Rankin-Bass, the stop motion puppet masters of animated classics like Rudolph, The Red-Nosed Reindeer and Santa Claus is Coming to Town, had a few offerings for Easter.
The first, and perhaps the most well known, was 1971's Here Comes Peter Cottontail. It tells the tale of a lazy rabbit who is destined to inherit the mantle of the Easter Bunny, but he is challenged to a contest for the post by his nemesis Irontail. Irontail lost his fluffy tail when a child ran over it with roller skates and he is bent on making Easter miserable. I particularly like that Irontail delivers grey and brown dull eggs while riding on the back of a bat. Peter parties and oversleeps and loses the initial egg delivery contest to the villain. The story is fun and includes a time machine called a Yestermorrowmobile in which Peter travels to other holidays and tries to deliver eggs during the Fourth of July, Halloween, and St. Patrick's day. In the Rankin-Bass tradition, Santa Claus gets involved and everything works out in the end. Voice talent includes the work of Danny Kaye, Casey Kasem, Vincent Price, and Paul Frees.
In 1977, Rankin-Bass brought back the narrator S. D. Kluger (Fred Astaire) from the Santa Claus classic to tell the story of The Easter Bunny is Comin' to Town. It follows a similar and familiar story vein, as an orphaned rabbit Sunny is taken in and raised by a happy group. In an effort to deliver his chicken friends' eggs he paints them different colors. He runs into Gadzooks, a ferocious bear, who learns the true meaning of friendship. This special mines much familiar Rankin-Bass territory and feels redundant despite the good animation and technique.

I still watch it almost every year. It is a true Hollywood classic. It is campy and overwrought but sometimes particularly moving. They sure don't make them like that any more.
So what did I miss? And what were your favorites? Were you a fan of the animation or did you prefer the extravaganza from DeMille? Share your thoughts and enjoy the weekend.