Here Comes Peter Cottontail

Here Comes Peter Cottontail is a 1971 Easter stop motion animated television special produced by Rankin/Bass Productions, currently distributed by Universal Television and based on the 1957 novel The Easter Bunny That Overslept by Priscilla and Otto Friedrich.[1] The special is narrated by Danny Kaye and starring Casey Kasem, Vincent Price, Joan Gardner, and Paul Frees. The special also features Steve Nelson and Jack Rollins' Easter song "Here Comes Peter Cottontail".

Here Comes Peter Cottontail
European DVD Art
Based on"Here Comes Peter Cottontail"
by Steve Nelson
Jack Rollins
The Easter Bunny That Overslept
by Priscilla Friedrich
Otto Friedrich
Written byRomeo Muller
Directed byJules Bass
Arthur Rankin Jr.
Voices ofCasey Kasem
Danny Kaye
Vincent Price
Joan Gardner
Paul Frees
Narrated byDanny Kaye
Country of originUnited States
Japan
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducersJules Bass
Arthur Rankin Jr.
CinematographyKizo Nagashima (Animagic Supervision)
EditorIrwin Goldress
Running time51 minutes
Production companyRankin/Bass Productions
Release
Original networkABC
Original releaseApril 4, 1971 (1971-04-04)
Related
  • Here Comes Peter Cottontail: The Movie

It was originally broadcast on April 4, 1971, on the ABC television network in the United States.[2] In later years, it has appeared on CBS, Fox Family, The CW, and Cartoon Network.[3]

In 2005, it was followed by a computer-animated sequel Here Comes Peter Cottontail: The Movie.

Plot

Young Easter Bunny Peter Cottontail lives in April Valley, where all the other Easter bunnies live and work, making Easter candy, sewing bonnets, and decorating and delivering Easter eggs.

Colonel Wellington B. Bunny, the retiring Chief Easter Bunny, names Peter his successor. Peter, who has always dreamed of being the Chief Easter Bunny, accepts.

Meanwhile, bunny January Q. Irontail lives alone with his bat Montressor. Irontail wants Peter's job, only so he can ruin Easter for children as revenge after a child once accidentally roller-skated over his tail, forcing him to wear a prosthetic one made of iron. Irontail demands that Colonel Bunny hold a contest to see who delivers the most eggs, according to April Valley's Constitution. Peter accepts the challenge but stays up all night, partying with friends. Although he tells his rooster Ben to wake him up at 5:30 in the morning, Irontail sneaks into his house and feeds the rooster magic bubblegum, sealing his beak. Peter sleeps on, not hearing the crows from the popping bubbles.

Due to his appearance, Irontail tries all day long to deliver eggs but only manages to deliver one (to a sleeping man). Because it is still one egg more than Peter delivered, Irontail becomes the new Chief Easter Bunny, passing laws to make Easter a disaster, such as painting eggs brown and gray, ordering the candy sculptors to make chocolate tarantulas and octopuses instead of bunnies and chicks, and having Easter galoshes instead of bonnets.

Ashamed that his bragging and partying led to this tragedy, Peter leaves April Valley. He eventually meets inventor Seymour S. Sassafras, who supplies April Valley with colors for egg-painters from the colored vegetables in his Garden of Surprises. Sassafras lets Peter use his Yestermorrowbile, a time machine. Sassafras' assistant caterpillar Antoine will take Peter back to Easter to deliver his eggs, win the contest, and defeat Irontail. Irontail finds out about Peter's plan and sends his spider to sabotage the Yestermorrowbile, allowing Peter and Antoine to go to any holiday but Easter.

Since the contest's rules do not specifically say the eggs must be delivered on Easter, Peter tries to give them away at other holidays, to no avail. On the 4th of July, Peter paints the eggs red, white and blue and lies to two boys by passing them off as firecrackers, which ultimately fails. On Halloween, Peter meets Madame Esmeralda, a witch, and gives her a Halloween egg as a gift, making the score a tie. When she calls the other Halloween inhabitants, Irontail sends Montressor out to steal Peter's eggs. Peter gets the eggs back and wants to return home, but Antoine first has to land the craft to fix it.

After failing to give any of his eggs away on Thanksgiving, Peter and Antoine go to Christmas Eve where Peter, dressed as Santa Claus, tries to give eggs on the streets, which are deserted. There, Peter hears sobbing from a hat shop and meets Bonnie, an Easter bonnet who left April Valley years ago. Bonnie is sad that nobody wants to buy her, so Peter tells the shopkeeper that he will trade his Christmas eggs for Bonnie. However, Irontail steals them again. Peter and Bonnie go after him, accidentally leaving Antoine behind.

During the chase, Irontail and Montresor crash into Santa's sleigh. Santa returns the eggs to Peter, who cannot stop the Yestermorrowbile and is too sad to thank him since they left Antoine behind. After missing New Year's Day, Peter and Bonnie find the stop button and land on Valentine's Day. There, Peter meets a bunny named Donna and gives her a Valentine egg. However, Irontail finds the eggs again and casts a spell on them, turning them all green, inside and out.

After failing to give the green eggs away on Presidents' Day, Peter vows to be more honest and responsible. He and Bonnie land in St. Patrick's Day, which gives Peter another chance to give away his eggs — this time, Peter is successful and wins the contest, becoming the Chief Easter Bunny. Antoine returns as a butterfly, and Irontail works as the janitor of April Valley while Peter leads a parade.

Cast

The special featured the following cast members:[4]

Actor/Actress Role
Casey Kasem Peter Cottontail
Danny Kaye Seymour S. Sassafras, Colonel Wellington B. Bunny, Antoine
Vincent Price January Q. Irontail
Joan Gardner Mom (on Mother's Day and at Thanksgiving table), Sue, Madame Esmeralda, Bonnie Bonnet, Hat shop owner, Martha Washington
Paul Frees Colonel Wellington's assistant, Dad at Thanksgiving table, Santa Claus, Firefighter, Rooster
Iris Rainer Donna
Greg Thomas Tommy, Boy 1 (Independence Day)
Jeff Thomas Boy 2 (Independence Day)

Soundtrack

Although not commercially released, a soundtrack album for the special was released for demonstration purposes by ABC.

  1. Here Comes Peter Cottontail – Seymour S. Sassafrass
  2. The Easter Bunny Never Sleeps – Colonel Wellington B. Bunny, Chorus
  3. The Easter Bunny Always Sleeps (Irontail's reprise; the diabolical version of The Easter Bunny Never Sleeps) – Irontail
  4. If I Could Only Get Back to Yesterday – Seymour S. Sassafrass, Chorus
  5. When You Can't Get It All Together, Improvise – Antoine, Peter Cottontail, Chorus
  6. Be Mine Today – Peter Cottontail, Donna, Chorus
  7. In The Puzzle of Life – Seymour S. Sassafrass, Chorus
  8. Here Comes Peter Cottontail (reprise) – Seymour S. Sassafrass, Chorus

Crew

  • Producers/Directors Jules Bass, Arthur Rankin, Jr.
  • Teleplay Romeo Muller
  • Music and Lyrics Jules Bass, Maury Laws
  • Based on "Here Comes Peter Cottontail" Steve Nelson/Jack Rollins © 1949 Hill & Range Songs, Inc.
  • Based on "The Easter Bunny That Overslept" – Priscilla and Otto Friedrich © 1957 Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Company
    • Illustration – Adrienne Adams
  • Character Design Paul Coker, Jr.
  • Continuity Design – Steve Nakagawa
  • Editorial Supervisor – Irwin Goldress
  • Sound and Effects Recording – John Boyd, Jim Harris
  • "Animagic" Supervision – Kizo Nagashima
  • Character Model Sculptor – Ichiro Komuro (uncredited)
  • Animators – Yutaka Mikome (uncredited), Takeo Nakamura, Hiroshi Tabata
  • Musical Director Maury Laws

Home media releases

Despite the acclaim such as TV Guide's comment that the special had "one of the best scores in children's special history," no original soundtrack album was ever released commercially. ABC and Rankin/Bass did produce a private vinyl LP pressing of the entire soundtrack recording in 1971, but no record company has released an official, legitimate audio version to date.[5]

On video, the special has seen multiple releases in various formats. In 1990, 1992,[6] 1993, 1998, and 2002, it was released on VHS by Family Home Entertainment and Sony Wonder. It has also seen the following releases on DVD:

The 2014 release is the first to include the sequel, Here Comes Peter Cottontail: The Movie.

A Blu-ray was released by DreamWorks on February 22, 2019 as a Wal-Mart exclusive, containing a heavily edited version that runs nearly ten minutes shorter. This same release was extended beyond Wal-Mart to all media retailers in 2020 with the same edited version.

See also

References

  1. Lenburg, Jeff (2009). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons (3rd ed.). New York: Checkmark Books. p. 318. ISBN 978-0-8160-6600-1.
  2. Woolery, George W. (1989). Animated TV Specials: The Complete Directory to the First Twenty-Five Years, 1962-1987. Scarecrow Press. pp. 194–196. ISBN 0-8108-2198-2. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  3. "Archived Cartoon Network TV Schedule (4/11/04)". 6 April 2004. Archived from the original on 2004-04-06. Retrieved 13 August 2023.
  4. Terrace, Vincent (2013). Television Specials: 5,336 Entertainment Programs, 1936-2012 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. p. 185. ISBN 9780786474448.
  5. "Rankin/Bass' "Peter Cottontail" – 50 Years of Yestermorrows |". cartoonresearch.com. Retrieved 2021-04-03.
  6. Clarke, Eileen, ed. (March 23, 1992). "Activities for Children – Videos". New York Magazine. 25 (12): 104.
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