Everyone knows the voices of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck. "What's up, Doc?" and "You're dethpicable!" echo through the modern cultural landscape--along with the unmistakable voices of Porky Pig, Sylvester the Cat, Tweety Bird, Yosemite Sam, Foghorn Leghorn, and other cartoon stars--thanks to the incredible voice talents of Mel Blanc. This book is Blanc's autobiography, ably co-written with Philip Bashe, who channels Blanc's lively personality with spirited and descriptive prose. It's particularly appropriate that the foreword is by comic impersonator Rich Little.
Blanc began his career as a multi-character voice actor on radio in the late 1920's. He relocated to Los Angeles and in 1936 went to work for Leon Schlesinger Productions, the company that created the cartoons for Warner Brothers' studios in a facility on the studio lot. Blanc's tenure at Warners' gained him lasting fame, and those years are highlighted in his book's title, which is a variation on the iconic ending of early Warner cartoons wherein a smiling Porky Pig bursts on the screen with a wave and says "That's All, Folks!"
As one would expect from the autobiography of a man in such a unique profession, the book is studded with anecdotes and surprising bits of history. For example, as a youth in Portland, Oregon, Blanc went to vaudeville stage shows, a venue that would later provide the movies and television with some of their biggest stars.
"By far my favorite was a one-man act called 'Fiddle Funology,' which I caught as often as I could when it came to town. Its blue-eyed star was in his late 20's and labored under the stage moniker Ben K. Benny. Brandishing a violin, he'd walk out from the behind the curtain and greet the audience pleasantly. Then he would ask the orchestra leader in the pit below how the show had been progressing thus far.
"Just fine."
"Well," he'd snap. "I'LL fix that."
[…] Little did I know at the time that this comedian from Waukegan, Illinois, would one day become my employer and dear friend: the great Jack Benny."
In writing a review of a book like this one is tempted is to repeat its unique and entertaining stories, its unlikely and hilarious anecdotes. But there are so many of them that I wouldn't know where to begin. Besides, the stories that had the greatest impact upon me are two that nearly defy belief, stories that could not pass as fiction because they would seem too implausible to be true.
One of these accounts centers on Lou Costello, of the comedy team Abbot and Costello. Mel Blanc, present with the duo in the studio one day for both the rehearsal and subsequent performance of a live radio program, witnessed Costello's amazing response to utterly devastating news that reached the comedian during rehearsal. Over the years I've occasionally re-read this page, and it is always as poignant as the first time I read it.
The other account appears in the next to last chapter, titled "The Accident". As you may infer from the title, Blanc fell victim to a serious accident, a really horrible one that nearly cost him his life. But someone came to his rescue in the most incredible fashion, and thereafter Mel Blanc always credited this person with saving his life. You will never guess who it was so, of course, you must read the book to find out.
"That's Not All, Folks!" is an entertaining, funny, and engrossing account of the life of the man whose voice may be the best known voice of the 20th century. Blanc's vocal creations gave life and personality to almost all of the Warner Brothers cartoon stars of the golden era, to The Flintstone's Barney Rubble, The Jetson's Mr. Spacely, et. al. And, in giving voice to animated characters, Mel Blanc brought laughter to all of us.
Mel Blanc died in 1989, only a year after the first printing of his autobiography. He must have known that his end was drawing near, and yet he was hopeful for what was yet to come. On the last page of the book, below a photo of Blanc and his adult son, is the caption:
"In the future my characters' voices will live on through Noel, who has learned them all so well, I could sue him."