Dumbo
Dumbo | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ben Sharpsten Bill Roberts Jack Kinney Norman Ferguson Samuel Armstrong Wilfred Jackson |
Written by | Otto Englander (story direction) Joe Grant Dick Huemer |
Based on | Dumbo, the Flying Elephant by Harold Pearl and Helen Aberson |
Produced by | Walt Disney |
Starring | Edward Brophy Herman Bing Margaret Wright Sterling Holloway Cliff Edwards Nick Stewart James Baskett Jim Carmichael Hall Johnson Verna Felton |
Music by | Frank Churchill Oliver Wallace |
Production company | |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures |
Release date | October 23, 1941 |
Running time | 64 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | American English |
Budget | $813,000 USD |
Box office | $1.6,000,000 |
Dumbo is a 1941 American animated movie. It was produced by Walt Disney Productions. It was first released on October 23, 1941 by RKO Radio Pictures. The fourth movie in the Walt Disney Animated Classics, Dumbo is based upon a child's book of the same name by Helen Aberson and illustrated by Harold Pearl. The main character is Jumbo Jr., a baby elephant who is cruelly nicknamed Dumbo. He is ridiculed for his big ears, but in fact he is capable of flying by using them as wings. Throughout most of the movie, his only true friend aside from his mother is the mouse Timothy, making fun of the stereotype between mice and elephants. Dumbo was made to make up for the damages of Pinocchio and Fantasia. The movie has been criticized in recent years as being "racist" (the leader crow in the movie was named "Jim Crow" and at some point around the 1950s was renamed "Dandy Crow" in attempt to avoid controversy,[1] but the original name is still the one mostly known, although it was supposed to be just a sarcastic mockery to the Jim Crow laws in the Southern USA back then and was used only on the character's model sheets[2]), yet is also considered to be one of Disney's best movies. It was an attempt to be simple and make profits for the Disney studio, is now generally regarded as a classic of animation. At 64 minutes, it is one of Disney's shortest animated features. Taking place in 1941, Dumbo was the first Disney animated movie to be set in modern times.
The story
[change | change source]Florida, 1941. A circus elephant named Mrs. Jumbo sadly looks on how babies are delivered by storks to other circus animals. 1 morning, when the animals leave for the circus, Mrs. Jumbo's baby is eventually delivered by a stork who arrived late. As even a baby elephant makes a pretty heavy package, hers is the last to arrive, but soon becomes the laughing stock of the others because of his big ears, getting meanly named "Dumbo" by the others. When Mrs. Jumbo can not take the public making fun of her son, she is locked up as "mad elephant" and Dumbo finds himself all alone. A mouse named Timothy comes and scares the mean herd. He encourages Dumbo and tells the circus director to make Dumbo the top (literally) of an elephant pyramid stunt which ends up literally bringing the house down and Dumbo is given the job of "baby clown" in a repetitive, humiliating and dangerous number as punishment. To cheer Dumbo up, Timothy brings him to go see his mother. The next morning, they find themselves up in a tree with a bunch of crows, who discover that Dumbo can fly.
Cast
[change | change source]- Dumbo is the silent title character.
- Edward Brophy: Timothy Q. Mouse
- Herman Bing: The Ringmaster
- Margaret Wright: Casey Junior
- Sterling Holloway: Mr. Stork
- Cliff Edwards: Jim/Dandy Crow
- Hall Johnson Choir: Crow Chorus
- Nick Stewart: Specks Crow
- James Baskett: Fats Crow
- Hall Johnson: Deacon Crow
- Jim Carmichael: Dopey Crow
- Verna Felton: Elephant Matriarch, Mrs. Jumbo
- Dorothy Scott: Elephant Giddy
- Sarah Selby: Elephant Prissy
- Noreen Gammill: Elephant Catty
- John McLeish: Narrator
- The Sportsmen: Themselves
Crew
[change | change source]- Based on the Book by: Helen Aberson and Harold Pearl
- Supervising Director: Ben Sharpsteen
- Screen Story by: Joe Grant and Dick Huemer
- Story Direction: Otto Englander
- Sequence Directors: Norman Ferguson, Wilfred Jackson, Bill Roberts, Jack Kinney, Samuel Armstrong
- Animation Directors: Bill Tytla, Fred Moore, Ward Kimball, John Lounsbery, Art Babbitt, Wolfgang Reitherman
- Story Development: Bill Peet, Aurelius Battaglia, Joe Rinaldi, Vernon Stallings, Webb Smith
- Character Designs: John P. Miller, Martin Provensen, John Walbridge, James Bodrero, Maurice Noble, Elmer Plummer
- Music: Frank Churchill and Oliver Wallace
- Lyrics: Ned Washington
- Orchestration: Edward H. Plumb
- Art Direction: Herbert Ryman, Kendall O'Connor, Terrell Stapp, Don DaGradi, Al Zinnen, Ernie Nordli, Dick Kelsey, Charles Payzant
- Backgrounds: Claude Coats, Al Dempster, John Hench, Gerald Nevius, Ray Lockrem, Joe Stahley
- Animation: Hugh Fraser, Harvey Toombs, Milt Neil, Hicks Lokey, Howard Swift, Don Towsley, Les Clark, Claude Smith, Bernard Wolf, Jack Campbell, Walt Kelly, Don Patterson, Cy Young, Ray Patterson, Grant Simmons, Joshua Meador, William Shull, Art Palmer
Uncredited crewmen:
- Story: Vernon Stallings
- Art Direction: John Hubley
- Animation Director: Frank Thomas
- Cel Painter: Phyllis Bounds Detiege
- Animators: Eric Larson, Retta Scott
- Singing Voice for "Look Out for Mr. Stork": Thurl Ravenscroft
Characters
[change | change source]Dumbo the Flying Elephant
[change | change source]Dumbo is the main character in the movie. He is a fictional anthropomorphic elephant who has really big ears. He can fly using his big ears. Similar to Dopey from Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs and Gideon in Pinocchio, Dumbo has no spoken dialogue. However, in the live-action/puppet television series Dumbo's Circus, Dumbo speaks and was voiced by Katie Leigh.
In the movie, Dumbo is delivered by Mr. Stork and is made fun of for the strange size of his ears. As his mother, Mrs. Jumbo, beats up the bullies who pick on her baby, the ringmaster has his helpers chain her up and lock her up in a trailer, which says: "MAD ELEPHANT". It is then that Timothy Q. Mouse looks after Dumbo. The two of them try to make Dumbo famous and get his mother free. Thanks to the help of a "magic feather" from some crows, Dumbo flies to fame and gets his mother free.
Timothy the Mouse
[change | change source]Timothy Q. Mouse is a mouse who became the only friend of elephants Dumbo and his mother Mrs. Jumbo. He teaches Dumbo how to become the ninth wonder of the universe and the only flying elephant in the whole world. His name was revealed at the end of the movie.
Mrs. Jumbo
[change | change source]Mrs. Jumbo is Dumbo's mother. Deeply depressed at not having her baby delivered, she loves her son more than anything. She becomes angry when the boys pick on him.
Casey Junior
[change | change source]Casey Junior is an anthropomorphic circus train. He is happy-go-lucky and rather brave, because of his capability of going up a high hill. Although Casey Junior has a face, he speaks with his whistle. His name was mentioned in his theme song. Casey Junior was voiced by Margaret Wright through a Sonovox. He previously appeared as the main character in The Reluctant Dragon, originally voiced by Frances Gifford. In fact, Casey Junior was the first Disney animated character to appear in a non-Disney Canon movie (Dumbo was in production at the time, when The Reluctant Dragon was released).
Other characters include the other elephants who also make fun of Dumbo, the Ringmaster, the clowns of the circus, the Pink Elephants, Mr. Stork and the Crows who give Dumbo the "magic feather" and teach him to fly.
Release
[change | change source]Even though World War II was going on, Dumbo was still the most financially successful Disney movie of the 1940s. This was one of the first of Disney's animated movies to be broadcast, albeit severely edited, on television, as part of Disney's anthology series. The movie then received another distinction of note in 1981, when it was the first of Disney's canon of animated movies to be released on home video and also was released in the Walt Disney Classics Video Collection in 1985. That release was followed by remastered versions in: 1986, 1989, 1991 (Classics), and 1994 (Masterpiece). In 2001, a 60th Anniversary Special Edition was released that has original RKO titles. In 2006, a "Big Top Edition" of the movie was released on DVD that also has original RKO titles. A UK Special Edition was released in May 2007 and was a successful Disney release.
Country | Premiere |
---|---|
United States | October 23, 1941 |
Brazil | November 17, 1941 |
Nicaragua | December 24, 1941 |
United Kingdom | February 8, 1942 |
Canada | March 31, 1942 |
Chile | May 23, 1942 |
Australia | June 4, 1942 |
Ireland | June 5, 1942 |
Mexico | July 9, 1942 |
Argentina | August 10, 1942 |
Portugal | November 30, 1942 |
Sweden | September 16, 1946 |
Belgium | April 25, 1947 |
France | October 25, 1947 |
Norway | December 26, 1947 |
Denmark | June 25, 1948 |
Hong Kong | August 19, 1948 |
Colombia | September 16, 1948 |
Finland | October 1, 1948 |
Italy | October 2, 1948 |
- Argentinian inChilean Spanish | October 15, 1948 (Dumbo) |
Poland | October 23, 1949 |
Netherlands | July 25, 1951 |
West Germany | April 8, 1952 |
Austria | May 22, 1953 |
Japan | March 12, 1954 |
Lebanon | May 14, 1968 |
Kuwait | October 14, 1986 |
Theatrical release history
[change | change source]United States
[change | change source]- October 23, 1941 (original release)
- May 25, 1949 (the final RKO release)
- June 6, 1959 (the first Buena Vista release)
- June 3, 1977
Worldwide
[change | change source]- Brazil: November 17, 1941
- Argentina: December 24, 1941
- United Kingdom: February 8, 1942
- Canada: March 31, 1942
- Australia: June 4, 1942
- Mexico: July 9, 1942
- Portugal: January 27, 1944
- Spain: September 25, 1944 (Madrid)
- Spain: December 14, 1944 (Barcelona)
- Sweden: September 16, 1946
- Netherlands: April 25, 1947
- Belgium: April 25, 1947
- France: October 25, 1947
- Norway: December 26, 1947
- Denmark: June 25, 1948
- Hong Kong: August 19, 1948
- Colombia: September 16, 1948
- Finland: October 1, 1948
- Italy: October 2, 1948
- Argentinian inChilean Spanish: October 15, 1948
- Poland: October 23, 1949
- West Germany: April 8, 1952
- Austria: May 22, 1953
- Japan: March 13, 1954
- Philippines: September 28, 1955
- Israel: January 21, 1967
- Lebanon: May 14, 1968
- Iraq: October 18, 1979
- Kuwait: October 14, 1986
- Chad: January 12, 1989
- China: July 12, 1989 (Beijing)
Home video release history
[change | change source]- June 4, 1982, 1981 (VHS and Betamax)
- June 4, 1982 (Laserdisc)
- December 3, 1986 (VHS and Betamax - 45th Anniversary- Walt Disney Classics)
- July 13, 1990 VHS and Laserdisc -Walt Disney Classics
- May 3, 1991 (VHS and Laserdisc - 50th Anniversary Edition - Walt Disney Classics)
- October 28, 1994 (VHS and Laserdisc - Walt Disney Masterpiece Collection)
- August 17, 1999 VHS Walt Disney Masterpiece Collection
- October 23, 2001 (VHS and DVD - 60th Anniversary Edition)
- June 6, 2006 (DVD - Big Top Edition)
- September 20, 2011 Blu-Ray and DVD - 70th Anniversary Edition
- April 26, 2016 Blu-Ray - 75th Anniversary Edition
Reception
[change | change source]The movie received very good reviews and did well at the box office despite being released less than 2 months before World War II.
It also has been known as both a classic and a masterpiece, and has received a Special Edition 60th Anniversary Disney DVD on October 23, 2001, exatly 60 years after its first release. That release featured a sneak peek of a direct-to-video sequel called Dumbo 2. The preview showed a lot of sketches and storyboard ideas. The main story has to do with Dumbo and his new friends getting separated from the rest of the circus as they wonder into the big city. Dumbo's new friends are Claude and Lolly the twin bears who leave chaos everywhere they go, Dot the curious zebra, Godfrey the hippo who is older and wants to do things for himself, and Penny the adventurous ostrich. Timothy returns as well. The story was supposed to be as if the first Dumbo ended and this one started the next day. The project seems to have been canceled,as no further announcements have been made since, plus the fact that The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning, Tinker Bell, and its sequels, were to be the last projests for DisneyToon Studios.
The crow characters in the movie are often seen as African-American stereotypes. The leader crow voiced by Cliff Edwards was originally named "Jim Crow" for script purposes. The other crows are all voiced by African-American actors and singers, all members of the Hall Johnson Choir: Nick Stewart, James Baskett, Jim Carmichael and Hall Johnson. The late famous duo of African-American dancers Freddie and Eugene Jackson were invited and hired by Disney to work as live-action reference and models for the animators of the characters, like the chief-animator and Disney Legend Ward Kimball, improvising dances and movements then used in the iconic musical sequence "When I See An Elephant Fly". Despite suggestions of racism by writers like Richard Schickel, many historians, critics, writers, pundits and personalities such as John Grant, Leonard Maltin, John Canemaker, Floyd Norman, Eric Goldberg, Alex Wainer, Michael Wilmington, Whoopi Goldberg and Neal Gabler reject these claims. For instance, the crows are noted as forming the majority of the characters in the movie who are empathetic and sympathetic to Dumbo's plight (the others are Timothy Q. Mouse and Mrs Jumbo), they are free spirits who serve nobody, and intelligent characters aware of the power of self-confidence and of what means being ostracized and marginalized, unlike the Stepin Fetchit stereotype common at that time and in the previous decade. Furthermore, their song "When I See An Elephant Fly" is more orientated to mocking Timothy Mouse than Dumbo's large ears.
Soundtrack listing
[change | change source]- Main Title (01:47)
- Look Out For Mister Stork (02:16)
- Loading The Train / Casey Junior / Stork On A Cloud / Straight From Heaven / Mother And Baby (04:58)
- Song Of The Roustabouts (02:38)
- Circus Parade (01:28)
- Bathtime / Hide And Seek (01:31)
- Ain't That The Funniest Thing / Berserk / Dumbo Shunned / A Mouse! / Dumbo And Timothy (03:23)
- The Pyramid Of Pachyderms (01:58)
- No Longer An Elephant / Dumbo's Sadness / A Visit In The Night / Baby Mine (03:34)
- Clown Song (01:00)
- Hiccups / Firewater / Bubbles / Did You See That? / Pink Elephants On Parade (06:07)
- Up A Tree / The Fall / Timothy's Theory (01:32)
- When I See An Elephant Fly (01:48)
- You Oughta Be Ashamed (01:10)
- The Flight Test / When I See An Elephant Fly (Reprise) (00:57)
- Save My Child / The Threshold Of Success / Dumbo's Triumph / Making History / Finale (02:14)
- Spread Your Wing (Demo Recording) (01:08)
Songs
[change | change source]- Baby Mine (Betty Noyes)
- Casey Junior (The Sportsmen)
- Look Out for Mr. Stork (The Sportsmen)
- Song of the Roustabouts (The King's Men)
- The Clown Song (A.K.A."We're gonna hit the big boss for a rise") (Billy Bletcher, Eddie Holden and Billy Sheets)
- Pink Elephants on Parade (The Sportsmen)
- When I See an Elephant Fly (Cliff Edwards and the Hall Johnson Choir)
- When I See an Elephant Fly (Reprise)
Media and marketing
[change | change source]Dumbo's Circus
[change | change source]Dumbo's Circus was a live-action puppet television programme for preschool audiences that aired on The Disney Channel in the 1980s. Unlike in the movie, Dumbo spoke on the show. Each character would perform a special act, which ranged from dancing and singing to telling knock knock jokes.
Books
[change | change source]- Walt Disney's Dumbo
- Happy to Help: (ISBN 0-7364-1129-1) A picture book Disney Press by Random House Disney, written by Liane Onish, illustrated by Peter Emslie. It was published January 23, 2001, this paperback is for children age 4-8. Twenty-four pages long, its 0.08 inches thick, and with cover dimensions of 7.88 x 7.88 inches.
- Walt Disney's Dumbo Book of Opposites
- (ISBN 0-307-06149-3) A book published in August 1997 by Golden Books under the Golden Board Book brand. It was written by Alan Benjamin, illustrated by Peter Emslie, and edited by Heather Lowenberg. Twelve pages long and a quarter of an inch thick, this board edition book had dimensions of 7.25 x 6.00 inches.
- Walt Disney's Dumbo the Circus Baby
- (ISBN 0-307-12397-9) A book published in September 1993 by Golden Press under the A Golden Sturdy Shape Book brand. Illustrated by Peter Emslie and written by Diane Muldrow, this book is meant for babies and preschoolers. Twelve pages long and half an inch thick, this book's cover size is 9.75 x 6.25 inches.
- Walt Disney's Dumbo
- Dumbo (My First Disney Story)
- Fly, Dumbo, Fly!
- I'm Gonna Like Me: Letting Off a Little Self-Esteem
Theme parks
[change | change source]Dumbo the Flying Elephant is a popular ride that appears in Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom,[3] Disneyland,[4] Tokyo Disneyland,[5] Disneyland Park (Paris), and Hong Kong Disneyland.[6]
Video games
[change | change source]Dumbo appears as a hero in the game Kingdom Hearts. Sora, the main character, flies on him and Dumbo splashes enemies with water from his trunk.[7]
Titles in other languages
[change | change source]- Arabic: دمبو (Dumbo)
- Bosnian: Dumbo
- Bulgarian: Дъмбо
- Chinese: 小飛象 (xiǎo fēi xiàng, or Little Flying Elephant)
- Croatian: Slonić Dumbo
- Danish: Dumbo, den Flyvende Elefant
- Dutch: Dombo
- Finnish: Dumbo - Lentävä Elefantti
- French: Dumbo, l'Éléphant Volant
- German: Dumbo, der Fliegende Elefant
- Greek: Ντάμπο το ελεφαντάκι
- Hebrew: דמבו הפיל המעופף
- Icelandic: Dúmbó: Fíllinn Fljúgandi
- Italian: Dumbo, l'Elefante Volante
- Japanese: ダンボ (Danbo)
- Korean: 덤보 (Dumbo)
- Maltese: Dambow
- Norwegian: Dumbo, den Flyvende Elefanten
- Polish: Dumbo
- Portuguese: Dumbo, o Elefante Voador
- Russian: Дамбо (Dambo)
- Serbian: Дамбо (Dambo)
- Spanish: Dumbo, el Elefantito Volador
- Swedish: Dumbo den Flygande Elefanten
- Turkish: Dumbo
- Thai: ดัมโบ
- Vietnamese: Chú voi biết bay Dumbo
(NOTE: Most of the above titles were later renamed simply Dumbo.)
Directing animators
[change | change source]- Art Babbitt (Mr. Stork, Clowns)
- Ward Kimball (The Crows)
- John Lounsbery (Timothy Mouse and Dumbo)
- Wolfgang Reitherman (Timothy Mouse)
- Vladimir Tytla (Dumbo, the elephants)
- Fred Moore (Timothy Mouse)
- Frank Thomas (Pink Elephants)
- Note:All directing animators were credited on supervising these characters except Frank Thomas.
Sequence directors
[change | change source]- Wilfred Jackson (Dumbo)
- Jack Kinney (The Crows)
- Sam Armstrong (Casey Junior, Mr. Stork)
- Bill Roberts (Timothy Mouse, Clowns)
- Norman Ferguson (Pink Elephants, Circus animals)
References
[change | change source]- ↑ "Dumbo (film)". D23. Retrieved 2024-03-11.
- ↑ Newsdesk, Laughing Place Disney (2019-04-30). "Disney Legend Floyd Norman Defends "Dumbo" Crow Scene Amid Rumors of Potential Censorship". Retrieved 2024-03-11.
- ↑ "Disney World's Dumbo the Flying Elephant Page". Archived from the original on 2008-10-01. Retrieved 2008-12-18.
- ↑ Disneyland California's Dumbo the Flying Elephant Page
- ↑ "Tokyo Disney's Dumbo the Flying Elephant Page". Archived from the original on 2008-10-05. Retrieved 2008-12-18.
- ↑ Hong Kong Disneyland's Fantasyland Attractions Page
- ↑ Official Kingdom Hearts Page
Other websites
[change | change source]- Official website
- Dumbo on IMDb
- Dumbo at the Big Cartoon DataBase (dead link)
- Dumbo at AllMovie
- 1941 adventure movies
- 1941 musical movies
- 1940s family movies
- American family movies
- American musical movies
- Buddy movies
- Disney animated movies
- English-language movies
- Movies based on books
- Movies about elephants
- Movies about mice
- Movies about birds
- Movies about animal cruelty
- Movies about bullying
- Movies composed by Oliver Wallace
- Movies composed by Frank Churchill