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Paul Hawthorne/Getty Images "The Sound of Music," released in 1965, is a family favorite during the holidays. ... Carr starred in only one TV movie after "The Sound of Music." She died in 2016.
The 1959 cartoon Clutch Cargo produced by Cambria Studios was the first to make use of the Syncro-Vox technique. [2] Clutch Cargo , along with fellow Cambria shows Space Angel and Captain Fathom , superimposed actors' lips voicing the scripted dialogue laid over the animated figures.
The first American television broadcast of The Sound of Music was on February 29, 1976, on ABC, which paid $15 million ($84.9 million in 2023) for a one-time only broadcast that became one of the top 20 rated films shown on television to that point [135] with a Nielsen rating of 33.6 and an audience share of 49%. [136]
Hare Ribbin' is a 1944 animated short film in the Merrie Melodies series, directed by Robert Clampett and featuring Bugs Bunny. [1] The plot features Bugs' conflict with a red-haired hound dog, whom the rabbit sets out to evade and make a fool of using one-liners, reverse psychology, disguises and other tricks.
Mickey and Minnie Mouse in Plane Crazy, one of the earliest golden-age shorts.. The golden age of American animation was a period that began with the popularization of sound synchronized cartoons in 1928 and gradually ended in the 1960s when theatrical animated shorts started to lose popularity to the newer medium of television.
Wilfred Jackson played the music on a mouth organ, Ub Iwerks banged on pots and pans for the percussion segment, and Johnny Cannon provided sound effects with various devices, including slide whistles and spittoons for bells. Walt Disney provided what little dialogue there was to the film, mostly grunts, laughs, and squawks.
The Sound of Music premiered at New Haven's Shubert Theatre where it played an eight-performance tryout in October and November 1959 before another short tryout in Boston. [9] The musical then opened on Broadway at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre on November 16, 1959, moved to the Mark Hellinger Theatre on November 6, 1962, and closed on June 15 ...
Bosko is an animated cartoon character created by animators Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising.Bosko was the first recurring character in Leon Schlesinger's cartoon series and was the star of thirty-nine Looney Tunes shorts released by Warner Bros. [2] He was voiced by Carman Maxwell, Bernard B. Brown, Johnny Murray, and Philip Hurlic during the 1920s and 1930s and once by Don Messick during the 1990s.