Tarzan yell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Tarzan yell 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.

Although the yell ostensibly was that of Weissmuller, different stories exist as to how the sound effect was created. According to the newspaper columnist L. M. Boyd (circa 1970), "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.[1] Another widely published notion concerns the use of an Austrian yodel played backwards at abnormally fast speed.

The Tarzan yell 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, rather than having the actor providing Tarzan's voice for the series attempt to imitate the trademark yell.

An even weirder cry was used for Burroughs' own Tarzan films, shot concurrently with the MGM Weismuller movies in Central America with Herman Brix as a cultured Tarzan. The yell can best be described as a sound that gradually rises ever higher in pitch.

The sound itself has been trademarked by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. [2]

Contents

Non Tarzan related films and television shows where the Weissmuller Tarzan yell can be heard include:

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