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Mickey's Follies

United States

1929

6 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
English
  • Currently 2.9/5 Stars.
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DIR Ub Iwerks, Wilfred Jackson

PROD Walt Disney

CAST Walt Disney, Marcellite Garner

MUSIC Carl W. Stalling

ANIM Ub Iwerks

Synopsis

Mickey puts on a show in his barnyard. A short dramatic scene by a chicken and rooster; an operatic ode by Patricia Pig, and then the main attraction: Mickey sings and plays his theme song, then dances to it. –IMDb

Director

Original

Ub Iwerks

Ub Iwerks was known at Disney for his animation genius, his technical wizardry and his unusual name. In February 1929, Walt Disney and his New York distributors were extremely pleased with Ub’s animation on the Mickey Mouse cartoons, about which Walt wrote a letter to his wife, Lilly: "Everyone praises Ubb’s (his name was later shortened to “Ub”) artwork and jokes at his funny name," wrote Walt. “The oddness of Ubb’s name is an asset — it makes people look twice when they see it. Tell Ubb that the New York animators take off their hats to his animation…”

As an animator, Ub worked at record-breaking speed. He animated the first Mickey Mouse silent cartoon, “Plane Crazy,” entirely by himself within a three-week period, completing as many as 700 drawings a day. (Today, the average animator produces 80 to 100 drawings a week.)

Later, as a technical magician, Ub invented technology that would revolutionize feature animation, including the multihead optical printer, used in… read more

Original

Wilfred Jackson

Walt Disney first came to rely upon Wilfred Jackson’s genius and sense of perfection, the year Mickey Mouse was born, 1928. At that time, Walt had conceived the notion of marrying music and animation during what was the age of silent movies. Then a new kid in the Studio’s animation department, Wilfred devised a method of synchronizing animation with music, by using a metronome to mark time that could then be converted to a music track. The innovation, which was featured in Mickey Mouse’s debut film “Steamboat Willie,” revolutionized the entertainment medium and competing studios spent more than a year trying to figure out Disney’s production “secret.”

Walt quickly promoted “Jaxon,” as he was called, from animator to director. And as Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston wrote in their book, “Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life,” — "Jaxon was easily the most creative of the directors, but he was also the most “picky” and took a lot of kidding about his thoroughness."

Born… read more

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