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Entries in birthday (6)

Tuesday
Feb152011

"Happy Birthday, Mother" by Diane Disney Miller

The building that houses our Museum, 104 Montgomery Street, was built in 1899.  Earlier that year, on February 15, a daughter was born in Spalding, Idaho, to Willard and Jeanette Bounds.  Lillian Marie, my mother, was their tenth and last child.  She grew up in Lapwai, Idaho, where the headquarters of the Nez Perce Tribal Reservation was located.  Her father was at various times during his life an Indian scout for General Crook (this I learned from my Aunt Grace, her oldest sister), a blacksmith, and a Deputy U.S. Marshall, who once drove a wagon from Lewiston to Spalding to deliver a $626,000 payment in twenty dollar gold pieces that the U.S. government paid the Nez Perce Indians to acquire their land. (This last bit I learned from Dick Riggs in an article he wrote for the Nez Perce County Historical Society.)

My mother spoke often, and fondly, of her childhood on the Reservation.  Spalding as a town no longer exists, but is marked with a sign, "Site of the former town of Spalding."  She attended grade school there, then high school in Lapwai, where she played basketball.  Many years ago my husband's parents were on a driving trip in that part of the country, and, in conversation with a pleasant couple they'd met, Ron's mother mentioned that her son was married to Walt Disney's daughter, whose mother had come from that area.  The man volunteered that he'd gone to school with mother and her siblings and shared, "Those Bounds girls were good basketball players!"  That was something I hadn't heard, and I am still impressed.  

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Monday
Dec062010

The Influence of Walt

Continuing our celebration of Walt Disney's birthday, we asked guest blogger, Jonas Rivera--an Academy Award-winning producer at PIXAR--to share his thoughts on what Walt meant to him and how Walt's legacy influenced him for the future.

It's hard to imagine that there's anything to say that hasn't already been said about Walt Disney.  I've spent a good hunk of my life trying to learn about him, his work and his influence.  It's impossible really, to summarize how much he means to the world.  So instead, I'll try to summarize what he means to me.

My parents took me to Disneyland when I was three years old.  I remember as if it were yesterday.  My Dad's awesome Kodachrome slides may have helped me retain the details over the years.  Two years later, I saw my first movie. Snow White and the Seven Dwarves blew my mind.  I was five years old, but at that moment I knew that my true love was animation.  

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Sunday
Dec052010

Happy Birthday, Walt!

In honor of Walt's birthday, we asked Paul Anderson to share this story with us about Walt's dedication to building his dream:


 

To anyone who has read a Walt Disney biography, you know the story of Walt Disney's 1926 Moon roadster. Walt was quite proud of that car, and it was the very automobile he used to court Lilly.

However, after losing Oswald, Walt and Roy fell on hard financial times. Of course, that didn't seem to disturb the ever-optimistic Walt Disney. Instead, he came up with a new character, Mortimer Mouse (aka Mickey).

While there are a number of versions of how Walt came up with Mickey, there is only one story of the relationship between his Moon roadster and Mickey Mouse. This story, is considered to be accepted truth ... well, if there ever was any doubt about it, I offer proof now (and the actual dates).

When Walt was back in New York recording the sound for Mickey's third cartoon, Steamboat Willie, he started to run short on money. He kept in constant contact with Roy back in Los Angeles, and they were looking for extra money anywhere they could.

Walt asked Roy in the summer of 1928 to mortgage their Lyric Avenue homes for additional funds. Still, due to problems with the recording of the soundtrack, more money was desperately needed, so Walt, demonstrating his faith in the project, informed his beloved brother to sell his beloved Moon roadster (the latter being the more likely to bring in the cash). The money was not only needed for the work underway in New York, but there are several accounts that it was also needed to meet payroll at the Hyperion Studio (2719 Hyperion).

In digging around through various newspaper morgues in the past, I have come up with an unbelievable number of Disney related articles (5000 plus--). Towards the latter days of my newspaper research, it was getting discouraging, as rarely would anything show up that I did not already have (thanks to a database I started from day one, I actually knew).

So I got the bright (my wife would say insane) idea of searching for various historical Disney ads. So I present here  Walt's Los Angeles Times classified advertisement (placed by Roy O. Disney ... or perhaps Lilly or Edna) to sell said "beloved" Moon roadster.

The first time it ran was on Saturday November 3, 1928, and the car was listed at $525. Apparently there was no interest at this price that day or on the following Sunday, Monday, or Tuesday, so the advertisement was run once again on Wednesday the 7th of November.

This time, the price was lowered to $475 and, it sold! Mickey got his soundtrack. Disney started an empire. Payroll was made. Thank goodness for this little classified ad (well, and for Walt's foresight!).


HAPPY BIRTHDAY, WALT!!!!

Thursday
Nov182010

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MICKEY!!!!

In honor of Mickey's special day, noted film historian and author, J.B. Kaufman, penned this ode to everyone's favorite mouse:

Thursday, the 18th of November, marks an important birthday in Disney history: the birthday of Mickey Mouse. Today, the venerable mouse turns 82 years old.

          Earliest known drawing of Mickey Mouse

Over the years, other dates have been put forward as Mickey’s birthday. For a time during the 1930s, the 28th of September was selected as the big day. The Disney studio was not only aware of this claim, but actually encouraged it, because their distributor, United Artists, used it as the basis for a promotional campaign. During “Mickey Mouse Birthday Week” in September, United Artists encouraged theaters to book multiple Mouse cartoons, as many as six or seven in a single program. Mickey was at the height of his popularity during those years, and the press obligingly picked up the story each September, noting the significance of his birthday.

Today, however, we recognize 18 November as the official date. That’s because, on that date in 1928, Steamboat Willie opened at New York’s Colony Theater. It wasn’t the first time Mickey had appeared on a theater screen—Plane Crazy, the first Mickey Mouse short, had been previewed in theaters as early as the previous spring—but neither Plane Crazy nor the followup picture, The Gallopin’ Gaucho, had succeeded in finding a distributor.

Steamboat Willie was different. It was Walt Disney’s first sound film, and it marked a significant advance over the sound cartoons made by other producers. Walt and his team hadn’t just tacked a soundtrack onto their film; they had planned Steamboat Willie as a sound film from the ground up, with comedy business that used sound effects and music in an integral way. The result was a fresh, original cartoon with clever musical gags. It culminated in Mickey’s makeshift performance of “Turkey in the Straw” on the deck of the boat, using livestock and kitchen utensils as his “instruments.” It was a star-making performance.

 

That fact was made abundantly clear on 18 November 1928, when Steamboat Willie opened at the Colony as part of a program with the sound feature Gang War. Delighted audiences and reviewers took note of this unusual cartoon. Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times wrote: “It is an ingenious piece of work with a good deal of fun.” Variety called it “a wow” and noted: “Giggles came so fast at the Colony they were stumbling over each other.”

This was only a beginning, of course, and most cities across America would not see Steamboat Willie until months later in 1929. But it was clear from the beginning that this cartoon was something original and different, and so was its star. Mickey’s personality—cheerful, clever, resourceful—was unmistakable from the start, and once his success story began, there was no stopping it. Small wonder we observe that historic occasion as his birthday!

By the next November, Mickey was well known from coast to coast—and overseas as well, since by then a European distributor had contracted to distribute the Mickey Mouse series. He had also been joined by a second series of Disney shorts, the Silly Symphonies.

By November 1930, Mickey’s worldwide success was firmly established. Mickey Mouse character merchandise had started to appear, leading off with storybooks, dolls, and other toys. A Mickey Mouse comic strip was appearing in daily newspapers. A chain of Mickey Mouse Clubs, started as an impromptu stunt by a California exhibitor, was rapidly spreading to other states. And Walt’s rival cartoon producers had begun paying Mickey the ultimate tribute: imitation. From one studio after another came cartoons featuring mice that were blatant ripoffs of Mickey.

Around this time, Mickey’s second birthday, the Disney studio started work on a special short to mark the occasion: The Birthday Party. In this cartoon Minnie and the rest of the gang conspired to throw a surprise party for Mickey. The party featured gifts, music, dancing, and of course a cake adorned with two candles. The Birthday Party was not completed and released until January 1931—a fact which probably didn’t seem important at the time, since hardly anyone outside the studio knew when Mickey’s “birthday” actually was. But this may have contributed to uncertainty and confusion over the date later on.

Today it’s a different story: Disney fans around the world are well aware of Mickey’s big day. As the date approaches, it seems only fair to point out that the same day, 18 November, is also Minnie’s birthday. After all, Minnie was there at Mickey’s side in Steamboat Willie—and, for that matter, had also appeared with him in the two previous pictures, Plane Crazy and The Gallopin’ Gaucho. This year, we’re wishing “happy birthday” to both of the world’s most famous mice. They’ve been making the world a happier place for 82 years, and they’re still going strong.

  

Wednesday
Sep292010

SATURDAY NIGHT SOIREE!

The Walt Disney Family Museum is staying up late to celebrate its FIRST birthday with a party, which includes extended hours and HALF-OFF admission from 6PM to 9PM on Saturday, October 2! Swing by our SATURDAY NIGHT SOIREE for some upbeat music, icy cold beers and wine (the cash bar will be open until 9!), dancing, and an amazing night to remember. It’s a great time to tour our state-of-the-art galleries that tell the remarkable life story of Walt Disney.

Saturday, October 2nd from 6PM to 9PM @ The Walt Disney Family Museum, 104 Montgomery Street, The Presidio of San Francisco.


Tickets available ONLINE now, and will be available at the door! (Last ticket sale for entry into the galleries is for 8PM, however the Museum will stay open until 9PM.)