
http://www.dvdtoons.com/features/49
http://www.laauditions.com/bios/dr_seuss.htm
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He wrote a children’s record called “Gerald McBoing Boing”, which was adapted by the UPA animation studio in 1951. UPA was a trendsetter in those days, known for a highly graphic style that eschewed realism. Its cartoons were cartoony in the best sense--- backgrounds were often highly stylized with strong perspective and bright splashes of color, and motion was simple but exaggerated. The UPA cartoons were sophisticated in their artistic sensibilities, making them appeal to critics and intellectuals; but they were also very entertaining.
Still, Gerald McBoing Boing stood out from the rest of their output, winning an Oscar for Best Animated Short Film. It was also voted #9 in the 50 Greatest Cartoons survey of a few years ago, and featured in Jerry Beck’s book of the same name.





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Horton Hatches an Egg was the fourth Dr. Seuss book, having been published in 1940. It concerned an elephant who agrees to sit on an egg for a bird that ends up disappearing for a good long time. Warner Brothers animation director Bob Clampett loved the book, and he pitched an animated adaptation to his boss Leon Schlesinger. The 1942 cartoon short of Horton was a charming success, due largely to its faithfulness to the source material, and it stands as the only book adapted by the Warner Bros. animators.
Horton got a sequel when Geisel wrote Horton Hears a Who in 1954. This story introduced the “Whos” that became even more famous in The Grinch Who Stole Christmas. The second Horton story was adapted by another Warner Bros. veteran, Chuck Jones, for a 1970 Peabody Award-winning television special.



http://www.toonopedia.com/horton.htm
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Dr. Seuss forever was immortalized on celluloid when his 1957 book How the Grinch Stole Christmas was adapted by Chuck Jones for a 1966 television special. Jones, of course, was an associate of Geisel from the Snafu days, so he was receptive to the idea of working with Jones again.


http://www.toonopedia.com/grinch.htm
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http://www.toonopedia.com/catinhat.htm
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Y un archivo recopilación que si es DVD que aparece en Amazon ( http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/de ... 7?v=glance ) contiene los siguientes tres cortos:

-Butter Battle Book
-Daisy-Head Mayzie
-Horton Hatches the Egg
Hay tb muchos archivos rar, pero no tengo ni pajolera de lo que contienen. Cualquier info será bienvenida.What parent doesn't get a little kick out of reading Theodor Geisel's (a.k.a. Dr. Seuss) brilliantly charming little tomes to their kids? What child doesn't love hearing the stories--repeatedly, even? The three tales here--"Butter Battle Book," "Daisy-Head Mayzie" (a story discovered after Geisel's 1991 death), and "Horton Hatches the Egg!"--all offer up Dr. Seuss's distinctive storytelling, but each is decidedly different.
Saludos.
