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Frank Tashlin

Frank Tashlin, also known as Tish Tash and Frank Tash, was an American animator and filmmaker. He was best known for his work on the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of animated shorts for Warner Bros., as well as his work as a director of live-action comedy films.

Animator and brief career as cartoonist
cartoon directed by Frank Tashlin in 1943 Born in Weehawken, New Jersey, Tashlin drifted from job to job after dropping out of high school in New Jersey at age 13. In 1930, he began working for John Foster as a cartoonist on the ''Aesop's Fables'' cartoon series, then worked briefly at Van Beuren Studios, but he was just as much a drifter in his animation career as he had been as a teenager. Tashlin joined Leon Schlesinger's cartoon studio at Warner Bros. Pictures as an animator in 1933, where he was known as a fast animator. He used his free time to start his own comic strip in 1934 called Van Boring, inspired by former boss Amedee J. Van Beuren, which ran for three years. He signed his comic strip "Tish Tash", and used the same name for his cartoon credits (at the time it was considered extremely unprofessional to use anything except one's birth name among animators, but Tashlin was able to get away with this due to the anti-German sentiment of that era). Tashlin was fired from the studio when he refused to give Schlesinger a cut of his comic strip revenues. He joined the Iwerks Studio in 1934, He directed 16 or 17 shorts from 1936 to 1938. He was making $150 a week. In 1937, as part of a restructuring, Tashlin moved to Friz Freleng's old unit when Friz Freleng left Schlesinger for MGM, meaning that Cal Howard and Cal Dalton took over Tashlin's old unit, Howard was succeeded in 1938 by Ben Hardaway, and both Hardaway and Dalton was succeeded in 1939 by the return of Friz Freleng. At one point he had an argument with studio manager Henry Binder and resigned. In 1938, he worked for Disney in the story department, where he made $50 a week. Afterward, he served as production manager at Columbia Pictures' Screen Gems animation studio in 1941. He effectively ran the studio and hired many former Disney staffers who had left as a result of the Disney animators' strike. He launched The Fox and the Crow series, one of the better products of the studio. He was fired over an argument with the executives of Columbia. One of his directorial efforts was ''Porky Pig's Feat'' (1943), the final black-and-white appearance of Porky Pig. Robert McKimson took over his unit after his departure from the studio. His only Bugs Bunny shorts were The Unruly Hare and Hare Remover. The latter was also his last credit at Warner Bros. Martha Sigall described him as "Here today, gone tomorrow. Now you see him, now you don't. That was Frank Tashlin, who would be working at Leon Schlesinger's one day, and, suddenly, gone the next day." ==Film director and writer==
Film director and writer
Tashlin moved on from animation in 1946 to become a gag writer for the Marx Brothers, Lucille Ball, and others, and as a screenwriter for stars such as Bob Hope and Red Skelton. His live-action films still echo elements of his animation background; Tashlin had a streak of commercial successes with the Martin and Lewis film Hollywood or Bust in 1956, Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? in 1957, which, like 1956's ''The Girl Can't Help It, starred actress and Playboy'' model Jayne Mansfield, and six of Jerry Lewis' early solo films (Rock-A-Bye Baby, The Geisha Boy, Cinderfella, ''It's Only Money, Who's Minding the Store?, and The Disorderly Orderly''). Moreover, in the 1950s Tashlin came to the approving attention of French film magazine Cahiers du Cinéma, in reviews that the director dismissed as "all this philosophical double-talk." In 2000, the broad, colorful satire of Madison Avenue advertising in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? earned the film a place on the National Film Registry. In 2014, his stop-motion animation short The Way of Peace was also added to the Registry. In the 1960s, Tashlin's films lost some of their spark, and his career ended in the latter part of that decade, along with those of most of the stars with whom he had worked. His final film was ''The Private Navy of Sgt. O'Farrell'' starring Bob Hope and Phyllis Diller in 1968. ==Author==
Author
Tashlin wrote and illustrated three books, ''The Bear That Wasn't (1946), The Possum That Didn't (1950), and The World That Isn't'' (1951). These are often referred to as "children's books" although all contained satirical elements; ''The Bear That Wasn't'' was adapted as an animated cartoon by Tashlin's former Warner Bros. colleague, Chuck Jones, in 1967. Another children's story which Tashlin wrote in 1949 was recorded by Spike Jones: How the Circus Learned to Smile. Tashlin also wrote and self-published an instructional booklet entitled How to Create Cartoons (about cartoon drawing, not animation) in 1952. ==Death==
Death
Tashlin died on May 5, 1972 at the age of 59, at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after being stricken with a coronary thrombosis three days before at his Beverly Hills home. He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California. ==Filmography==
Filmography
Cartoon shorts Feature films ==References==
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