Remember the "Tom and Jerry" adventure in which Tom emerges from a pile of coal and then tries to fool maid Mamie Two Shoes into thinking he's an entirely different cat by shuckin' and jivin' his way across the lawn? Or how about when Tom blows cigar smoke into Jerry's face, slaps an oversized bow tie on him and drops him onto a sizzling-hot plate, forcing the mouse into a Mr. Bojangles routine?
Doesn't ring any bells? Well, that's how Hollywood wants it.
"Tom and Jerry: The Golden Collection," a Blu-ray dedicated to the duo's 1940s-'50s work, was going to include those two shorts, "Mouse Cleaning" and "Casanova Cat," when it's released in June. But Warner Bros. Home Video recently yanked them because of those racially insensitive stereotypes.
"The company felt that certain content would be inappropriate for the intended audience and therefore excluded several shorts," a WB spokesperson said in response to an interview request.
This isn't the only case of distributors playing cat-and-mouse with classic cartoons.
• In Walt Disney's 1948 short "Melody Time," folk hero Pecos Bill is seen rolling his own cigarettes. In later releases, the smokes have disappeared, as has a scene in which he lights up with the help of a lightning bolt.
• "Coal Black and de Sebben Dwarfs," a 1943 Merrie Melodies short that parodies "Snow White," has never been released on home video even though renowned cartoon historian Jerry Beck considers it one of the top 25 cartoons of all time.
• Disney excised scenes of miniature African cannibals from home-video releases of Donald Duck's 1954 "Spare the Rod." The 6½-minute short is now less than 3 minutes.