Lulu is put on trial by talking musical instruments for neglecting her violin.Lulu is put on trial by talking musical instruments for neglecting her violin.Lulu is put on trial by talking musical instruments for neglecting her violin.
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Jack Mercer
- Mini-Harp
- (voice)
- …
Carl Meyer
- Judge Violin
- (voice)
- …
Mae Questel
- Little Violin
- (voice)
- …
Arnold Stang
- Tubby
- (voice)
Jackson Beck
- Lulu's Father
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- …
Cecil Roy
- Little Lulu
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Izzy Sparber
- Myron Waldman(uncredited)
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- Quotes
[title credits]
Chorus: # Oh, Lulu! / Little Lulu, Little Lulu, with freckles on your chin, / Always in and out of trouble, but mostly always in. / Using Daddy's necktie for the tail on your kite, / Using Mommy's lipstick for the letters you write. / Though the clock says 7:30, it's really after 10; / Looks like Lulu's been repairing it again. / Though you're wild as any Zulu, / And you're just as hard to tame, / Little Lulu, I love you-lu just the same, the same, / Little Lulu, I love you-lu just the same. #
Featured review
Trial by Jury
Lulu ditches violin practice for a pickup game of sandlot baseball. When she is knocked out by a baseball, she dreams she is on trial for abandoning her violin.
This cartoon-character-on-trial-in-a-dream was a specialty for Famous Studios. The one I remember best is SEA-PREME COURT, which was weird and a bit a gross. Director Bill Tytla does a good job here, casting the trial as a breach-of-promise suit, throwing in a couple of good visual puns and mimicking the disintegrating imagery of waking from a dream.
However, despite the high level of competence in all departments, this one seems a bit tired. Almost any juvenile character could have been used in Lulu's place, No one was happy with the Little Lulu cartoons, not the staff at Famous, not the sales department at Paramount, not Marge, the cartoonist whose character Lulu was. Little Audrey was already in development, an in-house series that would not require royalty payments and which would yield royalty income for the studio. Plus they could reuse the stories: same cartoons, different theme song.
This cartoon-character-on-trial-in-a-dream was a specialty for Famous Studios. The one I remember best is SEA-PREME COURT, which was weird and a bit a gross. Director Bill Tytla does a good job here, casting the trial as a breach-of-promise suit, throwing in a couple of good visual puns and mimicking the disintegrating imagery of waking from a dream.
However, despite the high level of competence in all departments, this one seems a bit tired. Almost any juvenile character could have been used in Lulu's place, No one was happy with the Little Lulu cartoons, not the staff at Famous, not the sales department at Paramount, not Marge, the cartoonist whose character Lulu was. Little Audrey was already in development, an in-house series that would not require royalty payments and which would yield royalty income for the studio. Plus they could reuse the stories: same cartoons, different theme song.
helpful•10
- boblipton
- Jun 22, 2015
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Musical Lulu
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime7 minutes
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