Saturday, April 8, 2023

Easter Short Subject Special - The First Easter Rabbit & The Bernstain Bears' Easter Surprise

Happy Easter! We celebrate the secular side of the holiday with these two lesser-known holiday tales. Most Easter shows of the 70's and 80's aren't nearly as well-known or often seen as their cold-weather counterparts. Do these two deserve a second look, or should they be snowed under? We're going to start at Christmas, as a little girl receives a very important gift, and find out...

The First Easter Rabbit
Rankin-Bass/NBC, 1976
Voices of Burl Ives, Robert Morse, Dina Lyn, and Joan Gardner
Directed by Arthur Rankin Jr. and Jules Bass
Music and Lyrics by various

The Story: Veteran Easter bunny G.B (Ives) tells the story of Stuffy (Morse), the beloved Christmas present of little Glinda (Lyn). After Glinda comes down with scarlet fever, her mother (Gardner) burns most of her toys to eliminate the germs. Stuffy is spared by Calliope the Fairy (Gardner), who anoints the now-real rabbit the Easter Bunny, symbol of spring for all children. Three slick con-bunnies help him find April Valley, the magical land at the North Pole where it's spring all year-round. His neighbor Santa Claus (Paul Frees) suggests Stuffy bring Easter joy to one town as a "test" subject. Stuffy knows which town he wants to deliver Easter to. He misses Glinda. He may not get to spread it beyond the borders of the Valley if winter sorcerer Zero (Frees) finds the Golden Easter Lily, the flower that keeps the Valley warm!

The Animation: This is the only Rankin-Bass Easter special done in regular 2-D animation. The designs absolutely show Paul Coker Jr's hand. Most of the characters have large round heads with brilliant round scarlet cheeks, wide smiles, and big oval eyes. The backdrops are especially lush here. For the little time they spend in it, April Valley is gorgeous enough to make you understand why Zero wants it.

The Song and Dance: Not bad Easter retelling of The Velveteen Rabbit. I like why Stuffy is chosen to be the Easter Bunny. They boil it down to the essentials - he's a symbol of springtime, and nothing else. They don't get as complicated with his origin as some of Santa's origin stories tend to, and it's refreshing. Frees is a rather adorable Santa, and Gardner is a lovely, warm mother who genuinely seems to care for her ill child. 

Favorite Number: "There's That Rabbit" is heard three times, notably sung by Ives during a colorful montage depicting how Stuffy paints his eggs and links him and Easter to the children. Stuffy's delighted to meet a now-well Glinda at the "Easter Parade" in her town, joined by con-bunnies Flops (Stan Freberg), Spats (Frees), and Whiskers (Don Messick). They have a grand time doing everything depicted in the song, including ending up in the rotogravure. 

What I Don't Like: This should have been an hour, like the other two Rankin-Bass Easter shows. It feels really rushed. Santa and G.B are the only ones with much to do. Zero doesn't do anything but complain and demand until the second half, and even then, he sends his snowball Bruce (Messick) to find the Golden Lilly. We never see him actually take the Lilly, either. In fact, we don't learn much about the Valley or its residents, or why it's so important beyond it being warm all the time. Zero and Stuffy never even meet until the last five seconds. Stuffy's not the one who deals with Zero, either. Santa does that.

And speaking of, did we really need Santa? He seems to mainly be there so Rankin-Bass can shoehorn more holidays into their specials again. He does a lot of things Stuffy should have done, like deal with Zero and figure out about bringing Easter eggs to one town. There's a lot of plot lines that are set up but never explored, like the con-bunnies wanting to steal those carrots and how Zero managed to get the Golden Lilly from April Valley.

The Big Finale: Ironically, this was one of my family's favorite holiday specials during the 80's and early 90's. We had it on the end of a tape with kids' movies and cartoons and watched it even when it wasn't Easter. For all the problems, it's still decent Easter viewing for young kids who need something to do before the egg hunt begins. 

Home Media: Currently DVD only, and the DVD is out of print. You're better off looking for this used.


The Bernstain Bears' Easter Surprise
NBC, 1981
Voices of Ron McLarty, Pat Lysinger, Knowl Johnson, and Bob McFadden
Directed by Mordecai Gerstein and Al Kouzel
Music by Elliot Lawrence; Lyrics by Stan Bernstain 

The Story: We jump back to when Brother Bear (Johnson) was Mama and Papa's only cub. He's lonely and curious about the world around him, constantly asking his bumbling father questions he can't answer. His friends are all animals who live by the bog and hibernate during the winter, except ever-hopping Bill Bunny (Zachary Danzinger). Brother's eager for winter to be over, especially after Mama (Lysinger), whose lap seems to be growing rather large, tells him about his big Easter surprise. 

Winter, however, seems to be going on for longer than usual. Turns out Boss Bunny (McFadden), the head Easter Bunny, quit and won't come out of his hole or start production on Easter. Papa's (McLarty) is horrified, but his attempt at being the Easter Bunny don't go well. It's up to Brother and Bill to figure out why Boss Bunny quit, and remind him that Easter and spring are the seasons for miracles, including the miracle of birth.

The Animation: Same deal as the Valentine's special. This is nothing flashy, but the characters move well enough, the backgrounds are reasonably detailed, and the characters do resemble their book counterparts at the time. That's probably all this franchise really needs.

The Song and Dance: Adorable story manages to work in the themes of rebirth and miracles without getting too religious, and do it in a charming and sweet way. Papa's "Do It Yourself" song and his brief fling as the Easter Bunny may be his funniest moment from any of the specials. I love how he manages to rig up the conveyor belt in the chicken coop, and his and Brother's "hop hop hops." Check out Mama's hilarious expressions in the background during the number, too. Mama has a lovely moment too when she tells Brother about how spring is a time for miracles...including the arrival of new babies...

Favorite Number: Brother pesters Papa with "I Have Many Questions," as he asks his father about the world around them and how it works. Papa, of course, doesn't really have an answer for any of them. Mama reminds Brother to "Care About Spring," as she explains to him what Easter's really all about. Disappointed after Boss Bunny quits, Papa claims he'll just "Do It Himself" and rig up his own Easter factory. Brother's excited at first, but it ends in a messy disaster. Brother and Boss Bunny reprise "Care About Spring" as Boss relates just why he's given up on spring, and Brother tells him all the reasons he should let it go on. The chorus picks this up when Boss (literally) sees the light; their version turns up again over the end credits.

What I Don't Like: Boss Bunny...kind of has a point. From all his bellyaching, it sounds like he's old, tired, and has been running Spring and Easter on his own for many years without a break. Hopefully, he was able to hire more reliable help after he got the factory going again. 

The Big Finale: Other than it's missing Sister, this is by far my favorite Berenstain Bears holiday special. If you have children who are fans of the series, especially the older books sans Sister, or remember when this used to turn up on cable in the 80's, it's highly recommended Easter viewing.

Home Media: DVD only, along with spring-themed episodes of the original 1985 Berenstain Bears TV show. 

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