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the god who wasn't there
My most recent film, The God Who Wasn't There, is available on DVD at the official site and elsewhere.

the god who wasn't there
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THIS ENTRY:
It's probably not much of a stretch to say that the cartoon character we know as Mickey Mouse was born one Sunday in April 1900...


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April 08, 2004

Walt Disney creativity

Farhad Manjoo's Salon article, "The Mouse Who Would Be King," is worth getting the Salon Day Pass. Here is Manjoo's account of the birth of Mickey Mouse:

mickey mouseIt's probably not much of a stretch to say that the cartoon character we know as Mickey Mouse was born one Sunday in April 1900, when a Welsh-American railroad engineer who called himself Cayce Jones crashed his passenger train, the Cannonball Express, into the caboose of a freight line that had been mistakenly left on a length of track near Vaughan, Miss. Cayce Jones died that afternoon, but his fireman, Sim Webb, survived the accident, and he wrote a song to commemorate the perished engineer.

You could call Sim Webb's ballad the first piece in the puzzle that is Mickey Mouse. Along the Mississippi rails, Webb's song became a popular tune, and in 1909, two Vaudeville songwriters, T. Lawrence Seibert and Eddie Newton, published their own version, "Casey Jones (The Brave Engineer)." It was an instant hit. Indeed, "Casey Jones" was so popular that the year after it was released, the songwriting team of Ren Shields and the Leighton Brothers attempted to capitalize on Seibert and Newton's success by releasing what we might today call a "remix" -- "Steamboat Bill," a fast-paced ditty that substituted a steamboat pilot in place of a railroad engineer.

The route from Cayce Jones to Mickey Mouse took a few more turns: In 1928, Buster Keaton produced his last independent silent movie -- "Steamboat Bill, Jr.," a story that was at least partly inspired by the 1910 song. The film, which has been called one of Keaton's greatest works, did well, catching the eye of Walt Disney, an accomplished silent animator and a fan of Keaton's. By then, Disney had already conceived of his bubble-drawn cartoon mouse (Mickey's first film, a silent short called "Plane Crazy," had not been well received). Disney saw potential for his mouse in the Keaton story, and in the song that inspired it. Short of cash, the animator staked his one prized possession -- his Moon roadster -- on an idea featuring Mickey as a steamboat pilot, a kind of parody of Keaton's film. It would be Disney's first talkie, with Mickey whistling the tune from "Steamboat Bill" as he drove his barge down the river. Disney called it "Steamboat Willie." The short debuted on Nov. 18, 1928, at the Colony Theater in New York. It was a blockbuster, and Mickey Mouse was born.

As Lessig has pointed out, imagine making a take-off on Finding Nemo called Finding Nemie and see how fast the Walt Disney Company would come down on you today. What Walt Disney (biography) took for granted, we've been trained to fear.

(More "Steamboat Willie" Mickey Mouse pictures.)





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