Swing Shift Cinderella

Swing Shift Cinderella is an animated cartoon short subject. This cartoon is in the same vein as Red Hot Riding Hood, it's predecessor. Frank Graham voiced the wolf, and Colleen Collins voiced Cinderella, with Imogene Lynn providing her singing voice.

Plot
At the beginning, the Big Bad Wolf is chasing the young version of Little Red Riding Hood from the beginning of Red Hot Riding Hood, but then they stop and notice that they're in the cartoon. The Wolf shoos away Red and decides to meet Cinderella. He takes a taxi to her house, but she sternly rebuffs him. Eventually, Cinderella calls her Fairy Godmother to get rid of him and set her up for the ball that night. The second the Fairy Godmother hears there's a Wolf she rushes right over. The Fairy Godmother traps the Wolf, then gives Cinderella a sexy dress and transforms a pumpkin into a Woodie for her to go the ball, but Cinderella has to get home by midnight (just like in the classic fairy tale).

The oversexed Fairy Godmother then keeps the Wolf busy. She appears before him in an old-fashioned 1890s swimsuit ("Miss Repulsive 1898") and then an evening gown before trying to snuggle up to him on the couch. She chases him all around Cinderella's house and, eventually, to the nightclub where Cinderella's performing (the Wolf got the wand briefly and turned Cinderella's bathtub into a convertible; the Fairy Godmother turned a trash can into a Jeep). At one point Wolf accidentally kisses the Godmother, thinking she was Cinderella, which only further deepens the Fairy's lust for the Wolf. More chasing ensues, though more low-key, until Cinderella comes out on-stage and performs an exotic dance while singing the song "Oh, Wolfie" (this performance was reused in 1949's Little Rural Riding Hood, with new "libido-reaction" gags inserted in place of the ones seen here). The Wolf runs to dance with Cinderella on stage but the smitten Godmother intercepts him and she in turn dances with the Wolf. The Fairy Godmother also chains the Wolf to her leg so he can't get too far away from her.

After the performance, more brief chasing ensues until the clock strikes midnight. Cinderella rushes home, the things conjured up by her Fairy Grandmother reverting to her junky stuff, but she makes it in time to catch the bus to the factory; turns out that she's actually a Rosie the Riveter by night. In the ultimate punchline, the bus, in addition to Cinderella, is full of wolves, who start wolf-whistling and catcalling at her.