Silly Symphony
Silly Symphony is an American animated series of 75 musical short films produced by Walt Disney Productions from 1929 to 1939. As the series name implies, the Silly Symphonies were originally intended as whimsical accompaniments to pieces of music.[1] As such, the films usually had independent continuity and did not feature continuing characters, unlike the Mickey Mouse shorts produced by Disney at the same time (exceptions to this include Three Little Pigs, The Tortoise and the Hare, and Three Orphan Kittens, which all had sequels). The series is notable for its innovation with Technicolor and the multiplane motion picture camera, as well as its introduction of the character Donald Duck making his first appearance in the Silly Symphony cartoon The Wise Little Hen in 1934. Seven shorts won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film.[1]
The series also spawned a Disney media franchise that included the Silly Symphony newspaper comic strip distributed by King Features Syndicate, the Dell comic book series Silly Symphonies, as well as several children's books, many of which were based on Silly Symphony cartoons.
The Silly Symphonies returned to theaters with its re-issues and re-releases, and eventually tied with Joseph Barbera and William Hanna's Tom and Jerry's record for most Oscar wins for a cartoon series in the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film category.
Production
While Walt Disney and Carl Stalling, a theatre organist from Kansas City, were in New York to add sound to the Mickey Mouse shorts The Gallopin' Gaucho, The Barn Dance and Plane Crazy, Stalling suggested the idea of making a series of musical animated shorts that combined the latest sound technology with storytelling. At first Walt did not seem interested, but when they returned to New York in February to record the sound for a fifth Mickey Mouse cartoon, The Opry House, they also recorded the soundtrack for The Skeleton Dance, the type of short that Stalling had suggested and the first Silly Symphony cartoon.[2]
Within the animation industry, the series is known for its use by Walt Disney as a platform for experimenting with processes, techniques, characters, and stories in order to further the art of animation. It also provided a venue to try out techniques and technologies, such as Technicolor, special effects animation, and dramatic storytelling in animation, that would be crucial to Disney's plans to eventually begin making feature-length animated films.[1]
Shortly after the switch to United Artists, the series became even more popular. Walt Disney had seen some of Dr. Herbert Kalmus' tests for a new three-strip, full-color Technicolor process, which would replace the previous two-tone Technicolor process. Disney signed a contract with Technicolor which gave the Disney studio exclusive rights to the new three-strip process through the end of 1935, and had a 60% complete Symphony, Flowers and Trees, scrapped and redone in full color. Flowers and Trees was the first animated film to use the three-strip Technicolor process,[3] and was a phenomenal success. Within a year, the now-in-Technicolor Silly Symphonies series had popularity and success that matched (and later surpassed) that of the Mickey Mouse cartoons. The contract Disney had with Technicolor would also later be extended another five years as well.[4]
The success of Silly Symphonies would be tremendously boosted after Three Little Pigs was released in 1933 and became a box office sensation; the film was featured in movie theaters for several months and also featured the hit song that became the anthem of the Great Depression, "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf".[5] Several Silly Symphonies entries, including Three Little Pigs (1933), The Grasshopper and the Ants (1934), The Tortoise and the Hare (1935), The Country Cousin (1936), The Old Mill (1937), Wynken, Blynken, and Nod (1938), and The Ugly Duckling (1939, with an earlier black-and-white version from 1931), are among the most notable films produced by Walt Disney.
Due to problems related to Disney's scheduled productions of cartoons, a deal was made with Harman and Ising to produce three Silly Symphonies: Merbabies, Pipe Dreams, and The Little Bantamweight. Only one of these cartoons, Merbabies, ended up being bought by Disney, the remaining two Harman-Ising Silly Symphonies were then sold to MGM who released them as Happy Harmonies cartoons.[6] Disney ceased production of Silly Symphonies in 1939.[7]
Distribution
The series was first distributed by Pat Powers from 1929 to 1930 and released by Celebrity Productions (1929–1930) indirectly through Columbia Pictures. The original basis of the cartoons was musical novelty, and the musical scores of the first cartoons were composed by Carl Stalling.[8]
Columbia Pictures
After viewing "The Skeleton Dance", the manager at Columbia Pictures quickly became interested in distributing the series, and gained the perfect opportunity to acquire Silly Symphonies after Disney broke with Celebrity Productions head Pat Powers after Powers signed Disney's colleague Ub Iwerks to a studio contract. Columbia Pictures (1930–1932) agreed to pick up the direct distribution of the Mickey Mouse series on the condition that they would have exclusive rights to distribute the Silly Symphonies series; at first, Silly Symphonies could not even come close to the popularity Mickey Mouse had. The original title cards to the shorts released by Celebrity Productions and Columbia Pictures were all redrawn after Walt Disney stopped distributing his cartoons through them. Meanwhile, more competition spread for Disney after Max Fleischer's flapper cartoon character Betty Boop began to gain more and more popularity after starring in the cartoon Minnie the Moocher; by August 1932, Betty Boop became so popular that the Talkartoon series was renamed as Betty Boop cartoons.
United Artists
In 1932, after falling out with Columbia Pictures, Disney began distributing his products through United Artists. UA refused to distribute the Silly Symphonies unless Disney associated Mickey Mouse with them somehow, resulting in the "Mickey Mouse presents a Silly Symphony" title cards and posters that introduced and promoted the series during its five-year run for UA. United Artists also agreed to double the budget for each cartoon from $7,500 to $15,000.[9]
RKO Radio Pictures
In 1937, Disney signed a distribution deal with RKO Radio Pictures to distribute the Silly Symphony cartoons, along with the Mickey Mouse series. RKO would continue to distribute until the end of the series in 1939.
Home media
Several Symphonies have been released in home media, most of the time as bonus shorts that relate to something within various Disney films. For instance, the original Dumbo VHS included Father Noah's Ark, The Practical Pig and Three Orphan Kittens as bonus shorts to make up for the film's short length. In the UK, several Symphonies were released in compilations under Walt Disney Home Video's "Storybook Favourites" brand. The three "Storybook Favourites Shorts" volumes released included among others, Three Little Pigs, The Tortoise and the Hare and the remake of The Ugly Duckling.
On December 4, 2001, Disney released "Silly Symphonies" as part of its DVD series "Walt Disney Treasures". On December 19, 2006, "More Silly Symphonies" was released, completing the collection and allowing the cartoons to be completely available to the public.[1]
Some Disney Blu-ray discs includes Silly Symphonies as high definition special features.[10] Show White and the Seven Dwarves includes six, Beauty and the Beast and Dumbo both contain two and Pixar's A Bug's Life contains one.
The Silly Symphony shorts originally aired on Turner Classic Movies' period program block "Treasures from the Disney Vault".
List of films
The Silly Symphonies are listed here in production order.
# | Film | Original release date | Director | Music | Notes | Running time (minutes) | Based on |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | The Skeleton Dance | August 22, 1929 | Walt Disney | Carl Stalling |
|
5:31 | |
2 | El Terrible Toreador | September 26, 1929 |
|
6:14 | |||
3 | Springtime | October 24, 1929 | Ub Iwerks |
|
6:14 | ||
4 | Hell's Bells | November 21, 1929 | 5:49 | ||||
5 | The Merry Dwarfs | December 19, 1929 | Walt Disney | 5:57 | |||
6 | Summer | January 16, 1930 | Ub Iwerks | 5:51 | |||
7 | Autumn | February 13, 1930 |
|
6:24 | |||
8 | Cannibal Capers | March 20, 1930 | Burt Gillett | Bert Lewis |
|
6:15 (5:56 cut) | |
9 | Night | July 31, 1930 | Walt Disney |
|
6:53 | ||
10 | Frolicking Fish | June 21, 1930 | Burt Gillett |
|
6:02 | ||
11 | Arctic Antics | June 26, 1930 | Ub Iwerks (Possibly) Burt Gillett (Possibly) |
|
7:00 | ||
12 | Midnight in a Toy Shop | August 16, 1930 | Wilfred Jackson |
|
7:34 | ||
13 | Monkey Melodies | September 26, 1930 | Burt Gillett |
|
7:00 | ||
14 | Winter | October 30, 1930 | 6:53 | ||||
15 | Playful Pan | December 27, 1930 | 6:59 | ||||
16 | Birds of a Feather | February 3, 1931 | 8:04 | ||||
17 | Mother Goose Melodies | April 16, 1931 | Bert Lewis Frank Churchill |
8:10 | Mother Goose | ||
18 | The China Plate | May 23, 1931 | Wilfred Jackson | Frank Churchill | 7:32 | ||
19 | The Busy Beavers | June 30, 1931 | Burt Gillett | 7:07 | |||
20 | The Cat's Out | July 28, 1931 | Wilfred Jackson |
|
7:20 | ||
21 | Egyptian Melodies | August 27, 1931 | 6:20 | ||||
22 | The Clock Store | September 28, 1931 | 7:12 | ||||
23 | The Spider and the Fly | October 23, 1931 | 7:14 | ||||
24 | The Fox Hunt | November 20, 1931 | Frank Churchill | 6:22 | |||
25 | The Ugly Duckling | December 17, 1931 |
|
7:11 | The Ugly Duckling | ||
26 | The Bird Store | January 16, 1932 | Frank Churchill | 6:52 | |||
27 | The Bears and the Bees | February 15, 1932 | 6:18 | ||||
28 | Just Dogs | May 16, 1932 | Burt Gillett | Bert Lewis |
|
7:13 | |
29 | Flowers and Trees | July 23, 1932 |
|
7:49 | |||
30 | Bugs in Love | October 1, 1932 | Bert Lewis |
|
7:04 | ||
31 | King Neptune | October 15, 1932 | 7:11 | ||||
32 | Babes in the Woods | November 19, 1932 |
|
7:74 | Hansel and Gretel | ||
33 | Santa's Workshop | December 10, 1932 | Wilfred Jackson | Frank Churchill |
|
6:37 | |
34 | Birds in the Spring | March 13, 1933 | David Hand | Bert Lewis Frank Churchill |
7:32 | ||
35 | Father Noah's Ark | April 8, 1933 | Wilfred Jackson | Leigh Harline | 8:24 | Noah's Ark | |
36 | Three Little Pigs | May 25, 1933 | Burt Gillett | Frank Churchill Carl Stalling |
|
8:41 | Three Little Pigs |
37 | Old King Cole | July 29, 1933 | David Hand | Frank Churchill Bert Lewis |
7:28 | Old King Cole | |
38 | Lullaby Land | August 19, 1933 | Wilfred Jackson | Frank Churchill Leigh Harline |
7:22 | ||
39 | The Pied Piper | September 16, 1933 | Leigh Harline | 7:32 | Pied Piper of Hamelin | ||
40 | The Night Before Christmas | December 9, 1933 |
|
8:27 | A Visit from St. Nicholas | ||
41 | The China Shop | January 13, 1934 | 8:23 | ||||
42 | The Grasshopper and the Ants | February 10, 1934 |
|
8:24 | The Ant and the Grasshopper | ||
43 | Funny Little Bunnies | March 24, 1934 | Frank Churchill Leigh Harline |
|
7:10 | ||
44 | The Big Bad Wolf | April 14, 1934 | Burt Gillett | Frank Churchill |
|
9:21 | Little Red Riding Hood |
45 | The Wise Little Hen | May 3, 1934 (Carthay Circle Theatre)[12] June 7, 1934[12] |
Wilfred Jackson | Leigh Harline |
|
7:43 | The Little Red Hen |
46 | The Flying Mouse | July 14, 1934 | David Hand | Frank Churchill Bert Lewis |
9:17 | ||
47 | Peculiar Penguins | September 1, 1934 | Wilfred Jackson | Leigh Harline | 9:21 | ||
48 | The Goddess of Spring | November 3, 1934 | Leigh Harline | 9:48 | |||
49 | The Tortoise and the Hare | January 5, 1935 | Frank Churchill |
|
8:36 | ||
50 | The Golden Touch | March 22, 1935 | Walt Disney | 10:34 | |||
51 | The Robber Kitten | April 20, 1935 | David Hand | 7:48 | |||
52 | Water Babies | May 11, 1935 | Wilfred Jackson | Leigh Harline | 8:17 | The Water-Babies | |
53 | The Cookie Carnival | May 25, 1935 | Ben Sharpsteen | Leigh Harline |
|
8:00 | |
54 | Who Killed Cock Robin? | June 29, 1935 | David Hand | Frank Churchill |
|
8:30 | Cock Robin |
55 | Music Land | October 5, 1935 | Wilfred Jackson | Leigh Harline | 9:34 | ||
56 | Three Orphan Kittens | October 26, 1935 | David Hand | Frank Churchill |
|
8:55 | |
57 | Cock o' the Walk | November 30, 1935 | Ben Sharpsteen | Frank Churchill Alfred Hay Malotte |
8:23 | ||
58 | Broken Toys | December 14, 1935 | Ben Sharpsteen | Alfred Hay Malotte |
|
7:53 | |
59 | Elmer Elephant | March 28, 1936 | Wilferd Jackson | Leigh Harline | 8:29 | ||
60 | Three Little Wolves | April 18, 1936 | David Hand | Frank Churchill | 9:26 | The Boy Who Cried Wolf | |
61 | Toby Tortoise Returns | August 22, 1936 | Wilfred Jackson | Leigh Harline | 7:34 | ||
62 | Three Blind Mouseketeers | September 26, 1936 | David Hand | Alfred Hay Malotte | 8:43 | ||
63 | The Country Cousin | October 31, 1936 | David Hand Wilfred Jackson |
Leigh Harline |
|
9:15 | |
64 | Mother Pluto | November 14, 1936 | Wilfred Jackson | Leigh Harline |
|
8:35 | |
65 | More Kittens | December 19, 1936 | David Hand | Frank Churchill |
|
8:11 | |
66 | Woodland Café | March 13, 1937 | Wilfred Jackson | Leigh Harline | 7:37 | ||
67 | Little Hiawatha | May 15, 1937 | David Hand | Alfred Hay Malotte |
|
9:12 | The Song of Hiawatha |
68 | The Old Mill | November 5, 1937 | Wilfred Jackson | Leigh Harline |
|
8:42 | |
69 | Wynken, Blynken and Nod | May 27, 1938 | Graham Heid | 8:52 | |||
70 | Moth and the Flame | April 1, 1938 | David Hand Burt Gillett Dick Heumer |
Alfred Hay Malotte | 7:45 | ||
71 | Merbabies | December 9, 1938 | Rudolf Ising, Vernon Stallings | Scott Bradley |
|
8:37 | |
72 | Farmyard Symphony | October 14, 1938 | Jack Cutting | Leigh Harline | 8:11 | ||
73 | Mother Goose Goes Hollywood | December 23, 1938 | Wilfred Jackson | Edward Plumb |
|
7:32 | |
74 | The Practical Pig | February 24, 1939 | Duck Rickard | Frank Churchill Paul Smith |
|
8:21 | |
75 | The Ugly Duckling | April 7, 1939 | Jack Cutting Clyde Geronimi |
Alfred Hay Malotte |
|
8:59 | The Ugly Duckling |
Reception
Disney's experiments were widely praised within the film industry, and the Silly Symphonies won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film seven times, maintaining a six-year-hold on the category after it was first introduced. This record was matched only by MGM's Tom and Jerry series during the 1940s and 1950s.
Legacy
The Symphonies changed the course of Disney Studio history when Walt's plans to direct his first feature cartoon became problematic after his warm-up to the task The Golden Touch was widely seen (even by Disney himself) as stiff and slowly paced. This motivated him to embrace his role as being the producer and providing creative oversight (especially of the story) for Snow White while tasking David Hand to handle the actual directing.[13]
Silly Symphonies brought along many imitators, including Warner Bros. cartoon series Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies, MGM's Happy Harmonies, and later, Universal's Swing Symphony.
Years later after the Silly Symphonies ended, Disney occasionally produced a handful of one-shot cartoons, playing the same style as the Silly Symphony series. Unlike the Silly Symphonies canon, most of these "Specials" have a narration, usually by Disney legend Sterling Holloway.
The 1999–2000 television series Mickey Mouse Works used the Silly Symphonies title for some of its new cartoons, but unlike the original cartoons, these did feature continuing characters.
As of 2021, three of the Silly Symphony shorts (Three Little Pigs, The Old Mill, and Flowers and Trees), have been selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress, for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[14][15][16]
Comic adaptations
A Sunday Silly Symphony comic strip ran in newspapers from January 10, 1932, to July 12, 1942.[17] The strip featured adaptations of some of the Silly Symphony cartoons, including Birds of a Feather, The Robber Kitten, Elmer Elephant, Farmyard Symphony and Little Hiawatha.[17] This strip began with a two-year sequence about Bucky Bug, a character based on the bugs in Bugs in Love.
There was also an occasional Silly Symphonies comic book, with nine issues published by Dell Comics from September 1952 to February 1959.[18] The first issue of this anthology comic featured adaptations of some Silly Symphony cartoons, including The Grasshopper and the Ants, Three Little Pigs, The Goddess of Spring and Mother Pluto, but it also included non-Symphony cartoons like Mickey Mouse's Brave Little Tailor.[19] By the third issue, there was almost no Symphony-related material in the book; the stories and activities were mostly based on other Disney shorts and feature films.
See also
- Golden age of American animation
- List of Disney animated shorts
- Alice Comedies
- Oswald Comedies
- Mickey Mouse
- Donald Duck
- Other animated shorts series
- Animated Antics (Fleischer Studios)
- Cartune Classics (Walter Lantz Productions)
- ComiColor Cartoons (Iwerks Studio)
- Color Classics (Fleischer Studios)
- Color Rhapsodies (Screen Gems)
- Happy Harmonies (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio)
- Looney Tunes (Warner Bros.)
- Merrie Melodies (Warner Bros.)
- Modern Madcaps (Famous Studios)
- Noveltoons (Famous Studios)
- Puppetoons
- Rainbow Parade (Van Beuren Studios)
- Swing Symphony (Walter Lantz Productions)
- Terrytoons
- Silly Symphonies the newspaper comic strip, featuring adaptations of the animated shorts. Collected in IDW Publishing's and The Library of American Comics's book series, Silly Symphonies: The Complete Disney Classics.
References
- Merritt, Russell; Kaufman, J. B. (2016). Walt Disney's Silly Symphonies: A Companion to the Classic Cartoon Series (2nd ed.). Glendale, CA: Disney Editions. ISBN 978-1-4847-5132-9.
- Davis, Amy M. (20 February 2007). Good Girls & Wicked Witches: Women in Disney's Feature Animation. ISBN 9780861969012. Archived from the original on 2021-11-19. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
- Robertson, Patrick (2011). Robertson's Book of Firsts. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 9781608197385. Archived from the original on 29 July 2020. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
- "Glorious Technicolor 1932-1955". Widescreenmuseum.com. Archived from the original on 2015-10-02. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
- "Three Little Pigs at the Disney archives". Archived from the original on 2007-10-06. Retrieved 2007-11-27.
- Lenburg, Jeff (2006). Who's Who in Animated Cartoons: An International Guide to Film and Television's Award-Winning and Legendary Animators. ISBN 9781557836717. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
- "Silly Symphonies at". Toonopedia.com. 1929-05-10. Archived from the original on 2012-09-15. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
- "The Birth of the Silly Symphonies, by Russell Merritt and J.B. Kaufman". Disney.go.com. Archived from the original on 2011-05-20. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
- Mosley, Leonard (1990). Disney's World. Scarborough House. p. 135. ISBN 9781589796560. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- "Blu-ray Forum - View Single Post - List of Disney Animated Shorts on Blu-ray". forum.blu-ray.com. Retrieved 2021-02-24.
- Layton, James; Pierce, Davis (February 24, 2015). The Dawn of Technicolor 1915–1935. Rochester, New York: George Eastman Museum. p. 269. ISBN 978-0-935398-28-1.
- Kaufman, J.B. (June 8, 2020). "When's Your Birthday?". Cartoon Research. Archived from the original on October 1, 2020. Retrieved September 26, 2020.
- Walt Disney: The Animated Man by Michael Barrier
- "Librarian of Congress Announces 2007 Film Registry" (Press release). Library of Congress. December 27, 2007. Archived from the original on July 22, 2014. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
- Morgan, David (December 16, 2015). ""Shawshank Redemption," "Ghostbusters" added to National Film Registry". CBS News. Archived from the original on May 14, 2019. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
- Hinckle, Jessica (December 21, 2021). "2021 National Film Registry Selections Reflect Diversity & Challenge Stereotypes". ComingSoon.net. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
- Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 351. ISBN 9780472117567.
- "Silly Symphonies - Inducks". Inducks. Archived from the original on 10 June 2020. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
- "Silly Symphonies #1 - Inducks". Inducks. Archived from the original on 9 May 2021. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
Further reading
External links
- Silly Symphonies at the Big Cartoon DataBase
- Markstein, Donald D. "Silly Symphony". Toonopedia.
- Silly Symphonies at The Encyclopedia of Disney Animated Shorts
- Silly Symphony at Inducks