Happy Go Luckies
Happy Go Luckies

Happy Go Luckies

November 23, 1923 | 7 min

In Happy-Go-Luckies a pair of ukulele-strumming railroad hoboes fake their way into a dog show and make off with the prize loot. “Two heads are better than one” is the moral. To modern eyes, our trickster duo may look like two dogs—in the show they pretend to be one long dog—but audiences of the ’20s would have recognized a dog-and-cat team. The black body, white face, and sharp ears would have been most familiar from the greatest jazz-era trickster cat, Felix. Dogs and cats—much easier to animate than humans—were everywhere in silent cartoons. Terry, like most early film animators, had begun as a newspaper cartoonist, and his first strip, working with his brother as a teenager for the San Francisco Call, was about the adventures of a dog named Alonzo.

Genres

Animation

Cast

Share on social media

More Like This

The Triplets of Belleville
The Boutdebois Brothers
The Twelve Labors of Hercules
Petit Faust
The Four Little Tailors
Monsieur Clown Among the Lilliputians
Delicate Porcelains
Coppelia
Ko-Ko's Haunted House
KoKo the Kop
The Rediscovered Paradise
The Dresden Doll
The Banker's Daughter
The Mysterious Fine Arts
The Adventures of Prince Achmed
Robot Dreams
The Clown's Pup
The Little Soldier Who Became a God
Tale of the Ark
A Family Affair