Poor Papa is a 1927 animated short subject film, produced and directed by Walt Disney that was released in 1928.[2] The cartoon is the first produced Oswald cartoon, featuring Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, a character that Disney and Ub Iwerks created for Universal Pictures and Charles B. Mintz. Oswald would later serve as the basis for the Mickey Mouse film series. This was the first Oswald short made but the twenty-first Oswald short to be released.
Poor Papa | |
---|---|
Directed by | Walt Disney |
Story by | Walt Disney |
Produced by | Charles Mintz George Winkler |
Animation by | Ub Iwerks Hugh Harman Rudolf Ising Les Clark Friz Freleng Ben Clopton Norm Blackburn Rollin "Ham" Hamilton |
Color process | Black and white |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 5:11 |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
editOswald paces nervously outside a room where his wife is giving birth. A succession of storks fly over the house and drop numerous babies down the chimney. The doctor exits the birthing room, congratulates Oswald and begins to count a large number on his fingers. Oswald stops him and rushes into the room to see his wife in bed with more than 30 babies.
On Saturday night, Oswald washes the children in a barrel and, tying them together, runs the string of them through a wringer and hangs them up to dry. A number of children are playing outside the house. Inside, many children are engaging in destructive activities such as jumping on a piano keyboard, sawing the legs off a table and boring holes in the furniture. Oswald is trying to churn butter but is annoyed by the children's antics. He grabs one and spanks him, but the child runs away and thumbs his nose at Oswald. Another child drops a bar of soap, upon which Oswald slips and falls. Fed up, he grabs a rifle and climbs on the roof. He puts up a "NO VACANCIES" sign. Seeing more storks approaching carrying babies, he shoots at them and drives them away. One drops its load of babies and they falls through the chimney before Oswald can prevent it. He ties a knot in the chimney, then laughs as the storks are unable to use the chimney, not seeing them drop the babies into the house's open water tank. He turns on the tap to fill a pot and is taken aback when numerous babies pour out of the tap.
History
editIn the early summer of 1927, Disney finished the cartoon Poor Papa, but Universal was not very satisfied. They had expected a more Charlie Chaplin-like character and thought Oswald was too elderly and too fat. Disney agreed to make some changes and the cartoon was not released in theatres at the time. Disney made a second Oswald cartoon known as Trolley Troubles, which was well received and released instead.
As for Poor Papa, it too eventually released in theatres, although Universal held it back until 1928. In total, nine Oswald cartoons were released in 1927.
Some elements of Poor Papa were later reused in the Mickey Mouse short Mickey's Nightmare.
Preservation status
editAfter its release, Poor Papa was believed to be lost for many years, until around in the 2000s, where three incomplete surviving copies were found in the United Kingdom. All three copies were sold to private collectors.
In 2007, Disney attempted to purchase one of the three copies during production of The Adventures of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit DVD, but failed.[3] Later, in 2015, Disney found a complete copy of the cartoon in a private collection. It was then restored and Poor Papa was finally released as a bonus feature in the Blu-Ray "Signature Edition" of Pinocchio.
References
edit- ^ Universal Short Subjects. Motion Picture News. April–June 1928.
- ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. p. 40. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7.
- ^ "Ramapith: David Gerstein's Prehistoric Pop Culture Blog: Lucky New Oswald Finds". September 2, 2010.
External links
edit- Media related to Poor Papa (1928) at Wikimedia Commons
- The full text of Poor Papa at Wikisource
- Poor Papa at IMDb