‘BAMBI’ AT 75
Why was the cranky grasshopper cut?
Working in Hollywood can give anybody a hard exoskeleton, especially the grasshopper character who was cut from Disney’s classic 1942 animated film Bambi.
The studio is revealing the grumpy grasshopper character who didn’t make the final film cut, swatted aside after preliminary storyboard drawings.
The nameless grasshopper was recovered from the archives of the Walt Disney Animation Research Library and given voice for Bambi’s 75th anniversary home release (on digital HD May 23, Blu-ray June 6). The cranky critter never found a place in the story of a deer prince growing up in the forest.
“This grasshopper was just very ornery,” says Fox Carney, head of research at the animation library. “He was not that appealing. Ornery for the sake of being ornery didn’t add anything to the story.”
The grasshopper’s fate is a far cry from Disney’s star insect, Jiminy Cricket ( both belong to the order Orthoptera, meaning “straight wings”), from 1940’s Pinocchio. The two projects were developed in overlapping time frames, Carney says. “They both have insects in the story. But Jiminy Cricket becomes more cartoony, much more appealing and engaging and a central character,” says Carney. “And in Bambi, they have a grasshopper who just looks like a grasshopper. I couldn’t imagine Pinocchio without Jiminy Cricket. But I sure as heck can envision Bambi not having this grasshopper.” Story artists created the grasshopper after Walt Disney asked them to incorporate more characters from the forest to punch up the comedy in early drafts. Some of these gags showed the forest was filled with small creatures, too — a bee (temporarily swallowed by Bambi), ants and the grasshopper, who is almost stepped on by Bambi before he starts hurling the small-guy anger. There was an opportunity for growth in the part. “You work with characters like the grasshopper and see if it takes you somewhere. If it does, they make it into the final film. Some don’t,” Carney says. The grasshopper’s ornery aspects were incorporated into the Friend Owl character, who balanced those traits by showing some story heart and teaching the forest characters about falling in love (or being “twitterpated”). The sketches and clip also depict another then- minor character, an adorable bunny named Bobo. The rabbit eventually would morph into the beloved sidekick Thumper, famously voiced by Peter Behn. When Disney saw test reels of Bambi and Thumper together, he exclaimed that the pairing was “pure gold,” according to Carney.
“Thumper wasn’t a big character, either, but as the story team started developing him, it was like this character has charm. Then came the classic voice recording,” Carney says. “Now, some people love Thumper even more than Bambi. But this grasshopper ... he scampered back to the meadow.”