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Hollywood Party, also known under its working title of The Hollywood Revue of 1933 and Star Spangled Banquet, [1] [2] is a 1934 American pre-Code musical film starring Laurel and Hardy, The Three Stooges, Jimmy Durante, Lupe Vélez and Mickey Mouse (voiced by an uncredited Walt Disney). It was distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Each sequence ...
The term was used by the Minister of State for Universities Margaret Hodge, during a discussion on higher education expansion.Hodge defined a Mickey Mouse course as "one where the content is perhaps not as rigorous as one would expect and where the degree itself may not have huge relevance in the labour market"; and that, furthermore, "simply stacking up numbers on Mickey Mouse courses is not ...
The Firehouse Five Plus Two was a Dixieland jazz band, popular in the 1950s, consisting of members of the Disney animation department. [1] Leader and trombonist Ward Kimball was inspired to form the band [ 1 ] after spending time with members of the Disney animation and sound department and finding that they had a lot in common as jazz aficionados.
Mousercise was an exercise children's television series which aired on The Disney Channel from 1983 to 1996. Inspired by the success of a 1982 exercise album for children released by Disneyland Records, featuring various Disney songs, [1] the show debuted on The Disney Channel on April 18, 1983, when the channel launched and was one of the channel's first programs.
One Hour in Wonderland is a 1950 television special made by Walt Disney Productions. It was first seen on Christmas Day , 1950, over NBC (4–5 pm in all time zones) for Coca-Cola , and was Walt Disney 's first television production. [ 1 ]
The Chain Gang is a 1930 Mickey Mouse animated film produced by Walt Disney Productions for Columbia Pictures, as part of the Mickey Mouse film series. [1] It was the twenty-first Mickey Mouse short to be produced, the sixth of that year. [2]
The song was written by the Mickey Mouse Club host Jimmie Dodd and was published by Hal Leonard Corporation, on July 1, 1955. [1] Dodd, who was a guitarist and musician hired by Walt Disney as a songwriter, wrote other songs used over the course of the series, as well, such as the “theme day” songs sung on the show.
In the Zork series of games, the Great Underground Empire has its own system of measurements, the most frequently referenced of which is the bloit. Defined as the distance the king's favorite pet can run in one hour (spoofing a popular legend about the history of the foot), the length of the bloit varies dramatically, but the one canonical conversion to real-world units puts it at ...