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The Merry Kittens: Three Kittens, Terrier May 31, 1935 Burt Gillett Shamus Culhane: Only short co-directed by Shamus Culhane. Original MPPDA production code #392, listed on credits instead of its standalone screen. 9 Parrotville Post-Office: Captain, Black Parrot, Mrs. Birdkins, Mr. Birdkins' Children June 28, 1935 Burt Gillett Tom Palmer
The kitten starts to play with the feather walking down the piano keyboard and the feather lands on the 'on' switch with the kitten presses and the then-revealed pianola begins to play; ironically it is playing a variation of "Kitten on the Keys", a song composed by Zez Confrey in 1921. The other two kittens rejoin the first and play around the ...
Maybe (Allan Flynn and Frank Madden song) Merrily We Roll Along (song) Miss Brown to You; Moon Over Miami (song) Moonburn; The Most Beautiful Girl in the World (1935 song) The Music Goes 'Round and Around; My Man's Gone Now; My Romance (song)
1935 albums (1 P) C. ... 1935 songs (77 P) V. Music venues completed in 1935 (3 P) Pages in category "1935 in music" The following 7 pages are in this category, out ...
Named one of the ten best films of 1935 by the National Board of Review. Scenes from this film appeared in the 1936 film Sabotage. 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: Winner of the 1935 Academy Award for Best Animated Short ...
Burton F. Gillett (October 15, 1891 – December 28, 1971) was a director of animated films.He is noted for his Silly Symphonies work for Disney, particularly the 1932 short film Flowers and Trees and the 1933 short film Three Little Pigs, both of which were awarded the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film and both of which were selected for inclusion in the National Film Registry.
US Billboard 1935 #15, US #1 for 2 weeks, 15 total weeks 16: Ruth Etting "Life Is a Song" Columbia 3031-D: April 5, 1935 () June 1935 () US Billboard 1935 #16, US #1 for 2 weeks, 12 total weeks 17: Dorsey Brothers' Orchestra "Lullaby of Broadway" Decca 370: January 26, 1935 () March 1935 ()
By 1937, the theme music for Looney Tunes was "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down" by Cliff Friend and Dave Franklin, and the theme music for Merrie Melodies was an adaptation of "Merrily We Roll Along" by Charles Tobias, Murray Mencher and Eddie Cantor [10] (the original theme was "Get Happy" by Harold Arlen, played at a faster tempo).