Cymbal-banging monkey toy

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File:Musical Jolly Chimp1.jpg
A battery-operated musical jolly chimp manufactured by Daishin C.K.

A cymbal-banging monkey toy is a mechanical depiction of a monkey holding a cymbal in each hand. When activated it repeatedly bangs its cymbals together and, in some cases, bobs its head, chatters, grins, does flips, and more. There are both traditional wind-up versions as well as updated battery-operated cymbal-banging monkeys.

History

The Japanese company Daishin C.K. manufactured the classic cymbal monkey during the 1950s to 1970s under the name "Musical Jolly Chimp". It screeched and showed its teeth when its head was pressed. It had a black on/off lever on its back and came with a green arm tag.

Later versions from other toy makers copied the facial expressions but often changed the toy's outfit and name. In the mid-1960s through the early 1970s the Japanese-manufactured "Charley Chimp", was sold by street peddlers on the streets of lower Manhattan in NYC. Other brand names include "Wind-up Monkey Playing Cymbals" from Russ, "Pepi Tumbling Monkey with Cymbal" from Yano Man Toys, "Clockwork Musical Monkey with Clashing Cymbals", "Musical Monkey", "Magic Monkey", and "Jolly Chimp". There is also one called "Charlie Chimp" from Lincoln, which is different from "Charley Chimp".

With many other companies manufacturing various versions in the United States, Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan and the Philippines the toy's appearance varies. The change in manufacturing countries was primarily due to factories going out of business and seeking the lowest manufacturing costs. This is still the case today. The monkey has been seen wearing red and white striped pants and a yellow vest with red buttons, or red overalls and a stocking cap. Other outfits include green striped pants, blue striped pants, a red shirt with either green or blue pants, and plaid blue overalls. The monkeys are sometimes rendered with red rings painted around their wide-open eyes, creating an appearance some find disturbing, perhaps explaining their many appearances in horror, sci-fi and comedy media. They can also symbolize emptiness and stupidity.

In popular culture

  • In the 1955 film Rebel Without a Cause, James Dean is seen drunkenly playing with one in the middle of a street.
  • In the 1977 film Close Encounters Of The Third Kind one suddenly begins clapping its cymbals as a UFO nears a character's home.
  • In the first chapter of the TV series The Greatest American Hero, in 1981, the toy appears on the bedside table in the room of the son of the protagonist.
  • The toy is featured in "The Monkey", a Stephen King short story from his 1985 book Skeleton Crew, which uses the monkey as its cover image. The story also appears in the story's comic book adaptation by Glenn Chadbourne from The Secretary of Dreams.
  • The Devil's Gift, a 1984 horror film, exhibits similarities to the Stephen King story and was later re-edited as the 1996 film Merlin's Shop of Mystical Wonders.
  • The 1986 musical The Phantom of the Opera features a cymbal-banging monkey as the topper of a music box.
  • The Disney animated film Aladdin includes a scene in which the monkey Abu is transformed into one by the evil sorcerer Jafar.
  • The 1988 film Monkey Shines features a monkey with cymbals both on the promotional poster and in a limited trailer, despite the plot of the movie not being related to a toy monkey but instead an actual monkey trying to kill his guardian.
  • In the Japanese anime Houshin Engi, one momentarily appears as a visual pun on its original Chinese story, Fengshen Bang, in which a royal gift mentioned is an animal trained to play music.
  • The song "Over and Over" by electropop band Hot Chip features the lyric "over and over and over and over and over like a monkey with a miniature cymbal".
  • In The Powerpuff Girls Movie, one of Mojo Jojo's monkey minions, (Cha-ching Cha-ching) bears a resemblance to a cymbal-banging monkey toy.
  • A cymbal-banging monkey toy also appears in the latest Wallace & Gromit short, A Matter of Loaf and Death. When Gromit goes over to Piella Bakewell's mansion, he sees what looks like his love interest, Fluffles in her box, whimpering with a blanket over her. But when he goes over to take the blanket off, Gromit discovers it's not Fluffles at all, Piella had tricked him by hiding a cymbal-banging monkey toy in Fluffles' bed to sound like her, whimpering.
  • In the 2000 computer game Escape from Monkey Island, it is necessary to give a monkey a pair of shields to use as cymbals to obtain an accordion. The monkey will not stop banging the cymbals together for the rest of the game.
  • It can be seen in the Roxette music video "Joyride".
  • "Sliver" music video by Nirvana
  • "Again" music video by Alice in Chains
  • A giant cymbal-banging monkey is used by the Grinch to block out the sound of carolers in the 2000 live action film How the Grinch Stole Christmas.
  • The toy has been seen a number of times in the works of Matt Groening. It was first seen in the 2000 season 12 Simpsons episode "The Computer Wore Menace Shoes", and then in the 2003 season four Futurama episode "Obsoletely Fabulous" as an obsolete robot. It is then seen in the 2007 film The Simpsons Movie, in which Homer Simpson imagines the toy, who urges him to concentrate instead of letting his mind wander.
  • The rock and roll band Le Havre from France is called the Monkey Toy Army after Cymbal-banging monkey toys.
  • The 2004 American film comedy Euro Trip features a cymbal-banging monkey toy in club Vandersexxx used as an instrument of pleasure and as part of a Kuleshov effect throughout the sexual encounter at the club.
  • In 2005 the Supernatural episode "Home" (Season 1, Episode 9) paid homage by having a clapping monkey in the scene where the plumber has his hand muitliated by a garbage disposal in their original home (which became haunted) in Kansas.
  • The 2006 book The Wall and the Wing by Laura Ruby features sinister mechanical monkeys who steal memories for pennies.
  • It is featured as an explosive weapon in the video game Call of Duty: World at War, in which it is seen in Map Pack 3 as the "Monkey Bomb".
  • It is seen in Doctor Who, (new) series 1, episode 9: "The Empty Child" when the Empty Child talks over the monkey's chattering.
  • James Franco portrays a serial killer named "Franco" on the daytime soap opera General Hospital. One of the character's trademarks is a cymbal-playing monkey. He has a large one, and a miniature version of the toy.[episode needed]
  • In the 2010 animated film Toy Story 3, one of Lotso's henchmen is a cymbal-banging monkey. He watches the security cameras at Sunnyside Daycare and sounds an alarm over its P.A. system if any toys try to escape at night. Chatter Telephone warns Woody about the monkey. Later Woody and Slinky Dog defeat the monkey and tie him up with tape.
  • In the 2010 video game Call of Duty: Black Ops a variant of the cymbal-banging monkey is occasionally obtained from a mystery box in "Zombie mode". It has an explosive element attached to it and explodes after a few seconds. It is used as a secondary grenade and appears in the zombie maps "Der Riese", "Kino der Toten", "FIVE", and "Shangri-La".
  • In the 2009 video game Wet, the cymbal-banging monkey is a constant symbol in its main menu and loading screens, as a reference to the game's tagline, "Get ready for some monkey business". The collectible elements in the game are also cymbal-banging monkeys, which you localize by hearing their cymbals.
  • Pawn Stars episode 2012 - S04E01
  • In the 2011 Animated series Stella and Sam, from the episode Laugh-A-Bit soup, it shows the Cymbal Banging Monkey that Stella held to make a Laugh-A-Bit soup since Sam stubbed his toe.
  • In Fallout 4-videogame, Raiders use these monkeys as alarms to detect intruders.

References