Mike Kazaleh says they were animated by Phil Duncan. I’m presuming Duncan did them on a freelance basis.
The little cartoons are set in a circus, which fits the theme of the opening and closing animation. In one of them, Huck is on a trapeze. He’s very attractively drawn.


Duncan comes up with a cycle of ten drawings as Huck spins in mid-air. They’re animated one drawing per frame. Compare it to those later Hanna-Barbera cartoons where a character stands rigid with an arm moving on a separate cel. The spotlight follows Huck.










Huck tells us not to miss the next cartoon as he misses the trapeze. Bill Hanna’s timing of Huck hanging in mid-air before falling is perfect. I like how Huck sprouts extra arms as he drops. Those drawings are on twos.



These little connecting cartoons were one of the things that made the Kellogg’s half-hour shows so enjoyable to watch. The mini-cartoons may not be hilarious, but they make you smile. At least, they make me smile. And they make you wonder what the H-B cartoons would have been like if the studio had the time and budget to fully animate the characters. Full animation opens up the possibility of more visual gags (and better-looking ones). On the other hand, there are plenty of fully animated colour cartoons that leave you cold. The early Hanna-Barbera cartoons, at their best, used clever stories, top voice work and nice settings to help make the cartoons funny. Limited animation didn’t hurt them.
priceless. i love huck's hat & his ears really flop ! wonderful. precious. such a great idea the inbetween toons.
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