http://youtube.com/watch?v=cq0a5JTSGvU
I can't watch it right now, but I will soon!
>From "Stump the Bookseller" (I wrote everything starting from B182):
http://loganberrybooks.com/solved-b.html
This book was about a bear who went to sleep for the winter. When he
woke up in the spring a factory had been built over his den. No one in
the factory will believe he is a bear. They all say he is a guy in fur
coat. He talks to each manager as he talks to higher ranking managers
you can see in the picture that the next manager has one more phone on
his desk, one more trash can and on more secretary than the last
manager he talked to. Pre-1965.
Jörg Steiner, The bear who wanted to be a bear, 1977. "A huge factory
replaces the woodlands around a hibernating bear who, on awakening,
must prove he is indeed a bear and not a lazy worker."
Frank Tashlin, The bear that wasn't, 1962, 1995. "After hibernating
for the winter, a bear wakes up to discover that a huge factory has
been built over his cave and that nobody believes he is a bear."
The Bear That Wasn't. I had this on a record when I was a kid, but
it's actually not a book but a cartoon. The refrain they keep
repeating is,"You're a hairy man who needs a shave and wears a fur
coat." There may have been a book made from the cartoon, I suppose.
Some information on it is here.
B182: Have I got info for you! It's The Bear That Wasn't, 1946,
written and illustrated by Frank Tashlin, writer, animator, director
and producer. Also the author of the 1950 The Possum That Didn't
(smile, that is) and the 1951 The World That Isn't. He worked with
Bob Hope, the Marx Bros, Jerry Lewis and directed "The Girl Can't Help
It" with Jayne Mansfield and Little Richard. However, some feel that
The Bear That Wasn't, while very funny, is really more for adults
while slightly sad for kids - it's cynical, after all. Some think it's
a bit political, too! It was made into a 10-minute cartoon by Chuck
Jones in 1967. In 1976, Jorg Steiner and Jorg Muller wrote a slightly
different book version called The Bear Who Wanted to Be a Bear. Not
much humor in that one.
Additional note: Frank Tashlin wrote (in 1952?) The Turtle That
Couldn't. He was also the director of at least a dozen Porky Pig
cartoons, some Bugs and Daffy, and many more.
Lenona.