Wally Gator | |
---|---|
Genre |
Animated Comedy |
Directed by |
William Hanna Joseph Barbera |
Voices of |
Daws Butler Don Messick |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 52 |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
William Hanna Joseph Barbera |
Running time | 24 minutes |
Production company(s) | Hanna-Barbera Productions |
Distributor |
Screen Gems (original) Warner Bros. Television Distribution (current) |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | September 3, 1962 – August 30, 1963 |
Wally Gator is one of the segments from The Hanna-Barbera New Cartoon Series. The other segments that compose this trilogy are Lippy the Lion & Hardy Har Har and Touché Turtle and Dum Dum. The segment consisted of 52 episodes over two seasons.
Wally Gator (voiced by Daws Butler impersonating Ed Wynn) is an anthropomorphic, happy go lucky alligator who wears a collar and a pork pie hat. Although his catchy theme song describes him as a "swingin' alligator of the swamp", his home is in the city zoo. Mr. Twiddle (voiced by Don Messick) is the zookeeper who keeps a close watch on Wally because sometimes he escapes to check out what things are like in the outside world.
Animation historian Christopher P. Lehman notes that Wally Gator follows the formula that Hanna-Barbera established in previous series, particularly the Yogi Bear series. The formula of these shows placed an animal character within a human-controlled environment and had these characters deal with the social boundaries placed and enforced by the humans. In Yogi's case, he lives in a park and is under the care of a park ranger. In Wally's case, he lives in a zoo and is under the supervision of a zookeeper.Similar situations were explored in Squiddley Diddly, an octopus who lives in (but often escapes from) a water theme park with Chief Winchley as his keeper.
The theme that drives the series is Wally's desire to escape the zoo and get to the outside world. This is derivative of the Top Cat series, where the titular character keeps trying to escape life in the alley. Wally successfully escapes in each episode, but by the end of the episode he returns to the zoo. In some cases someone returns him there, in others he voluntarily returns. The end result is the same.
Lehman notes an underlying theme in the series which is rather depressing. The zoo and life in captivity seems to be the proper place for Wally. No matter how much he struggles to fit in the society of the outside world, Wally remains an "Other" and is doomed to fail. The status quo is preserved following every unsuccessful attempt at change.