porphyry: (Default)
porphyry ([personal profile] porphyry) wrote2008-05-14 09:14 pm

Ents

In the folly of youth I once gave serious consideration to the possibility that Tolkien’s Ents were created with reference to the animate trees in the Wizard of Oz (they appear in the books as well as the movie). Over the years I vacillated between considering the connection insufficiently profound to being struck by my own cleverness.

But the recent expansion of my experience of 1930s cartoons has made the point moot. They are rife with talking and walking trees (though one does not find such characters as frequently, for instance, in the 1950s cartoons I was more familiar with as a child), to the extent that Tolkien can claim no originality in merely creating the Ents, rather they must be considered a commonplace of popular culture that Tolkien borrowed and used for a more serious purpose.

This is the most obvious example I have to hand. It even has a character I indentify to A. without hesitation as a huron (and for that matter, an Entwife):









This is a Betty Boop cartoon with tropical Ents (also a reminder how popular Hawaiian music was in the 1930s):




If you search around You-Tube you can find dozens more instances. But here is a more traditional presentation of Dryads:


[identity profile] stefanie-bean.livejournal.com 2008-05-15 03:37 am (UTC)(link)
I had never seen that Silly Symphony before - charming! And the "Summertime" cartoon by Carl Stalling was typically madcap. It's just as well I hadn't seen it as a child; it probably would have scared me out of an inch or two of growth. Thanks!

[identity profile] himmapaan.livejournal.com 2008-05-15 01:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Perhaps the most famous visual instance of anthropomorhic trees is in Arthur Rackham's art - much earlier than Tolkien too. Of course, trees as spirits have existed in folk and fairy lore for centuries. Plus, as you say, there are the dryads and associated tree and wood nymphs of Classical myths.

I have always loved Flowers and Trees. I have very fond memories of watching that over and again many years ago. I'm really enjoying these early cartoon posts - please post more! I didn't have time to comment on your recent one about the the Classival music/Jazz war. I had better do that presently...

[identity profile] malkhos.livejournal.com 2008-05-17 03:43 am (UTC)(link)
I'm glad someone else likes them.