplored and not mapped. The so-called dark continent could well hide unknown civilizations from people, and Burroughs let his imagination run wild. For the adventures of Tarzan, Burroughs composed more than a dozen such worlds.

For example, Opar is the ruins of an ancient outpost of Atlantis. They are inhabited by ape-like men and the most beautiful women. Countless riches are hidden in Opar: gold bars and precious stones. Tarzan makes raids there to replenish his own treasury. There is an assumption that the name "Opar" was inspired by the image of the rich biblical city of Ophir.

Another world is the City of God, one of Burroughs' most extraordinary creations. The ruler of this settlement is a British geneticist who calls himself "God", who managed to put his mind into the body of a gorilla. He also endowed the tribe of gorillas subject to him with a human mind, instilled in them the personalities of Henry VIII and members of his royal court. Perhaps it was this omnipotent primate that became the prototype of the gorilla Grod, the supervillain from DC Comics comics.

Of course, we have listed only a small fraction of the worlds invented by Burroughs. In the novel "Tarzan and the Ant-Men" our hero discovers two warring cities inhabited by 46-centimeter people. In Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle, there is a whole valley with crusaders who were brought there back in the 12th century. And in Tarzan Triumphant, a city of religious fanatics suffering from epilepsy is described - they consider their seizures a divine gift.

There's also Pal-ul-don, the city of dinosaurs, and let's not forget the lost city of madmen who breed and eat lions and worship parrots and monkeys. The population of the cities of Kayi and Zuli is controlled by a sorcerer with the help of a mysterious gem. And in the castle, built in the Portuguese style, the descendants of the conquistadors and local Africans live. This is the only lost world in Tarzan Africa where non-white people are in power.

british lord

What did a civilized Tarzan look like?

Although Tarzan mostly spends his life flying vines through the jungle, he is actually a British lord. If you've watched Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes, released in 1984, then you already know the backstory. However, Tarzan's aristocratic background is described in the first novel.

Tarzan's parents, John and Alice Clayton, were Lord and Lady Greystoke. In the first book, they die, and Tarzan claims his inheritance only at the end of the novel Tarzan Returns to the Jungle. However, "lord" is not really a title, but an English form of address for a duke, marquis, earl, viscount, or baron. So what is Tarzan's title? Burroughs reveals this secret in the nineteenth chapter of Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle, in the scene where the knight from Nimmer meets Tarzan:

“My name is Tarzan,” said the ape-man.

- What is your title? asked Sir Bertram.

Tarzan was puzzled by the knight's strange mannerisms and attire. However, he looked quite friendly and clearly considered himself an important person. Hence, the high position of Tarzan should command the respect of Sir Bertram.

"Viscount," the ape-man admitted, as calm as ever.

It turns out that Tarzan, named after his father, should be called in full John Clayton, Viscount Greystoke. However, in Tarzan Lives, an informal "biography" of the lord of the jungle, Philip José Farmer notes that the title of viscount has only been in use in England since the 15th century. In other words, the title was unknown to the Knights of Nimr. Farmer speculates that Tarzan held the older title of earl. Although this is not the official version, the film Greystoke supports it.

The hero does not live in a tree house at all

Another myth about Tarzan

Ever since the 1930s, when Johnny Weissmuller played Tarzan, we've often been shown Tarzan and Jane's home in movies: a simple but well-designed treehouse. Oddly enough, this is not the case in the books. Tarzan's house, built in the English style, is first described in Burroughs's novel Eternal Beloved, where Tarzan is assigned a minor role:

In the south of Uziri, the land of the Waziri, lies a rocky mountain range, at the foot of which lies a wide plain. Antelopes, zebras, giraffes, rhinoceros and elephants are found in abundance here, and here - each in his own way - lions, leopards and hyenas prey on fat, fat antelopes, zebras and giraffes. There are also buffaloes - violent, ferocious animals, which, according to Clayton, are more terrible than the lion himself.

It was truly a hunter's paradise, and almost every day another party left the Greystokes' spacious, squat bungalow in search of prey and adventure.

We learn more details about housing from the novel "Son of Tarzan". According to Burroughs, Tarzan lives in "a bungalow overgrown with flowers, behind which you can see the barns and outbuildings of a solid African farm."

When Tarzan is not distracted by fights with wild animals and the search for lost cities, he behaves like an economic homebody. Marvelous.

Edgar Rice Burroughs killed Jane


A beautiful couple was waiting for a tragic end

The first actress to play Jane Porter was Enid Markey in Tarzan of the Apes. Miss Markey, as a sin, was a brunette, which went against Burroughs's ideas about Jane. In his novels, Jane is blonde (and not English; she is from Maryland). Not only that, Burroughs couldn't stand Mark's acting. And, apparently, he could not stand it so much that in the next novel he got rid of Jane.

In the first chapter of "Tarzan the Indomitable" our hero returns home after a long absence. There, trouble awaits him: the First World War began, German soldiers looted and burned his house, killed many servants and friends. And worst of all, they killed Jane.

Here is how Burroughs describes it:

For a long time Tarzan stood like that and looked at the lifeless body, burned beyond recognition, then he lifted him up in his arms. Turned over and saw the terrible marks of death. At the same moment, he was pulled into the deepest pool of sadness, horror and hatred.

And Tarzan did not need evidence in the form of a broken German rifle in the back room or a bloody uniform cap on the floor - he already knew who was guilty of this nightmarish, senseless crime.

For a moment Tarzan suddenly woke up with a desperate hope that this blackened dead body was not his wife, but then his eyes saw the familiar rings on his fingers, and the last faint ray of hope left his soul.

This tragic scene incites Tarzan to ruthless revenge. The ape-man hunts down and exterminates all the German soldiers in a row - it does not matter to him whether they are involved in what happened. This is a kind of death of Tarzan, whose deeds have always been distinguished by nobility.

Of course Jane didn't die. The story was printed gradually, with a continuation, and before the release of the last chapter, Burroughs changed the fate of Jane - though no one knows why. At the end, Tarzan finds out that Jane was not actually killed, but was kidnapped. The body he found belonged to a maid: she was burned beyond recognition in order to inspire the monkey man as if he had a dead wife in front of him. The reason for such an ingenious hoax remained undisclosed and formed an impressive hole in the plot. But fans of the novel didn't care.

Jane is back.

Tarzan auditioned for the role of Tarzan


Why not Tarzan? But Burroughs was against

Edgar Rice Burroughs had a difficult relationship with Hollywood. He loved filming and the extra money, but he hated the changes that films brought to his character. Burroughs especially disliked Elmo Lincoln, the first movie Tarzan who was afraid of heights. In addition, Lincoln was a fleshy man, with a chest of 132 centimeters in girth, in contrast to the bookish Tarzan - lean and athletic.

Dissatisfied was the author and the most famous actor-Tarzan, Johnny Weissmuller (pictured). Burroughs wanted his character to express himself clearly and clearly, and Weissmuller's ape-man could not really connect two words in English.

The writer got back in the novel "Tarzan and the Lion Man", where our hero rescues a film crew in the African jungle. Along the way, Burroughs makes fun of actors, directors, and the film industry as a whole. He strikes a fatal blow in the final chapter. Tarzan arrives in Hollywood and is introduced to a casting director.

The casting director gave Clayton an appraising look.

- Look good to me. I'll take you to Mr. Goldin. He is the director of the picture. Do you have experience?

- As Tarzan?

- Not really. I mean, were you in a movie? the director laughed.

“Well, maybe you can. You don't have to be Barrymore to play Tarzan. Let's go up to Mr. Goldin's office.

They had to wait in the reception area, then the secretary let them in.

— Hello, Ben! - the director of the director of the picture greeted. “I think I found the one I need. This is Mr. Clayton, Mr. Goldin.

— Whose role?

For the role of Tarzan.

- Yeah. Mm…

Goldin surveyed Clayton with a critical eye, then put out his palms and waved them as if chasing a fly.

“Not the type,” he snapped. “Absolutely not the same.

Ape man is proficient in martial arts


In the jungle, kung fu will not hurt

If a person is strong and agile enough that he does not run away from a fight with huge primates, he does not need additional skills. Not needed, but they are. According to Joe Lansdale's novel Tarzan's Forgotten Adventure, the ape-man at one time studied kung fu at the Shaolin Temple. However, in our article we will confine ourselves to the works of Burroughs.

So did Edgar Rice endow Tarzan with mastery in the martial arts? In Tarzan and His Beasts, Burroughs describes this in general terms:

With a muffled grunt, the beast rushed at Tarzan, but in the lair of civilized people, the ape-man, among other things, learned about some skillful methods of warfare unknown to the forest people.

If a few years ago Tarzan would have responded to a fierce throw with no less ferocious force, now he dodged the frontal attack of the enemy and struck him with a powerful blow with his right right in the very stomach.

Apparently, Tarzan learned to box and certainly learned the wisdom of hand-to-hand combat. Perhaps he even mastered savate - French kickboxing - after all, a Frenchman, Paul d'Arnot, introduced Tarzan to civilization. But what about martial arts? Surely only one thing is known: jiu-jitsu. In Tarzan the Indomitable, Burroughs writes:

The girl saw that the ape-man was not at all ready to attack. Now he will collapse dead! The giant primate was already looming over the opponent, stretching its paws towards him, but then Tarzan made a movement, and it was so lightning fast that even Ara-lightning would have put to shame. Swiftly, like the head of a Gista snake, the man-beast's left hand darted forward and grabbed the enemy's left wrist. A sharp turn, and the right hand of the primate is clamped under the right hand of the opponent. It was the jiu-jitsu hold that Tarzan had learned from civilized men, a hold that could easily break large bones; a grip that rendered the formidable primate utterly helpless.

Tarzan and Jane are immortal

Immortal family?

In the novel Tarzan's Quest, the ape-man comes into conflict with the hostile Kavoorou tribe, who are terrorizing the jungle and kidnapping women. They even stole Jane. It turns out that the cavouras are immortal: they created a pill that gives eternal youth. In the twenty-eighth chapter, the high priest of the tribe explains to Jane:

“You will serve the only purpose for which women are fit. A man can achieve godliness only in solitude. The woman weakens and destroys him. Take a look at me! Look at my priests! Do you think we are all young? This is wrong. Hundreds of rains have come and gone since the last neophyte entered our holy order. How did we get such immortality? Through a woman. We all took a vow of celibacy. And this vow was sealed with the blood of women; we shall be punished by our own blood if we break it. For a Cavouru priest to succumb to a woman's lure is disastrous.

"Still, I don't understand," Jane shook her head.

- You'll understand. Long ago I learned the secret of immortal youth. It lies in an elixir that is brewed from many ingredients: the pollen of some plants, the roots of others, the cerebrospinal fluid of a leopard and, most importantly, from the cervical glands and the blood of women - young women. Now I understand?

Tarzan saved Jane, and they returned home with a box of magic pills, which they distributed to their friends. They even treated Tarzan's monkey companion, Nkima. So, of course, it is strange that Tarzan and Jane did not save a couple of immortal pills for their son Korak and his wife Meriam. However, they were not in this book, so the dog is with them.

The hero flew to the center of the earth


Where fate did not bring Tarzan!

In addition to the Tarzan books, Burroughs wrote other books, including the Pellucidar series. Her heroes, adventurers David Innis and Abner Perry, built an experimental drilling rig and discovered a cavity inside the Earth. Moreover, this cavity was illuminated by its own internal sun. The amazing world was inhabited by dinosaurs, primitive people and many intelligent non-human races.

In Tarzan's Adventures at the Center of the Earth, the ape-man and his comrades go in search of Innis and Perry. Wealthy Tarzan finances the construction of a special airship called "O-220". On this aircraft, they dive into a giant hole at the North Pole, go through a tunnel and find themselves in the center of the Earth.

The idea of ​​a hollow earth is a real pseudo-scientific idea that was put forward in the eighteenth century. It is not clear whether Burroughs seriously believed in it, but it was remarkably useful for his writings. And not only in novels about the Earth. In The Moon Girl, the Moon is also described as hollow and inhabited from the inside by ancient civilizations.

Despite the mass of film adaptations, the figure of Tarzan is still more mysterious than we can imagine. I wonder if the creators of the new film will be able to reveal his character from a new, unknown side?


The best cartoons of Soviet childhood can be safely called the work of the Soyuzmultfilm studio. Over the years of its existence, it has released a huge number of cartoons for every taste, which we show to our children and do not get tired of reviewing ourselves. In addition, most cartoons contain many secrets and details that are visible only to the most attentive.

Let's get to know them! :)

Winnie the Pooh



The first film adaptation of a book about Winnie the Pooh belongs to the Walt Disney Studios: in the early 60s, several episodes about a funny bear cub and his friends were released. Before starting work on the domestic Winnie the Pooh, Fyodor Khitruk had not seen the Disney version.

However, he wanted to move away from the images that were depicted in the book, to create his own, new and original characters. Of course, he succeeded.


It is curious that initially Winnie the Pooh was very furry, his ears looked a little “chewed”, and his eyes were of different sizes. At first, Piglet turned out to be similar to a thick, appetizing sausage. A lot of different bear cubs and piglets were drawn before the characters took on the look we are used to.


By the way, in the second and third series, the drawings of the characters were simplified: the black "glasses" on the face of Winnie the Pooh acquired a clear outline, and Piglet's rosy cheeks began to be indicated by one red line. While working on the cartoon about Winnie the Pooh, Fedor Khitruk did not know about the existence of animated films about the funny bear of the Disney studio. Later, according to Khitruk, Disney director Wolfgang Reiterman liked his version. At the same time, since the Soviet cartoons were created without taking into account the exclusive rights to film adaptation owned by the Disney studio, their screening abroad was impossible.

Kid and Carlson


The Soviet cartoon "Baby and Carlson" directed by Boris Stepantsev, based on the story of the Swedish writer Astrid Lindgren and released on television in 1968, was enthusiastically received by both young and adult viewers.


In total, there were two series about Carlson: "Kid and Carlson" (1968) and "Carlson returned" (1970). Soyuzmultfilm was going to make a third one, but this idea was never realized. The studio's archives still hold the film, which was planned to be used for filming the cartoon based on the third part of the trilogy about Malysh and Carlson - "Carlson plays pranks again."


If you watch the cartoon about Carlson very carefully, you will notice the following detail: at the beginning of the cartoon, when the Kid crosses the road, an Air France advertisement is visible on a passing bus.


The detectives from the cartoon about the adventures of Funtik the pig are very similar to the linen thieves from the cartoon about Carlson. In addition, the Soviet parents of Uncle Fedor from Prostokvashino are very similar to Malysh's Swedish parents.

Carlson, Malysh, Freken Bock and all other characters were created by the artist Anatoly Savchenko. He also suggested calling Faina Ranevskaya to voice the “housekeeper”. Before her, a huge number of actresses auditioned for this role, and no one came up, and Ranevskaya fit perfectly. She had another "minus" - a difficult character. She called the director "baby" and categorically rejected all his remarks. And when she first saw her heroine, she was frightened, and then she was very offended by Savchenko. "Am I that scary?" - constantly asked the actress. Explanations that this is not her portrait, but just an image, Ranevskaya did not console. She remained the same.

Carlson also did not have a “voice” for a long time, Livanov found himself, by accident. The actor every day went to the creators of the cartoon for a game of chess, and once at the game, director Boris Stepantsev complained to him that he could not find a person for the role of Carlson. Vasily Livanov immediately went to the studio, tried, and was approved. Later, the actor admitted that, while working in the image of Carlson, he diligently parodied the famous director Grigory Roshal

Cat Leopold


The Soviet animated series about the cat Leopold and the hooligan mice harassing him was filmed at the Ekran Creative Association from 1975 to 1993. At the time of the creation of the animated series, there was not yet an art workshop. Therefore, the first two series ("Revenge of the Cat Leopold" and "Leopold and the Golden Fish") were not drawn, but were made using the shifting technique.


Small details of characters and scenery were cut out of paper and placed under glass. After each frame, the details shifted by a tiny distance, which created the illusion of movement. Further cartoon series were realized using hand-drawn animation.


The creators of the cartoon puzzled over the name of the main character for a long time. The authors really did not want to call him too simply - "ordinary" Barsik or Murzik. According to their plans, the name had to sound beautiful and at the same time be easy to pronounce.


There is a version according to which the son of the author of the script Arkady Khait named the good-natured and charming cat. While working on the plot of the cartoon, the boy tried to do two things at once: follow the adults and watch The Elusive Avengers on TV. The name of the White Guard Colonel Leopold Kudasov, one of the heroes of The Elusive, prompted the idea to name the cat the same way.
Hooligan mice are also not nameless, as many people think. A well-fed gray rodent is called Motei, and a thin white animal is Mitya. However, in the cartoon, mice are never called by their names.

Cheburashka


The Soviet cartoon about Cheburashka was filmed by director Roman Kochanov based on the book by Eduard Uspensky, more precisely, according to their joint script. And although Uspensky wrote 8 stories about Crocodile Gena, Cheburashka and their friends, only 4 episodes were made.


The "cartoon" image of Cheburashka known today - a cute creature with huge ears, large trusting eyes and soft brown hair - was invented by the animator Leonid Shvartsman. This is how he first appeared in Roman Kachanov's cartoon "Crocodile Gena" (1969) and won the hearts of children and adults.


According to the preface to Eduard Uspensky's book "Gena the Crocodile and His Friends", Cheburashka was the name of a defective toy that the author of the book had in childhood, depicting an unprecedented animal: either a bear cub or a hare with big ears.

According to the book, the author's parents claimed that Cheburashka is an animal unknown to science that lives in the hot tropical jungle. Therefore, in the text of the book, the heroes of which, according to the writer, are the children's toys of Uspensky himself, Cheburashka really appears before the readers as an unknown tropical animal.

In an interview, Eduard Uspensky said that he once came to visit a friend who had a little daughter. At the time of the writer's visit, the girl was trying on a fur coat that dragged along the floor. “The girl was constantly falling, stumbling about her fur coat. And her father, after another fall, exclaimed: “Oh, she’s gone crazy again!”. This word stuck in my memory, I asked its meaning. It turned out that “cheburahnutsya” means “to fall”. And so the name of my hero appeared, ”the author admitted.

For a long time, the artist Leonid Shvartsman could not figure out what the old woman Shapoklyak looked like. The word "shapoklyak" is French for "folding top hat". From here everything went: the top hat is the 19th century, the old woman in the dark, mischievous, sly, which means with a long nose. Schwartzman's mother-in-law was also from the 19th century, and she had gray hair tied in a bun. He painted his old woman's mother-in-law's cheeks and surprised eyes. He added a crumpled top hat, lace, jabot, cuffs ...

After the release of the cartoon on the screens, an article appeared in one of the newspapers with the heading "Who will adopt Cheburashka?" It said that Cheburashka is a homeless child who has no homeland! Yes, and the crocodile Gena is also good, he is looking for friends through ads, and they need to be looked for in the team!

Thank God, they managed to win back Cheburashka, and now he is known and loved not only here, but also in Japan. No wonder, because he looks like a perfect positive Japanese hero: big eyes, small mouth. The Japanese call it the "Russian miracle" Chebi

Three from Prostokvashino


The animated series "Three from Prostokvashino" based on the novel by Eduard Uspensky "Uncle Fyodor, the dog and the cat" was directed by Vladimir Popov. A total of three series were released. Much of what is in the literary source was not included in the cartoon, but the popularity of the film adaptation several times exceeded the popularity of Uspensky's story.


Work on the creation of screen images of the cartoon "Three from Prostokvashino" was divided between the production designers at the request of director Vladimir Popov. The image of Galchonka did not work out for a very long time. Therefore, everyone who entered the premises of the artists at Soyuzmultfilm was asked to draw this character. Even the artist Leonid Shvartsman, who invented the “cartoon” Cheburashka, had a hand in its creation.


Uncle Fedor is the only type according to which the team that worked on the creation of the cartoon "Three from Prostokvashino" did not come to a single decision. Therefore, his on-screen image varies greatly from series to series. So, a move that is impermissible from the point of view of Western animation was taken quite calmly in our country.

By the way, Matroskin's cat could also be called Taraskin. The fact is that when Eduard Uspensky wrote his story, he wanted to name this character by the name of Anatoly Taraskin, an employee of the Wick film magazine, but he did not allow him to use his name. True, he later regretted it and confessed to the writer: “What a fool I was! I regretted giving my last name!


In fact, the characters from Prostokvashino were created by the artist Nikolai Yerykalov, but after the first series he left the project, and Arkady Sher was invited to continue his work. The new production designer had to "think out" and finish all the characters, although he did not feel much sympathy for them. For some reason, Cher did not like Matroskin the most, and when work was underway on the third series, he took and drew him plump and even in a stupid hat with a pompom. True, then he still felt sympathy for the cat. But the artist's favorite characters were Pechkin and Uncle Fyodor's mother. The explanation for this attachment is very simple: Arkady Sher drew Pechkin from himself, and his mother from his wife

Wait for it!


"Wait for it!" is not just an animated series, it is a real legend on which more than one generation has grown up. In 1969, "Well, you wait!" was a government order. Officials decided to give our answer to Disney cartoons and allocated a rather serious budget. Customer requirements were limited to a request to do something funny.


With this request, the leadership of Soyuzmultfilm turned to the famous comedians Alexander Kurlyandsky, Arkady Khait, Felix Kamov and Eduard Uspensky.


A lot of controversy arose among the creators of the cartoon about the 12th series of the famous cartoon, when the Wolf finds himself in the sarcophagus of Pharaoh Ramses. It was even conceded that the Egyptian government might protest against this. But everything worked out.

In the animated series "Well, wait a minute!" an amazing musical selection, which uses popular recordings of Western and Soviet pop music. But they were never listed in the imprint of the cartoon. Then it was not accepted.

The music that sounds during the credits is the screensaver "Well, you wait!" - is called “Vizisi” (“Water skiing”) and was published on a collection of Hungarian pop music by the Melodiya company in 1967. Its author is a Hungarian composer named Tomas Deak (Tamás Deák).

Falling last year's snow


As the composer Grigory Gladkov mentioned during his performance in the humorous program “Around Laughter”, the cartoon “Last Year's Snow Was Falling” had the original working title “Firs-sticks, dense forest”, and the main character in it was a janitor from “Plasticine Crow”. Then the visual appearance of the main character was finalized, however, as well as the title of the picture.


The role of the narrator in the cartoon "Last Year's Snow Was Falling" was originally planned to be given to Leah Akhedzhakova. She even voiced the cartoon, but director Alexander Tatarsky did not like it. As a result, both roles - both the peasant and the storyteller - were given to Stanislav Sadalsky.


Sadalsky, who voiced the roles of a man and a narrator in the cartoon "Last Year's Snow Was Falling", was not listed in the credits. Shortly before the delivery of the cartoon, the actor was detained in the restaurant of the Kosmos Hotel with a foreign citizen, after which a denunciation followed to the chairman of the State Television and Radio Broadcasting Company S.G. Lapin. As a punishment for communicating with foreigners, the actor's name was removed from the credits.

The cartoon "Last Year's Snow Was Falling" could not escape the close attention of censorship. “At the delivery of“ Snow ”I had a pre-infarction condition,” recalled the director of the cartoon, Alexander Tatarsky. “They told me that I was disrespectful to a Russian person: you have only one hero - a Russian peasant, and that idiot! ..”

After the demolition, "Sneg" had to be remounted and re-voiced in some places. The high-browed bosses staged a party meeting at which they scrolled every frame: were there secret messages to foreign intelligence services encrypted there?

The princess in The Bremen Town Musicians wears the dress of Yuri Entin's wife
The authors of the fairy tale Gennady Gladkov, Vasily Livanov and Yuri Entin brought the texts and notes of the songs home to the performer Oleg Anofriev. He listened to them and said that he wanted to voice all the heroes without exception. He did an excellent job in just one night. True, he was not allowed to sing for the Princess, although he was eager, but they gave her part to Elmira Zherzdeva.

The robbers in this cartoon were copied from the characters popular in the seventies - Coward, Dunce and Experienced. But the Princess - from the wife of songwriter Yuri Entin.
“The very red dress that you see in the cartoon, I bought her for forty rubles, she was wearing it at the wedding,” Yuri said. - And Gladkov and Livanov were our witnesses