The Alley Cat

The Alley Cat is an animated theatrical short. It was distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) on July 5, 1941. It was produced by Fred Quimby, and directed by Hugh Harman.

An alley cat tries to woo a prissy penthouse cat.

The two characters (named Tom and the "Lady Cat") were integrated into MGM's Tom and Jerry series (which had just debuted a year earlier), beginning in 1943 (Tom rechristened Butch for Baby Puss) and 1946 (the "Lady Cat" christened as Toodles Galore for Springtime for Thomas), respectively.

Characters
William Hanna
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Butler
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Unavailable
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Toodles Galore
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Sara Berner
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Butch
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Harry E. Long
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Butch
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Harry E. Long
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Harry E. Long
 * style="background-color:#clear"| Toodles Galore
 * style="background-color:#clear"| Harry E. Long
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Rover
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Billy Beltcher
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Rover
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Billy Beltcher

Locations

 * Earth
 * United States
 * Toodles's residence

Objects

 * None

Vehicles

 * None

Music
The music was composed by Scott Bradley.

Behind the scenes

 * Butch's speech sounds a lot more screechy than what he and Tom and other cats sound like when they talk in Tom and Jerry. This was likely due to make the cat sound more realistic, but in doing so, Butch sounds a lot like Quacker and Yakky Duck.