Tashlin directed the first film in the series, the 1941
Color Rhapsody short
The Fox and the Grapes, loosely based on the
Aesop fable of that name.
Warner Bros. animation director
Chuck Jones later acknowledged this short, which features a series of
blackout gags as the Fox repeatedly tries and fails to obtain a
bunch of grapes in the possession of the Crow, as one of the inspirations for his popular
Road Runner cartoons. Although Tashlin directed no more films in the series (despite playing a supervisory role on the following two shorts,
Woodman, Spare That Tree and
Toll Bridge Troubles, prior to his departure), Screen Gems continued producing
Fox and the Crow shorts, many of them directed by Bob Wickersham, until the studio closed in 1946. Screen Gems had acquired enough of a backlog of completed films that the "Fox and Crow" continued appearing in cartoons through 1949. By this time, Columbia had signed a distribution deal with a new animation studio,
United Productions of America (UPA), to produce three "Fox and the Crow" shorts,
Robin Hoodlum (1948),
The Magic Fluke (1949), and
Punchy De Leon (1950). All three UPA
Fox and the Crow cartoons were directed by
John Hubley. The first two each received an
Academy Award nomination for Animated Short Subject. An unrelated, six-minute, silent animated short titled
The Fox and the Crow, produced by Fables Studio, was released in 1921.
List of shorts Screen Gems In 1943, due to the series' success, Columbia gave the Fox and the Crow their own series separate from the
Color Rhapsodies; it lasted until 1946. All cartoons from
Room and Bored (1943) to
Mysto-Fox (1946) belong to this series.
UPA ==In other media==