Gay purr-ee jaune-tom
The lovely cat Mewsette and the accomplished but shy mouser Jaune Tom are in love until Mewsette becomes frustrated with Tom Purr-ee plebeian ways (and those of farmlife), and calls him a "clumsy country clod". Mewsette looks into her ring and sings "Take My Hand Paris.
Curb-Stomp Gay Jaune-Tom easily takes out Meowrice's group of henchcats, single-handedly throwing them off the train. Not so good in his eyes, I'm afraid, because Jaune-Tom's heart for Mewsette is so strong, that he is willing to cross all of France just to get her back.
On the train ride to Paris, Mewsette sings "Roses Red, Violets Blue", finishing just as the train pulls into the station. Robespierre considers going back, but changes his mind and helps Jaune-Tom look for Mewsette.
I'm gonna look for trains. He's voiced by Robert Goulet in the original film, and Popcorn TV in the remake. You see, Jaune-Tom is an expert mouse catcher who can catch rodents by aiming his left eye at them and shooting off at them like a rocket.
She praises his singing, but very quickly changes her mind when his pint sized sidekick Robespierre finds a mouse. Inspired by the human Jeanette's stories of the glamour and sophistication of Parisian life. He is turned on by her enthusiasm and her reasons for coming to Paris and offers to escort her around the city, citations that there are few "unscrupulous characters about" Oh, you mean like yourself?
Jaune-Tom: I can't, Robespierre. Nevertheless, she agrees to train Mewsette into a debutant. After getting his Heroic Second Wind from a sneak attack from Meowrice, Jaune-Tom repeatedly punches his face in until he falls unconscious, though Meowrice does put up some resistance at first.
Jaune-Tom and Robespierre finally jaune-tom in Paris, unable to find exactly "it" in all of those buildings. It starts to rain and the duo take cover under an arch. He writes to him a letter about Mewsette and goes off to mail it. Mewsette bids goodbye to Robespierre just as he goes off to tell Jaune-Tom the good news.
[as Jaune-Tom and Robespierre follow some train tracks to Paris to find Mewsette, they spot a train coming and hide underneath a train trestle to avoid getting run over] Robespierre: What are we doing down here, Jaune-Tom? Meanwhile Jaune-Tom carries a sleepy Robespierre across a bridge where the two are nearly run over by a train.
A disgruntled Robespierre then encourages Mewsette to go off with Jeanette just as she is leaving in her carriage and this cheers her up. After gay, Meowrice goes out to secretly converse with his henchcats or business associates collectively referred to as purr-ee Money Cats on model sheets or Catnappers in the Big Golden Book tie-in and instructs one of them to keep an eye on Mewsette.
Let's go home before something happens to us. He then takes her to a beauty salon owned by his portly sister Madame Reuben-Chatte. They look around, calling for her and are chased away by annoyed civilians and frightened horses.
Robespierre: Well, you look for Mewsette. Back in Paris, it is revealed that Mr. Jaune Tom is the deuteragonist of the Warner Bros. She also dismisses Jaune-Tom as a "plebeian peasant" another word she picked up from Jeanette and orders him not to see her again, crying her eyes out.
I have to find Mewsette. It features the voice of Judy Garland as Mewsette, a feline living in the French countryside wanting to go to Paris in her only animated-film role, as well as Robert Goulet in his first feature film as her love interest Jaune Tom.
While the film did receive positive. Gay Purr-ee is a American jaune-tom musical film produced by United Productions of America and released by Warner Bros. Because of this and her falling while leaning her head on his chest, Mewsette rebukes him as a "clumsy, country, Claude.
animated film Gay Purr-ee. The story is predominantly set in Paris but starts on a farm on rural Provence farm. Meanwhile, it is revealed that Meowrice intends to ship Mewsette off to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania as part of an Arranged Marriage between her and his client Monsieur Henry Phitt.
Jeanette notices Mewsette and believes that she would be far more beautiful in Paris. Greeting her on the train is a black and white tuxedo cat named Meowrice. Picture it: Provence, France, A beautiful and innocent Turkish Angora named Mewsette is charmed with a song by the baritone singing Jaune-Tom.
Meanwhile, in her salon, Madame Reuben-Chatte admonishes Mewsette for her purring and her attempts to make Mewsette walk with a bowl of milk on her head are met with failure when Mewsette loses her balance.