
Heckle and Jeckle in "Taming the Cat"
'''Heckle and Jeckle''' was a theatrical
cartoon series created by
Paul Terry, and released by his own studio,
Terrytoons. The characters were a pair of identical
magpies who calmly outwitted their foes in the manner of
Bugs Bunny, while maintaining a mischievous streak reminiscent of
Woody Woodpecker. However in a number of their cartoons (Moose On The Loose (1952), Free Enterprise(1948)) their foes win in the end. Their names were inspired by
Robert Louis Stevenson's famous novella ''
Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde''.
One magpie spoke with a British accent, while the other spoke with a
Brooklyn dialect. Although there seems to be a great deal of uncertainty as which was which, in the episode ''Bulldozing The Bulls'', they clearly refer to each other by name, with the Brooklyn accent belonging to Heckle and the British accent belonging to Jeckle. And in a later episode, ''Stunt Men'', Jeckle, in a British accent, calls Heckle by name again. While they usually referred to each other by such names as ''Old Featherhead'', these two episodes clearly give the names to the accents. Both characters were voiced at different times by
Dayton Allen,
Sid Raymond,
Roy Halee,
Ned Sparks and
Frank Welker.
[1][2] In 1978's
The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle & Jeckle, the birds introduced themselves by name in the opening credits; Heckle had the Brooklyn accent, and Jeckle the British one.
Heckle is slightly more cynical than Jeckle. Both of them treat their mutual enemies with threats and rudeness, but Heckle will usually make his intentions clear from the outset, while Jeckle will (at first) treat enemies politely in order to lull them into a false sense of security before unleashing magpie mayhem. In their cartoon ''
Blind Date'', Heckle is able to forcibly disguise the unwilling Jeckle as a girl, indicating that Heckle is physically stronger than Jeckle. In ''
The Power of Thought'' it is Jeckle who realizes the unlimited possibilities of being a cartoon character, although Heckle is quick enough to go along when this is pointed out to him.
The first ''Heckle and Jeckle'' cartoon premiered in
1946, the last in
1966. In
Filmation's
Spumco Mighty Mouse series in their own segment.
The first one was titled ''The Talking Magpies'' (1946) and the pair were a husband and wife, looking for a new home, who disturb the farmer and his dumb dog. They are eventually aided by the other flock of Magpies and win in the end.
Heckle and Jeckle had their own
comic book title for several years.
★
St. John Publications, #1-24 (1951-55)
★
Pines Comics, #25-34 (1956-59)
References
1. "The Heckle and Jeckle Show"
2. Cartoon voice, actor Sid Raymond dead
External links
★
The Talking Magpies cartoon @ the Internet Archive