Tom & Jerry | Piano Tooners | Animation | Comedy | Musical | Short | Slapstick
Library last generated: 2026-01-08 14:23 LOCAL
Watch on YouTube If playback fails, open YouTube.
Tom and Jerry – Piano Tooners (1932)
Director: John Foster, George Stallings
Studio: Van Beuren Studios
Starring: Unknown voice cast (uncredited)
Release Date: January 23, 1932
Runtime: 7 minutes
Format: Black & White | Mono | Sound | Animated
Country: United States
Language: English
Genres: Animation | Comedy | Musical | Short | Slapstick
---
Summary:
Tom and Jerry (the human duo from Van Beuren Studios, not the later MGM cat-and-mouse pair) work as piano tuners, but their job quickly devolves into slapstick chaos. Between malfunctioning instruments, zany gags, and a mix of music and mayhem, the short delivers fast-paced comedy that defined early 1930s cartoons.
---
Background:
Produced by Van Beuren Studios, Piano Tooners is part of the lesser-known Tom and Jerry series that predates the famous MGM cat-and-mouse by nearly a decade. These two human characters starred in a variety of comedic shorts, often centered on everyday jobs that spiral into absurd adventures. With rubber hose animation and synchronized sound, the series reflected the era’s fascination with vaudeville-inspired slapstick humor.
---
Trivia:
The Van Beuren Tom and Jerry have no connection to MGM’s more famous cat-and-mouse duo introduced in 1940.
The short exemplifies the studio’s style—fast-paced, gag-driven humor with limited but expressive animation.
Often confused with the better-known Hanna-Barbera characters, leading to the pair being renamed Dick and Larry in later TV syndication.
Public domain status has led to frequent circulation in classic cartoon compilations.
---
Hashtags:
#TomAndJerry #PianoTooners #1932Cartoon #VanBeurenStudios #ClassicCartoons #PublicDomainCartoon #EarlySoundAnimation #RubberHoseAnimation #SlapstickComedy #VintageAnimation #MusicalCartoon