Tarzan yell


The Tarzan yell or Tarzan's jungle call is the distinctive, ululating yell of the character Tarzan as portrayed by actor Johnny Weissmuller in the films based on the character created by Edgar Rice Burroughs starting with Tarzan the Ape Man. The yell was a creation of the movies based on what Burroughs described in his books as simply "the victory cry of the bull ape."

History and origin

Although the RKO Picture version of the Tarzan yell was putatively that of Weissmuller, different stories exist as to how the Tarzan yell was created. Many speculate that a man named Lloyd Thomas Leech was the original voice behind the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Tarzan yell. He was an opera singer from the 1940s into the '60s, winning the Chicagoland Music Festival on August 17, 1946, and going on to sing throughout the U.S., touring with several opera companies. There are recordings of his recollections of creating the Tarzan yell, a story supported by his children and grandchildren. According to the newspaper columnist L. M. Boyd, "Blended in with that voice are the growl of a dog, a trill sung by a soprano, a note played on a violin's G string and the howl of a hyena recorded backward." According to Bill Moyers, it was created by combining the recordings of three men: one baritone, one tenor, and one hog caller from Arkansas. Another widely published notion concerns the use of an Austrian yodel played backwards at abnormally fast speed. But Weissmuller claimed that the yell was actually his own voice. His version is supported by his son and by his Tarzan co-star, Maureen O'Sullivan.

Appearances

This sound effect is often used for comic effect in later, unrelated movies, particularly when a character is swinging on vines or doing other "Tarzanesque" things. The sound clip used in the Weissmuller films has also been exclusively used for animated series appearances of Tarzan, and in the Tarzan television series, which starred Ron Ely, rather than having the actor providing Tarzan's voice for the series attempt to imitate the trademark yell. A comical version of this yell was performed by Ray Stevens in his 1969 novelty hit "Gitarzan". It was even used in the 1981 film Tarzan, the Ape Man. The yell is heard at Carolina Hurricanes home games. Comedian Carol Burnett would do the yell on request during a question and answer weekly session on her comedy sketch series. In the 1999 Disney animated film Tarzan based on the title character's franchise, the character himself lets out an updated version of his jungle call at various moments. A version of the yell even appeared in ' as Chewbacca swings on a vine towards an Imperial AT-ST walker on the forest moon of Endor. The yell is also heard in the third prequel ' in the battle of Kashyyyk scene of the Wookiee warriors swinging on the a vine onto an attacking tank droid. It was also used in the James Bond film Octopussy in 1983.

Trademark

The sound itself is a registered trademark and service mark, owned by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc.
Recognition of the trademark's registration within the European Union is uncertain. In late 2007, the Office for Harmonization in the Internal Market determined that attempts by ERB, Inc. to maintain such trademark must fail legally, reasoning that "hat has been filed as a graphic representation is from the outset not capable of serving as a graphic representation of the applied-for sound... The examiner was therefore correct to refuse the attribution of a filing date." Regardless, the trademark registration was updated in 2010 and 2014.

Other Tarzan yells

The first ever version of the yell can be found in the part-sound serial Tarzan the Tiger. This version is described as a "Nee-Yah!" noise.
In the 1932 Tarzan radio serial with James Pierce the yell sounds like "Taaar-maan-ganiii". In the ape language mentioned in the Tarzan novels "Tarmangani" means "White Ape".
A very similar cry was used for Burroughs' own Tarzan film, The New Adventures of Tarzan, shot concurrently with the MGM Weissmuller movies in Central America with Herman Brix as a cultured Tarzan. The yell can best be described as a "Mmmmm-ann-gann-niii" sound that gradually rises ever higher in pitch.
In the 1935 Mickey Mouse cartoon, Mickey's Garden, a beetle lets out a Tarzan yell and chases after Mickey Mouse and Pluto two times. It is later reused in the 1941 Disney animated feature Dumbo and the 1941 Goofy cartoon The Art of Self Defense.
Elmo Lincoln recreated his victory cry in a 1952 episode of You Asked for It.
Donkey Kong has also been known to use the Tarzan yell. His Tarzan yell is first heard in ' and later was used in DK Jungle Climber, Donkey Kong Country Returns and later in '.
Tarzan's yell is used as a melodic refrain in the Baltimora single "Tarzan Boy". This refrain plays in place of an ordinary Tarzan yell when Haru climbs and struggles to keep his balance on the top of a palm tree in Beverly Hills Ninja. The refrain was also used in a 1993 jungle-themed advert for Listerine's Cool Mint mouthwash.
In the 1999 animated film, the Tarzan yell is dubbed by Brian Blessed, who voiced the villain Clayton. This was done after Tony Goldwyn, who voiced the title character, blew his vocals.
Jane used a variation of the Tarzan Yell.
Carol Burnett has been associated with the Tarzan yell ever since doing it on her TV show, The Carol Burnett Show, which started in 1967 and ran for 11 years. This link from the Larry King show describes how she came to do it.