a night at the opera
by
Douglas Messerli
Michael
Maltese (screenplay and lyrics), Chuck Jones (director) What's Opera, Doc? /
1957 [animated cartoon]
Perhaps the best cartoon ever made, or at least one of the greatest and most popular, Chuck Jones’ What’s Opera Doc? dares to turn the lisping Elmer Fudd into one of opera’s greatest lovers Siegfried while transforming Bugs Bunny into the love of Siegfried’s life, Brünnhilde.
Dressed in magic gold helmet, armor, and spear, Elmer follow’s Bugs’ footsteps
while singing from "Ride of the Valkyries"—his version, “Kill the
wabbit!” Bugs challenges him, in an operatic mini-aria that ends in a musical
version of his famed “what’s up?” to which Elmer replies, leaping to the
highest mountain top in a remarkable abstract montage of color and cartoon art,
that he is now powerful and invincible and intends to do Bugs in.
Elmer is soon stopped midtrack, however, as
he encounters Bugs now in drag, performing as the beautiful Valkyrie Brünnhilde
while lying on the vast body of a white stallion. Together, for most of the
cartoon, in fact, Siegried and Brünnhilde sing of their love, Bugs as Brünnhilde also
now performing the Venusberg ballet from Wagner’s Tannhäuser.
As Elmer sweeps her up for a deep, loving
kiss, Bugs’ wig falls off, revealing his true identity, which—as often occurs
in Bugs Bunny cartoons—utterly infuriates Elmer. Once again, he has been
tricked. But in this case, under the visor of the golden helmet, he is no
longer helpless, calling down upon earth torrents of rain, lightning, and
earthquakes. A storm quickly brews, tearing up the mountains into which Bugs
has escaped.
But immediately upon spotting the rabbit,
dead, Elmer regrets his wrath, carrying off the cold body to Valhalla, Bugs
briefly awakening only to turn to the camera and address us: “Well, what did
you expect in an opera? A happy ending?”
Jones
never again directed an Elmer Fudd cartoon.
In a 2016
essay, “How Bugs Bunny and ‘Kill the Wabbit’ Inspired a Generation of Opera
Stars,” The Wall Street Journal writer Michael Phillips catalogued
comments from many opera stars and others involved in the opera world declaring
that it was their childhood experience with this work and other’s such as
Warner Brothers’ earlier Rabbitt of Seville in which they first
encountered opera and were, thereafter, drawn to the musical form. And most of
the transgender men and women actors interviewed in Sam Feder’s 2020
documentary Disclosure agree that one of the most important cinematic
moments to them while growing up was Bugs Bunny’s transformation into Brünnhilde.
If Bugs could make such a vast transformation, why couldn’t they?
In 1992, the United States Library of
Congress inducted this film into its National Film Registry.
Los
Angeles, March 22, 2026
Reprinted
from My Queer Cinema blog (March 2026).




