Good Humor, Part 2: Oh, Those Bells!
First, watch the clip... the opening scene from The Good Humor Man (1950).
The unusual sound was created by Sonovox, a device invented in January 1939 by Gilbert Wright, an engineer and radio operator. Wright hadn't shaved that particular day and was idly scratching the coarse stubble around his adam's apple. He noticed that the sound of this action traveled through his neck and emerged from his mouth as a buzzing. Intrigued, he tried silently forming words with his mouth, lips, and tongue... and was surprised and amused to find that the words were intelligible using this odd alternate source of sound.


By 1950, Sonovox was pretty much "old hat," but Frank Tashlin, who moved into live-action features after directing cartoons for Warner Brothers, found a very clever and appropriate use for it to open The Good Humor Man.
More about Tashlin, more about Good Humor, and more about a very funny picture titled The Good Humor Man... in Part 3.
Link to a "Kiddie Record" that uses Sonovox.
Link to a YouTube video of the Kay Kaiser Band showing the Sonovox in use.

Labels: Disney, Dumbo, Frank Tashlin, Good Humor, Sonovox
1 Comments:
Thanks for sharing this clip. I just thought of the old Sonovox again yesterday, having recently watched The Reluctant Dragon. I'll link to this post.
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broadcastellan, At
August 15, 2008 at 9:05 AM
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