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All Seasons

Season 1930

  • S1930E01 Dizzy Dishes

    • August 9, 1930
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop (with dog's ears) is entertainer in a restaurant for dogs; a waiter joins the floor show to the neglect of patrons.

  • S1930E02 Barnacle Bill

    • August 31, 1930
    • Paramount Pictures

    Barnacle Bill (Bimbo) is a sailor on a ship that has just come into port. As soon as he can get off the ship, he heads for Nancy Lee's (Betty Boop) house. When he gets there he begins knocking on her door. Bimbo and Betty begin singing the lyrics to a tame version of "Barnacle Bill the Sailor." The actions of the film follow along the song's storyline, with Barnacle Bimbo romancing Betty and then leaving her to go back to sea. Like many early Fleischer Studios films, this film was inspired by a popular song, a version of "Barnacle Bill" written in 1928 by Frank Luther & Carson Robison and performed by Hoagy Carmichael.

  • S1930E03 Mysterious Mose

    • December 26, 1930
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty is startled awake in her bed on a stormy night. She searches for the cause of the shock while she sings the song. Then, unexplainable phenomena start happening in the house. Mysterious Mose (Bimbo) appears, and sings part of the song. Bizarre cartoon creatures appear and, at first, sing and enhance Mose's "mysterious" image. Quickly, however, the antics become frightful even to Mose. The film escalates into chaos, which ends when Mose bursts, revealing him having been an automaton (full of cogs and springs) the whole time.

Season 1931

  • S1931E01 The Bum Bandit

    • April 3, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    Bimbo prepares to rob a train that he has forced to stop. He then sings "The Holdup Rag." A ferocious bearded cowboy emerges, eats the barrel of Bimbo's gun, and, pulling off his beard and costume, reveals himself to in fact be his wife Dangerous Nan McGrew, whom he had abandoned. She then throws Bimbo into the locomotive, disconnects it from the rest of the train, and they drive off.

  • S1931E02 Any Little Girl That’s a Nice Little Girl

    • April 16, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    A Bouncing-Ball rendition of the title song features animated cats.

  • S1931E03 Silly Scandals

    • May 23, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    In a vaudeville act, Betty Boop (with dog's ears) sings "You're Drivin' Me Crazy;" Bimbo sneaks into the show and runs afoul of a stage hypnotist.

  • S1931E04 Bimbo’s Initiation

    • July 24, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    The surreal, nightmarish atmosphere of Bimbo's Initiation has made it one of the most renowned Fleischer Studios shorts. Bimbo is walking down the street when he suddenly disappears down an open manhole. He lands in an underground clubhouse of a secret society. The song Wanna Be A Member? is parody lyrics written to the 1919 song The Vamp (or Vamp A Little Lady).

  • S1931E05 Betty Co-ed

    • August 1, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    A young dog calls on Betty but fraternity hazers kidnap him. With a Bouncing Ball, Rudy Vallee sings the title tune.

  • S1931E06 Bimbo's Express

    • August 22, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop (with dog's ears) is moving; Bimbo comes with his moving van and is smitten with her. Songs: "Moving Day," "Hello Beautiful."

  • S1931E07 Minding the Baby

    • September 26, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    Bimbo's minding his baby brother, but neighbor Betty Boop (with dog's ears) wants him to come over and play.

  • S1931E08 Kitty from Kansas City

    • October 31, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    Sun bonneted Betty Boop takes a train to "Rudy Valley" where she gains weight and Rudy Vallee performs the title song with Bouncing Ball.

  • S1931E09 Mask-a-Raid

    • November 7, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop is queen of the Masquerade Ball. She get annoyed by the king of the ball. Bimbo does Italian scatting to confuse the king. Bimbo and the king pull on Betty's arms. Her skirt goes up, showing her underwear and her two garters. But a little creature pins the dress. Then, Betty flips a coin to see if the king or Bimbo wins her affections, but doesn't really work. So the king and bimbo fight with wooden swords. Bimbo loses and is taken away by a knight, but Bimbo soon realizes it is Betty and asks him to marry her.

  • S1931E10 Jack and the Beanstalk

    • November 21, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    Bimbo climbs a beanstalk to find Betty Boop enslaved by the giant.

  • S1931E11 Dizzy Red Riding-Hood

    • December 12, 1931
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop goes to Grandma's through the woods despite wolf warnings; but Bimbo follows and gives the old story a new twist.

Season 1932

  • S1932E01 Any Rags

    • January 12, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    The rag and bone man passes through Betty Boop's neighborhood.

  • S1932E02 Boop-Oop-a-Doop

    • January 16, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty works in the big top as a lion tamer and a tightrope walker. Another of the other circus attractions is Koko the Clown. While performing on the highwire the villainous ringmaster lusts for Betty as he watches her from below, singing "Do Something," a song previously performed by Helen Kane.

  • S1932E03 The Robot

    • February 5, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Bimbo is a mechanic whose girlfriend (not Betty) agrees to marry him if he wins a fight against "One-Round Mike." Quick as a wink, he transforms his car into a robot to help him in the ring!

  • S1932E04 Minnie the Moocher

    • February 26, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop and Bimbo run away from home, but that night they are scared by a chorus of ghosts singing the title song.

  • S1932E05 Swim or Sink (S.O.S.)

    • March 11, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    A sinking ship leaves three survivors on a life raft: Bimbo, Koko and Betty Boop. Good news/bad news: they're rescued by a pirate ship...

  • S1932E06 Crazy-Town

    • March 25, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop and Bimbo take a wild streetcar ride to Crazy Town, where birds swim, fish fly, and everything else reverses normal behavior.

  • S1932E07 The Dancing Fool

    • April 8, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Daredevil sign painters Bimbo and Koko like what they see through the window of Betty Boop's Dancing School, and stay for a lesson.

  • SPECIAL 0x1 Screen Songs: Oh! How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning

    • April 22, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

  • S1932E08 A Hunting We Will Go

    • April 29, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Amorous hunters Bimbo and Koko set out to bag some furs for coat-loving Betty Boop, but things don't turn out the way they'd planned...

  • S1932E09 Chess-Nuts

    • May 13, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    A live action chess game becomes a chaotic, animated quest for the favors of Betty Boop. Betty comes to life as the black queen and Bimbo becomes the white king. The black king, Old King Cole, wants Betty for himself and carries her away to his castle. Bimbo must come to her rescue, with the assistance of Koko and the other chess pieces. When Bimbo breaks into the castle, he engages Old King Cole in a fight, which results in King Cole's death, with Bimbo, Betty, Koko and the other chess characters parading along the chess board. The two men playing chess are shown to have been playing the game for so long that they grow large beards with a spider in a web between the two beards. The battle contains elements of chess, bowling, football and boxing. Koko appears briefly as part of Bimbo's team of animated chess men.

  • SPECIAL 0x2 Screen Songs: Let Me Call You Sweetheart

    • May 20, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

  • S1932E10 Admission Free

    • June 10, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Koko and Bimbo visit Betty Boop's penny arcade, Bimbo to flirt with Betty; but his turn at the shooting gallery becomes a hunting trip.

  • S1932E11 The Betty Boop Limited

    • July 1, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    On a special train, Betty's show troupe rehearses: Betty sings, Bimbo juggles, and Koko does a soft-shoe. The train itself also does tricks.

  • SPECIAL 0x3 Screen Songs: You Try Somebody Else

    • July 29, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

  • SPECIAL 0x4 Screen Songs: Rudy Vallee Melodies

    • August 5, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

  • S1932E12 Stopping the Show

    • August 12, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop appears on stage in a vaudeville theatre. Her act consists of imitations of real-life singers, including Helen Kane, Fanny Brice and Maurice Chevalier. The cartoon audience enthusiastically cheers and applauds.

  • S1932E13 Betty Boop's Bizzy Bee

    • August 19, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty is the owner and operator of the Bizzy Bee, a popular lunchwagon in the city. Even though the only item on the menu is hotcakes, the place is always packed, thanks to Betty's cute face. A running gag centers around a hippo vainly requesting that someone "please pass the sugar;" in the end, he is inundated with sugar.

  • S1932E14 Betty Boop, M.D.

    • September 2, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty, Bimbo and Koko are the owners of a travelling medicine show. They are selling "Jippo", an all-purpose health tonic. Koko's contortionist display doesn't convince the local townsfolk to open their wallets, but Betty gets the whole town eager to buy their product. Even though it's only water, drinking the tonic causes everyone to exhibit strange side-effects, from unusual hair growth to rapid de-aging.

  • SPECIAL 0x5 Screen Songs: Just a Gigolo

    • September 9, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

  • S1932E15 Betty Boop's Bamboo Isle

    • September 23, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    After a short live action performance by the Royal Samoans, Bimbo appears on screen playing a ukelele while riding in a motorboat. The motorboat goes faster and faster, until it crashes into a tropical island. Bimbo flies into the air and lands in another boat, this one containing a topless (except for a strategically placed lei) and dark-skinned Betty Boop. Bimbo and Betty, after nearly falling down a waterfall, are flung from the boat into a clearing surrounded by hostile trees, who torment the two. A group of savages appears, but Bimbo disguises himself by painting his face and sticking a bone in his hair. Bimbo is treated as an honored guest, and to a performance of Betty dancing the hula. A sudden rainstorm washes off Bimbo's disguise, and he and Betty make a hasty escape from the angry savages. After another rapid boat ride, Bimbo and Betty ride up the Mississippi River, where they attempt to kiss in private behind an umbrella (with a convenient hole).

  • S1932E16 Betty Boop's Ups and Downs

    • October 14, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    A destitute Betty is evicted from her home. As she leaves, a for sale sign appears on the property. As the camera pulls back, more and more signs appear, until the whole Earth is for sale. The moon and the planets start bidding on the Earth, and argue over who has made the highest bid. An irate Saturn uses a magnet to eliminate gravity, pulling Betty and everyone on Earth into space.

  • SPECIAL 0x6 Screen Songs: Romantic Melodies

    • October 21, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

  • S1932E17 Betty Boop for President

    • November 4, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty runs for the office of President against Mr. Nobody.

  • S1932E18 I'll Be Glad When You're Dead You Rascal You

    • November 25, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    After a live action introduction featuring Louis Armstrong and his orchestra, the short opens in the jungle, with Betty being carried on a litter by Bimbo and Koko. A horde of African savages descends on the trio, and runs off with Betty. Koko and Bimbo try to find the missing Betty, but end up in the cannibals' cooking pot. They climb a tree and escape, but are pursued by the enormous disembodied head of a savage (with the voice of Louis Armstrong). Koko and Bimbo eventually find Betty tied to a stake, surrounded by dancing natives. Koko and Bimbo help Betty escape by firing porcupine quills at the savages. The trio races off, hotly pursued by spear-tossing natives. The three finally reach safety after crossing a mountain, whose erupting peak flings the savages into space.

  • S1932E19 Betty Boop's Museum

    • December 16, 1932
    • Paramount Pictures

    Koko is recruiting customers for a 50 cent sightseeing tour of the museum. Betty is Koko's only passenger. Betty gets locked inside by accident. The skeletons from the displays come to life and chase Betty, until she is finally rescued by Bimbo.

  • SPECIAL 0x38 Screen Songs: Down Among a Suger Cane

    • June 14, 1932

Season 1933

  • S1933E01 Betty Boop's Ker-Choo

    • January 6, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty, Koko, and Bimbo drive at the auto races; Betty has a cold, and her sneezes help her win.

  • S1933E02 Betty Boop's Crazy Inventions

    • January 27, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    In a circus tent, Betty, Bimbo and Koko demonstrate some gadgets reminiscent of TV ads; an animated sewing machine gets out of hand.

  • S1933E03 Is My Palm Read

    • February 17, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    For customer Betty Boop, psychic reader Prof. Bimbo conjures up an adventure on a haunted tropical island in his crystal ball.

  • S1933E04 Betty Boop's Penthouse

    • March 10, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    At Bimbo's Experimental Laboratory, Bimbo and Koko concoct a variety of compounds and elixirs. Their scientific experiments are interrupted when they see a bathing-suit clad Betty taking a shower on the roof of her penthouse. Distracted by Betty as she sings "Penthouse Serenade," the two fail to realize the chemicals they've mixed are still on the boil, one of which turns into a Frankenstein-style monster. The creature sees Betty, and crosses over the phone wire to menace Betty. Betty sprays the monster with flower spray, which turns him into a harmless dancing flower. Betty giggles and says, "You nutty dope fiend!"

  • S1933E05 Snow White

    • March 31, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    A magic mirror, with a face resembling Cab Calloway, proclaims Betty Boop to be "the fairest in the land", much to the anger of the Queen. The Queen orders her guards Bimbo and Koko to behead Betty. With tears in their eyes, they take Betty into the forest and prepare to execute her. Betty escapes into a frozen river, which encloses her in a coffin of ice. This block slips downhill to the home of the seven dwarfs, who carry the frozen Betty into an enchanted cave. Meanwhile, Koko falls down a hole and arrives at the same cave, where the evil Queen turns him into a grotesque creature, all while singing the St James Infirmary Blues. With her rivals disposed of, the Queen again asks the magic mirror who the fairest in the land is, but the mirror explodes in a puff of magic smoke that returns Betty and Koko to their normal states and changes the Queen into a hideous monster. The queen monster chases the protagonists until Koko grabs its tongue and, with one mighty yank turns it inside out. Betty, Koko, and Bimbo dance around in a circle of victory as the film ends.

  • SPECIAL 0x8 Screen Songs: Popular Melodies

    • April 7, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

  • S1933E06 Betty Boop's Birthday Party

    • April 21, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    It's Betty's birthday, but she's in the kitchen washing dishes and wishing she had a man. Betty's pals, including Bimbo and Koko, throw her a party.

  • S1933E07 Betty Boop's May Party

    • May 12, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    An elephant punctures a rubber tree, whose spraying sap turns the whole town rubbery. Betty and the gang use their new found limberness to dance and sing.

  • S1933E08 Betty Boop's Big Boss

    • May 2, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty responds to an ad for employment ("Girl Wanted--Top Floor--Female Preferred"), along with an enormous group of fellow applicants. When the interviewing manager asks Betty what she can do, Betty replies in song that she can't type or take dictation, but that she can provide other benefits. The businessman sends the other applicants away via a trap door, and hires Betty. Betty is happy with her new job, but the boss soon takes liberties with his employee. Scared, Betty calls for help. The police arrive on the scene, making several futile attempts to enter the building. They finally whittle down the skyscraper by firing machine guns into it. Betty and her boss appear in silhouette behind the window shade, but when the shade is raised, the two are locked in an embrace. Betty exclaims "Fresh!" and pulls the shade back down for some privacy.

  • S1933E09 Mother Goose Land

    • June 23, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty, while reading a book of Mother Goose stories, wishes she visit sucha a wonderful place. Betty's wish is granted when Mother Goose appears, and gives her a tour of Mother Goose Land. Betty has a wonderful time until Little Miss Muffet's spider chases her, with lecherous ends in mind.

  • S1933E10 Popeye the Sailor

    • July 14, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    While on shore leave, Popeye takes Olive Oyl to a carnival, where he is challenged by Bluto in various games. Later, while Popeye is dancing on stage with Betty Boop, Bluto seizes the opportunity to kidnap Olive, forcing Popeye to come to her rescue.

  • S1933E11 The Old Man of the Mountain

    • August 4, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    As the cartoon proper begins, a lion on roller skates (made of rabbits) rushes from his guard post atop a mountain, racing into a nearby village crying "Look out! The Old Man of the Mountain!" The lions warning sparks a mass exodus of the other animals who pack up their things and start to flee as the lion continues to warn "Look out! The Old Man of the Mountain!" In time, Betty Boop emerges from a guest house in order to find out what is going on. She confronts a passing owl, who in song describes the Old Man of the Mountain, a predatory hermit who threatens the livelihood of the villagers, particularly the women. Despite the owl's warnings, Betty is curious and declares, "well, I'm going to see that old man of the mountain", and starts a trek up the mountainside. She passes several people fleeing from the Old Man, including a woman pushing a carriage with her triplets--who look suspiciously like the Old Man of the Mountain. When Betty gets to the top of the mountain, the Old Man of the Mountain emerges from behind a rock. Over twice as tall as Betty, the Old Man backs the girl into his cave and, as Betty fights off his advances, begins to sing with her a duet of (Calloway's) "You've Got to Hi-De-Hi." Betty loosens up and joins in, and the two begin to flirt with each other. After his first verse, the Old Man looms menacingly over Betty. "Whatcha gonna do now?" Betty asks, frightened. "Gonna do the best I can," the Old Man replies, launching into a jazzy dance routine. The Old Man and Betty continue to dance together, but when the song is over, the Old Man makes a lustful grab for Betty, who runs for her life back down the mountainside. The Old Man makes chase, and grabs Betty just long enough to catch hold of her dress, which Betty jumps out of. As Betty finds refuge behind a large tree in her underwear, her dress comes to life and slaps the Old Man before running back to its owner. Betty climbs the tree to apparent safety, but as the Old Man comes

  • S1933E12 I Heard

    • September 1, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    The miners at Never Mine go to Betty Boop's Tavern (a jazz-jumpin' place) for lunch; back in the mine, Bimbo delves into weird realms.

  • S1933E13 Morning, Noon and Night

    • October 6, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    To the tune of Rubinoff and his orchestra, Betty Boop and feathered friends try to save a baby bird from the booze-swilling Tom Kats Club.

  • S1933E14 Betty Boop's Hallowe'en Party

    • November 3, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop hosts a Halloween party with aid from a scarecrow, but an uninvited gorilla threatens havoc.

  • S1933E15 Parade of the Wooden Soldiers

    • December 1, 1933
    • Paramount Pictures

    An action figure of Betty Boop drops in on a small toy shop; the other toys come to life and crown her their queen. But there's a big rag doll of King Kong... Based on the titular classical music.

Season 1934

  • S1934E01 She Wronged Him Right

    • January 5, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop appears on stage with Freddie in an old-fashioned mortgage melodrama.

  • S1934E02 Red Hot Mamma

    • February 2, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop, sleepless on a freezing night, builds a nice hot fire which proves too much of a good thing; in a dream she visits Hell, sings "Hell's Bells, " and makes Hell freeze over!

  • S1934E03 Ha! Ha! Ha!

    • March 2, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop and Koko dabble in dentistry, complete with laughing gas.

  • S1934E04 Betty in Blunderland

    • April 6, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    The White Rabbit materializes from a jigsaw puzzle and leads Betty Boop through the looking glass into Wonderland.

  • S1934E05 Betty Boop's Rise to Fame

    • May 18, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    A reporter interviews Max Fleischer about his creation, and Betty illustrates with excerpts from three prior cartoons.

  • S1934E06 Betty Boop's Trial

    • June 15, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    A traffic cop tries to make time with Betty; she speeds to get away, is arrested, and undergoes a musical trial.

  • S1934E07 Betty Boop's Life Guard

    • July 13, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty takes a trip to the beach and needs the assistance of a big, hunky lifeguard when she rides her rubber horsy out too far!

  • S1934E08 Poor Cinderella

    • August 3, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    In her only color cartoon, Betty Boop goes to the ball thanks to her fairy godmother; later, only her foot fits the glass slipper.

  • S1934E09 There's Something About a Soldier

    • August 17, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop recruits for the Army by offering inductees a kiss. The recruits march off to war with a force of giant mosquitoes!

  • S1934E10 Betty Boop's Little Pal

    • September 21, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    Pudgy the Pup makes a mess of Betty Boop's picnic, is sent home, and runs afoul of the dog catcher.

  • S1934E11 Betty Boop's Prize Show

    • October 19, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    In a melodrama at the Slumbertown Theatre, Freddie is the sheriff and Betty is a school-marm desired by outlaw "Phillip the Fiend."

  • S1934E12 Keep in Style

    • November 16, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop puts on a musical show of new inventions and styles; her creation of "ankle skirts" sweeps the nation.

  • S1934E13 When My Ship Comes In

    • December 21, 1934
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop wins the Irish Sweepstakes, and fantasizes about what she'll do with the money.

Season 1935

  • S1935E01 Baby Be Good

    • January 18, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop tells naughty Little Jimmy a corrective fairy tale (with herself as fairy). Part of the action is replayed in reverse.

  • S1935E02 Taking the Blame

    • February 15, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop brings home a cat as playmate for Pudgy, but the cat is a bully who only gets Pudgy into trouble.

  • S1935E03 Stop That Noise

    • March 15, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    To escape her noisy city apartment, Betty Boop retreats to her country home, but the insects are against her.

  • S1935E04 Swat the Fly

    • April 19, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty is the best of things: she wants to bake a cake. But then a fly appears and makes it white hot.

  • S1935E05 No! No! A Thousand Times No!!

    • May 24, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop and Freddie appear on stage in a melodrama, wherein Betty sings the title song to the villain.

  • S1935E06 A Little Soap and Water

    • June 21, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop tries to give Pudgy the Pup a bath, with slapstick results.

  • S1935E07 A Language All My Own

    • July 19, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop takes her stage act on the road, and plays in Japan to great acclaim.

  • S1935E08 Betty Boop and Grampy

    • August 16, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Two piano movers, a fireman and a traffic cop all drop what they're doing to join Betty Boop at the contraption-happy Grampy's eccentric party.

  • S1935E09 Judge for a Day

    • September 20, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop, annoyed by 'public pests' like backslappers, gum parkers, and mud splashers, imagines what she'd do to them if she were a judge.

  • S1935E10 Making Stars

    • October 18, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop emcees a stage show presenting "future stars"...performing infants (including racial stereotypes).

  • S1935E11 The Funniest Living American

    • November 22, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Henry, comic strip character, gets a job at Betty Boop's pet store.

  • S1935E12 Little Nobody

    • December 27, 1935
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop gives Pudgy the pup a pep talk when he's called a nobody.

Season 1936

  • S1936E01 Betty Boop and the Little King

    • January 31, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    The Little King, comic strip character, meets Betty Boop.

  • S1936E02 Not Now

    • February 28, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    A caterwauling cat annoys Betty Boop and Pudgy; the latter tries cat-chasing, but bites off more than he can chew.

  • S1936E03 Betty Boop and Little Jimmy

    • March 27, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty tries a regime of exercise, but her weight loss gets out of hand. She sings "Keep Your Girlish Figure."

  • S1936E04 We Did It

    • April 24, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    While Betty Boop is away, the kittens get into mischief. Will Pudgy the Pup take the blame as usual?

  • S1936E05 A Song a Day

    • May 22, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    At Betty Boop's Animal Hospital, various species have appropriate ailments. Morale becomes a problem; Professor Grampy to the rescue!

  • S1936E06 More Pep

    • June 19, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    In a return to the 'Out of the Inkwell' format, Betty Boop invents a 'pep' formula to speed up lazy Pudgy, but it escapes into the 'real world' with rapid results.

  • S1936E07 You're Not Built That Way

    • July 17, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    Pudgy the pup tries to emulate a tough bulldog, but Betty Boop sings him the error of his ways.

  • S1936E08 Happy You and Merry Me

    • August 21, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    A stray kitten called Myron wanders into Betty Boop's house, gets sick on candy, and is cured with catnip by Betty and Pudgy the Pup.

  • S1936E09 Training Pigeons

    • September 18, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop is training a flock of pigeons, but one stray leads Pudgy the pup on a precarious chase over the rooftops.

  • S1936E10 Grampy's Indoor Outing

    • October 16, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop and Little Jimmy are prevented by a thunderstorm from going to the carnival; the inventive Grampy devises a substitute.

  • S1936E11 Be Human

    • November 20, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop is incensed at her farmer neighbor's cruelty to his animals. But the inventive Grampy knows how to teach him a lesson.

  • S1936E12 Making Friends

    • December 18, 1936
    • Paramount Pictures

    Pudgy the pup takes Betty Boop's advice ('Go Out and Make Friends With the World') to heart and befriends various wild animals.

Season 1937

  • S1937E01 House Cleaning Blues

    • January 15, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    House cleaning blues are just what Betty Boop has the morning after a wild party. Grampy to the rescue!

  • S1937E02 Whoops! I'm a Cowboy

    • February 12, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop's runt of a suitor thinks he'll have better luck if he takes cowboy lessons at a dude ranch; slapstick results.

  • S1937E03 The Hot Air Salesman

    • March 12, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    A door to door salesman visits Betty Boop's home with a long line of useless household gadgets.

  • S1937E04 Pudgy Takes a Bow-Wow

    • April 9, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop's stage show takes a new turn when Pudgy the pup and his feline enemy get into the act.

  • S1937E05 Pudgy Picks a Fight

    • May 14, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop is so delighted with her new fox fur that Pudgy the Pup grows jealous, then thinks he's killed it...

  • S1937E06 The Impractical Joker

    • July 18, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop is baking a cake, when Irving the practical joker comes for a visit. Betty becomes the victim of such pranks as shaking a false hand and getting squirted in the face. Betty calls on Grampy for help and he quickly rigs his apartment to counteract Irving's pranks and send him on his way. Irving gets the last laugh, when Grampy lights the candle on the cake. Irving replaced the candle with a firecracker before he left.

  • S1937E07 Ding Dong Doggie

    • July 23, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Against Betty Boop's orders (and to his own discomfiture), Pudgy the Pup accompanies a dalmatian fire dog to a fire.

  • S1937E08 The Candid Candidate

    • August 27, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop campaigns for Grampy for Mayor; he wins by one vote, but finds politics is no picnic. Urban renewal is parodied.

  • S1937E09 Service with a Smile

    • September 23, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop is desk clerk at the Hi-De-Ho-Tel ("Food Served with Every Meal") where the guests have many legitimate complaints. Fortunately, Grampy's inventions fix everything.

  • S1937E10 The New Deal Show

    • October 22, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop emcees a show of pet-aid gadgets. Object: a "new deal for pets." Some ideas copied from Betty Boop's Crazy Inventions (1933).

  • S1937E11 The Foxy Hunter

    • November 26, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Junior and Pudgy slip away from Betty Boop's care to go hunting with a pop-gun

  • S1937E12 Zula Hula

    • December 24, 1937
    • Paramount Pictures

    Disabled in a thunderstorm, Betty Boop and Grampy's plane lands on a tropic island where Grampy soon re-invents the comforts of home... until hostile, racially-stereotyped natives intrude.

Season 1938

  • S1938E01 Riding the Rails

    • January 28, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop goes to work on the subway (Trample 'Em R.R. Co.); Pudgy the Pup follows her and gets more ride than he bargained for.

  • S1938E02 Be up to Date

    • February 25, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop's Traveling Department Store comes to Hillbillyville; the mountain folks find old uses for the new gadgets.

  • S1938E03 Honest Love and True

    • March 25, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop is a poor-but-honest-actress in the Gay 90s who, hungry and cold, gets a job as a singer in a dance-hall saloon. The villainous owner makes unwanted advances, annoys and slaps her around a little, until a Royal Canadian Mounted Policeman shows up.

  • S1938E04 Out of the Inkwell

    • April 22, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    At the Fleischer studio, a black janitor, learning to hypnotize, conjures Betty Boop out of the inkwell and tries some suggestions on her. But two can play at that game...

  • S1938E05 Swing School

    • May 27, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    At Betty Boop's Music School for Animals, Pudgy the dog doesn't do so well, but puppy love triumphs.

  • S1938E06 Pudgy and the Lost Kitten

    • June 24, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty's dog, Pudgy, finds a hungry kitten outside and brings it home. Myron the kitten and his mother, from a previous Betty Boop cartoon called Happy You and Merry Me make a return appearance.

  • S1938E07 Buzzy Boop

    • July 29, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop's cousin, Buzzy, takes the train to visit Betty. While riding the train, she is "helpful" to other passengers in a mischievous kind of way.

  • S1938E08 Pudgy the Watchman

    • August 12, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop hires a feline professional "Mouse Eradicator" to take over from Pudgy the Pup who makes friends with mice. But after initial successes, Mr. Al E. Katz gets drunk on the job...

  • S1938E09 Buzzy Boop at the Concert

    • August 16, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop and her little cousin Buzzy attend the opera recital of "Madame Shrill, Soprano Supreme". Buzzy isn't a fan of the high-brow stuff, though, and turns it into a swing fest.

  • S1938E10 Sally Swing

    • October 14, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop, auditioning bandleaders for a college swing dance, "discovers" a cleaning woman who resembles Betty Grable.

  • S1938E11 On with the New

    • December 2, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop quits her job as overworked short-order cook to run an automated baby-care center. Will she regret it?

  • S1938E12 Thrills and Chills

    • December 23, 1938
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop and Pudgy take the train to a ski resort and enjoy the winter sports while Betty evades a masher.

Season 1939

  • S1939E01 My Friend the Monkey

    • January 27, 1939
    • Paramount Pictures

    A swingin' hurdy-gurdy man goes by Betty Boop's house; she wants to buy the monkey, which causes plenty of trouble for Pudgy the Pup.

  • S1939E02 So Does an Automobile

    • March 31, 1939
    • Paramount Pictures

    At Betty Boop's Auto Hospital, the cars are treated for various human like ailments.

  • S1939E03 Musical Mountaineers

    • May 12, 1939
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop runs out of gas while driving through hillbilly country. When she goes up to a nearby shack to ask for help, the locals appear suspicious of the stranger, but Betty wins them over with her dancing. Soon, the entire clan is making music and dancing. Betty's new friends help her on her way by filling her gas tank with a jug of "corn dripp'ns".

  • S1939E04 The Scared Crows

    • June 9, 1939
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop and Pudgy, doing the spring planting, are plagued by crows.

  • S1939E05 Rhythm on the Reservation

    • July 7, 1939
    • Paramount Pictures

    Betty Boop's Swing Band visits an Indian reservation. The Indians borrow all the musical instruments, but not knowing their real purpose, they find odd uses for them. Betty demonstrates the correct use of the kettle drum and teaches the braves the true meaning of 'rhythm.'

  • S1939E06 Yip-Yip-Yippy

    • August 11, 1939
    • Paramount Pictures

    A drugstore cowboy reads a dime novel and imagines himself as an Old West cowboy battling a cattle rustler.

Additional Specials