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Kitty from Kansas City

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Kitty from Kansas City was a 1930 song, famously sung by Hubert Prior Vallée, a French Vermont singer, popularly called Rudy Vallée. The song is about a Midwestern girl called Kitty and her apparent lack of intelligence, and obesity, due to a lyric: "She wasn't hard to see; she weighs 243."

Some recordings have been made by Vallée, the Imperial Dance Orchestra, and Johnny Walker.

Animated Film

Kitty from Kansas City
Directed byDave Fleischer
Produced byMax Fleischer
Fleischer Studios
Color processB&W
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Running time
7 mins

Kitty from Kansas City was the 47th part of the Screen Songs series. It includes an early (although very identical) version of Betty Boop.

Kitty (Betty) was walking to a Kansas City, Missouri, Kansas City train station, and she waited for her train to “Rudy Valley”, a place where her friend (Rudy) lives. As she waited, the train’s mail compartment sign snatches her. A mouse writes “Fe” behind mail, as a parody of the word “female”.

She reaches “Rudy Valley”, where the cartoon changes to a live-action performance of Vallée and his “Connecticut Yankees” singing and playing the song. Then, the scene goes back to the cartoon, where Kitty does some of the antics in the lyrics, the film ending with Kitty unpluggin a water stopping cork in a pond, with a parade of marine creature following Kitty.


The live-action performance (and the second cartoon sequence) have the pre-recorded sount track off, by about a second and a half.