Background In 1957, the
animation director team of
William Hanna and
Joseph Barbera were terminated from an 18-year tenure at
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer producing the animated
Tom and Jerry and
Droopy theatrical short subjects. Their staff, composed of 110 inkers, painters, and animators, were also let go. MGM found it more profitable to continually re-release older cartoons than to produce new ones. Hanna and Barbera remained a partnership and invested $30,000 out of pocket into a new venture,
H-B Enterprises. The duo began work on
storyboards featuring new characters, the first among them being Ruff (a cat) and Reddy (a dog). Hanna later equated their respective names with he and his partners' dispositions at the period in which they were created. They forged a deal with former MGM colleague
George Sidney in which he received a minority stake in the new company in return for acting as a business representative. Sidney arranged for a meeting at
Screen Gems, which had at the time been considering re-entering the animation business. Feeling confidence in the
Ruff and Reddy characters, the duo presented their proposal, along with a streamlined production budget, employing limited animation.
Animation Ruff and Reddy, as one of the first original animated series produced for television, pioneered the technique of limited animation. Limited animation would require far fewer drawings, and, by extension, less inking and painting. This method was employed by necessity, as higher budgets had been the cause for the collapse of the theatrical cartoon business. Hanna, in a six-page memo, had attempted to convince his superiors at MGM to employ economized techniques in order to reduce the cost of their short films, but received no response. At that time, he had estimated a six-minute cartoon to cost $17,500 if it employed the limited animation technique (down from the $35,000 budget the duo received at MGM). When pitching to Screen Gems, Hanna had worked down the numbers to a much smaller $3,000, and the duo were very confident the company would respond with great excitement. Screen Gems appreciated the show concept, but explained to the duo that the budget for television, still an experimental medium, would be very stringent. Eventually, the company gave the partnership an option to produce five five-minute segments, with an escalating budget starting from $2,700. Hanna described the process in his 1996 memoir,
A Cast of Friends: "It was essential that we select only the key poses necessary to convincingly impart the illusion of movement in our cartoons." This method often emphasizes close-ups, rather than full or medium shots. All in all, the production process for
Ruff and Reddy was not dissimilar from the process used to create theatrical cartoons: a script was written, followed by a
storyboard illustrating key poses. Afterwards, a recorded soundtrack with dialogue was used to create a "
pose reel," which would give the filmmakers a sense of timing. Watching pose reels during their MGM years had emphasized that simple key poses would be enough to demonstrate humor. Hanna believed the process to be in line with the nature of television during the period, stressing "intimacy rather than spectacle,". It thus represented an entirely different viewing experience, a large movie screen versus a small, standard-dimension television screen. In addition to the quicker, cheaper production process, Hanna and Barbera made the decision to produce the segments in full color. "It was one of the smartest things we did," Hanna said. "We said, 'Color will be here soon. Cartoons last forever. Let's go ahead and do them in color, and we'll be a jump ahead of the game.'" This strategy paid off, as Hanna-Barbera's following series continued to be reran after
color television increased its prevalence in the late 1960s.
Ruff and Reddy also eschewed lavish, detailed background art for simple, colorful illustrations.
Writing and music Hanna and Barbera were fond of the "ongoing comedic rapport" of cartoon duos, among them the
Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner and
Sylvester the Cat/
Tweety rivalries of
Warner Bros. Cartoons. Their own creation at MGM,
Tom and Jerry, had been a variation on this theme. With
Ruff and Reddy, they decided to delete the
nemesis theme and make the characters best friends instead. "Consequently, this softer relationship placed a greater emphasis on the humor and wit conveyed to the audience through dialogue," wrote Hanna. Hanna wrote the series' theme music, in his first foray into theme music composition, which would become a staple of Hanna-Barbera for nearly 30 years. His goal to capture the spirit of the characters while also catching the listeners' ear, he penned the lyrics one morning while storyboarding, handing off the sheet music to musical director
Hoyt Curtin, who composed the melody. Unlike
Tom and Jerry, the two new characters would speak, and the duo held auditions to find voice artists. Mainly selecting those they worked with at MGM, Hanna and Barbera decided to cast
Don Messick as Ruff and
Daws Butler as Reddy. Messick and Butler became the main long-time voice actors of H&B cartoons. The series was set to be the opening and closing acts for a half-hour children's program airing on Saturday mornings. While they had screened the pilot episode prior to broadcast, Hanna later admitted he was nervous as to how the public would respond. He writes in his book that reviews in trade papers were mainly positive, deeming it an "entertaining and clever cartoon program." NBC, following this success, signed the duo to a five-year contract to produce and develop additional animated television series. NBC paired the opening and closing episodes of the show (usually with a cliffhanger) with live segments and classic cartoons from
the prior incarnation of Screen Gems, including
The Fox and the Crow and ''
Li'l Abner''. ==Plot==