Hardrock, Coco and Joe

Hardrock, Coco and Joe — The Three Little Dwarfs is a 1951 short stop motion animated cartoon based on a song written by Stuart Hamblen.[1] It is about three of Santa Claus' helpers who ride on Santa's sleigh each Christmas. The short has become an annual "Christmas Classic" first on Johnstown, PA WJAC-TV and then following on Chicago's WGN-TV and since its introduction in the mid-1950s. The film is entirely in black-and-white.[2]

Hardrock, Coco and Joe
Hardrock, Coco and Joe: The Three Little Dwarfs
Release date
  • 1951 (1951)
Running time
3 minutes
CountryUSA
LanguageEnglish

The short was originally created by Centaur Productions utilizing the stop-motion talents of artist Wah Ming Chang; Chang's influence on the special can be seen through the visibly Chinese facial features of the elves and especially Santa. Its running time is about 2 minutes and 45 seconds. This cartoon is traditionally broadcast with their two other short Christmas cartoons, "Suzy Snowflake" and "Frosty the Snowman".

According to the narrative song, Hardrock drives Santa's sleigh, and Coco navigates with maps. Santa "has no need for Joe/ but takes him 'cause he loves him so". (However, in the Bozo the Clown special "A Bozo Christmas," Coco states that Joe, who was unable to go with them that year due to illness, was in charge of crisis management.) Part of the charm of this primitively-made cartoon is that Joe, the smallest of the three, and very boyish-looking, has a deep bass voice.

Chorus:

Oh-lee-o-lay-dee, o-lay-dee-I-ay
Donner and Blitzen, away, away
Oh-lee-o-lay-dee, o-lay-dee-I-oh
I'm Hardrock!
I'm Coco!
I'm Joe!

The program is available on DVD from the Museum of Broadcast Communications.[3]

Parody

A new generation of animation lovers was introduced to this Christmas classic via the short-lived Comedy Central television series, TV Funhouse, a spin-off of the recurring Saturday Night Live cartoons. In the series' third episode, "Christmas Day", the Hardrock, Coco, and Joe short is satirized under the name "Christmas With Tingles" in which an elf named Tingles magically spreads tension and guilt during the Christmas season. Aside from the subject matter, the spoof stays remarkably faithful to the original, featuring black-and-white stop-motion animation, as well as spoken lyrics backed by an a cappella chorus:

Yo-dee-yo-die-deedle, deedle-ee-dee
Awkwardness and anxiety,
Yeedle-dee-doo-deedle, dee-deedle dension
"I'm Tingles the Christmas Tension!"

The tune of the song featured in the "Christmas With Tingles" short is almost identical to the tune of the song featured in the Hardrock, Coco, and Joe "Three Little Dwarfs" cartoon.

This was also referenced in a Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode (Prince of Space).

Other recordings

The song was also recorded by Gene Autry, but in Autry's version, Joe is depicted as having a high, childlike voice, not a bass one.[4]

gollark: - To increase the efficiency of the education system and encourage self-directed learning, I believe schools should lock children in individual cubicles with textbooks for 5 hours a day instead of using classrooms and teachers.
gollark: - It's important to me that women aren't forced to have children they don't want or may not be able to take care of.- which is why I support mandatory sterilization for all - children would be grown in vats and raised by the government instead.
gollark: - I support the right to privacy!- In light of governments' large-scale mass surveillance campaigns which they do not seem inclined to stop, I would support an open and transparent volunteer spying agency using open source software and hardware to gather and process data in order to act as a competitor.
gollark: These are hard...
gollark: - which is why I think all government workers should be randomly selected, similarly to jury duty

See also

References

  1. Crump, William D. (2019). Happy Holidays—Animated! A Worldwide Encyclopedia of Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa and New Year's Cartoons on Television and Film. McFarland & Co. pp. 129–130. ISBN 9781476672939.
  2. Lenburg, Jeff (2009). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons (3rd ed.). New York: Checkmark Books. p. 316. ISBN 978-0-8160-6600-1.
  3. "Hardrock Coco And Joe - Digitally Remastered". Museum of Broadcast Communications. Retrieved 2016-12-11.
  4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6G2uRfYQSVw
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