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The Museum of Modern Art is showing Popeye, Betty Boop and other classic cartoons by the Fleischer Brothers

As America approaches 100 years as an animation powerhouse, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is thrilled to present a comprehensive survey of classic cartoons by the Fleischer Brothers, most famous for their Jazz Age creations Betty Boop and Koko the Clown as well as their wildly popular screen adaptations of E.C. Segar’s Popeye and DC Comics’ Superman.

This retrospective will include family-friendly matinees, but also programs historical (spotlighting Max Fleischer’s very early Koko the Clown silents, which famously combined live-action hijinks with hand-drawn animation) and thematic, all too appropriate given the Fleischers’ merciless sense of humor and profound eye for anything phantasmagorical and transgressive – including sound-era triumphs like the Betty Boop headliner Minnie the Moocher, featuring a ferocious rotoscoped performance from Cab Calloway, or the Technicolor two-reeler masterpiece Popeye The Sailor Man Meets Sindbad the Sailor Man.

Max Fleischer, American Animator and Inventor

Much of the material in Fleischer Cartoons draws from a wealth of new 4K restorations supervised by Max Fleischer’s granddaughter Jane Fleischer Reid, many of which will be making their world premieres at MoMA.

It is running from March 07, 2024 – March 13, 2024.

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One Comment

  1. People may wonder if animated cartoons that have run on television for decades warrant a museum showing. Of course they do. They were meant to be seen on a big screen, and those TV prints are usually of inferior picture and sound quality (and the TV station’s watermark in the corner doesn’t help). Besides, if “Minnie the Moocher” and “Popeye Meets Sindbad” aren’t modern art, what is?

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