"An Egyptian Gyp" (1929): In 1929, as the film industry transitioned to widespread use of synchronized sound, New York City-based Kolortone Productions released a series of six Kolortone Kartoons, featuring color animation via the Brewster Color process and synchronized music, dialogue, and sound effects. Among the six color cartoons was "An Egyptian Gyp", later theorized to be a repackaged version of this "Red Head Comedies" entry, "Cleopatra and Her Easy Mark". Kolortone's version runs about three-and-a-half minutes, possibly edited down from the original length, and features no intertitles which may have been present in the 1923 release. The surviving print in the Thunderbean Animation archive is tinted green and is silent, lacking both the full color and synchronized sound advertised by Kolortone in 1929.