Heckle Jeckle I m a Mouse I m Myself Again
Mighty Mouse | |
---|---|
![]() Belatedly 1950s/early 1960s depiction of Mighty Mouse used in the opening of TV prints of many cartoons. | |
Starting time advent | Mouse of Tomorrow (1942) |
Last appearance | Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures (1988) |
Created past | Paul Terry |
Voiced by |
|
In-universe information | |
Species | Mouse |
Gender | Male person |
Mighty Mouse is an American animated anthropomorphic superhero mouse character created by the Terrytoons studio for 20th Century Fox. The graphic symbol was originally called Super Mouse, and fabricated his debut in the 1942 brusque The Mouse of Tomorrow. The name was changed to Mighty Mouse in his eighth film, 1944's The Wreck of the Hesperus, and the character went on to star in lxxx theatrical shorts, last in 1961 with Cat Warning.
In 1955, Mighty Mouse Playhouse debuted as a Saturday morn cartoon show on the CBS tv set network, which popularized the character far more than the original theatrical run. The testify lasted until 1967. Filmation revived the grapheme in The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle & Jeckle, which ran from 1979 to 1980, and animation director Ralph Bakshi revived the concept again in Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures, from 1987 to 1988.
Mighty Mouse also appeared in comic books past several publishers, including his ain series, Mighty Mouse and The Adventures of Mighty Mouse, which ran from 1946 to 1968.
Mighty Mouse is known for his catchy theme song, "Mighty Mouse Theme (Here I Come up to Save the Solar day)", written past composer Marshall Barer.[i]
History [edit]
Super Mouse [edit]
The character originated in 1942 from an thought past animator Isidore Klein at the Terrytoons studio, who suggested a parody/homage to the popular Superman graphic symbol, making some sketches of a superhero fly. Paul Terry, the head of the studio, liked the thought merely suggested a mouse rather than an insect.[2]
The graphic symbol was dubbed "Super Mouse", and his beginning theatrical short, The Mouse of Tomorrow, debuted on October 16, 1942.[3]
In his book Of Mice and Magic, critic Leonard Maltin describes the character'south origin story:
Cats of the city have imposed a reign of terror on the rodent community. The mice have barely a risk to live in peace, with endless traps and clever feline footwork sealing their doom. One mouse manages to escape from a especially hungry cat and runs for shelter into an enormous supermarket. He examines the goods on the long lines of shelves and sets to work on a total transformation: He bathes in Super Lather, swallows Super Soup, munches Super Celery and plunges head first into an enormous piece of Super Cheese -- from which he emerges in a flash as Super Mouse! He'southward no longer a tiny rodent, merely a ii-footed, humanized mouse with a massive chest and powerful biceps. His costume is like Superman'due south, with a flowing cherry-red cape, and his powers are similar, also: He tin fly through the air and repel bullets with his chest. Super Mouse soars to the rescue of his fellow mice and dispatches the neighborhood cats to the moon. Returning to earth, he is hoisted on the shoulders of his happy comrades, as the narrator declares, "Thus ends the adventure of Super Mouse... he seen his job and he done it!"[4]
The trade periodical Variety said The Mouse of Tomorrow "just misses being outstanding, mainly because of faulty narration and besides much kidding of Superman. Thought of super-rat acquisition prowling beasts of feline globe is skillful, just also closely follows pattern of that super hero."[5]
Super Mouse (and his later alias, Mighty Mouse) was originally voiced by Roy Halee Sr., a tenor who ofttimes sang on radio and first started doing cartoon voices for J. R. Bray's studio. In the operatic melodramas to follow, Halee and his quartet provided all of the vocals.[two]
In Super Mouse's adjacent film, he spoofed the popular Universal Monsters films (Frankenstein'due south True cat, 1942). In Pandora's Box (1943), he battled bat-winged cat demons, and his origin story was changed: now he becomes Super Mouse past eating vitamins A through Z.[2] The hero made seven films in 1942–1943 before his proper name was changed.
Mighty Mouse: rename and redesign [edit]
In 1944, Paul Terry learned that another character named "Super Mouse" was to be published in Standard Comics' Coo-Coo Comics, so his grapheme's name was changed to Mighty Mouse.[6] The kickoff short under the graphic symbol'due south new name was The Wreck of the Hesperus, released Feb 11, 1944, adapting the celebrated poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow with the addition of a superhero mouse. A couple months later, the studio spoofed another archetype, Robert Louis Stevenson'south Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, under the title Mighty Mouse Meets Jeckyll and Hyde Cat.
By summer, Mighty Mouse'south costume got an overhaul too. Until this point, he'd been wearing Superman's colors—a blue costume with a cherry cape—just in the June sixteen, 1944 cartoon Eliza on the Ice, Mighty Mouse appears for the first fourth dimension in a red costume, with a yellow cape. This is likewise the first fourth dimension that the character was portrayed as living amongst the stars, hurtling downwards from the heavens to salvage the 24-hour interval.[2]
The terminal design of the grapheme debuted in the 15th cartoon, The Sultan's Altogether, released on October 13, 1944. In this cartoon, redesigned past animator Connie Rasinski, Mighty Mouse has a fuller figure with an exaggerated upper body, and is clad in a yellow outfit, with a cerise cape and trunks.[ii]
Like his inspiration, Superman, Mighty Mouse's superpowers are vast and sometimes appear limitless. His main powers include flying, super-forcefulness and invulnerability. The early cartoons often portray him every bit a ruthless fighter; one of his almost frequent tactics is to fly under an enemy's chin and let loose a volley of blows, subduing the opponent through sheer physical penalty.
All the same, his powers tin vary, depending on the demands of the story; he is sometimes knocked unconscious or rendered temporarily immobile by the villain, merely to rise again by the end of the cartoon and save the day. In some films, he uses 10-ray vision and psychokinesis. He was also able to turn back time in 1946's The Johnstown Flood. Other cartoons, like 1945's Krakatoa, show him leaving a crimson contrail during flight that he tin can manipulate like a band of solid, flexible thing. In several of the cartoons, when Mighty Mouse achieves the impossible feats, the narrator exclaims, first in a normal voice: " What A Mouse!!!!!", followed by his louder triumphant voice: "WHAT A MOUSE!!!!!"
In a 1969 interview, Terry said that Mighty Mouse's power had a religious aspect: "When a man is sick, or downward, or injure, you say, 'There's nothing more than we tin can do. It'southward in God's paw.' And he either survives or he doesn't according to God'due south programme. Right? And so, 'Human's extremity is God's opportunity.' And so, taking that every bit a basis, I'd only have to get the mice in a tough spot and and then say, 'Isn't at that place someone who tin can assistance?' 'Yep, there is someone; it's Mighty Mouse!' So, down from the heavens he'd come sailing downwardly and lick the evil spirit, or whatever information technology was. And everything would be serene again." Biographer W. Gerald Harmonic notes that every bit of the mid 40s, Mighty Mouse would be pictured living on a star or a cloud, up in the heavens, and that he became "a Christ-like figure, a savior of all 'mouse-kind'."[2]
While his typical opponents are nondescript cats, Mighty Mouse occasionally battles specific villains, though nigh announced in only one or 2 films. Several of the earliest "Super Mouse" films (having been made during World War 2), feature the cats as thinly veiled caricatures of the Nazis, hunting down mice and marching them into concentration camp–like traps to what would otherwise be their doom. The Bat-cats, conflicting cats with bat wings and wheels for feet, appeared in ii cartoons; in two others betwixt 1949 and 1950 he faces a huge, dim-witted, simply super-strong cat named Julius "Pinhead" Schlabotka (voiced past Dayton Allen) whose strength rivals Mighty Mouse's. In rare moments, he confronts non-feline adversaries such every bit human being villain Bad Neb Bunion and his horse, or the Automatic Mouse Trap, a brontosaur-shaped robotic monster. In The Greenish Line (1944), the cats and the mice live on either side of a light-green dividing line down the centre of their town'due south main street. They agree to go on the peace equally long as no i crosses it. An evil entity, a Satan cat, starts the cats and mice fighting. At the terminate, Mighty Mouse is cheered by mice and cats alike.
Melodrama spoofs [edit]
In 1945, Mighty Mouse and the Pirates was the get-go Mighty Mouse cartoon to feature sung dialogue, in the operetta style. Gypsy Life (1945) and The Crackpot Male monarch (1946) followed in the same manner.[2] Gypsy Life was peculiarly successful, earning Terry his tertiary nomination for an Academy Award for Brusque Subjects (Cartoon).[7]
There was a romantic, dryad in distress chemical element in these cartoons—in each one, Mighty Mouse saves a dark-haired beauty from terrible trouble, and in the latter two, the camera fades out on the hero and the girl in a romantic clinch. While these were very similar to the musical melodrama spoofs that were soon to emerge, they didn't take an overwrought narrator, or the suggestion that the cartoon is an episode of a continuing story.
In Nov 1947, A Fight to the Finish was the get-go in a series of musical melodrama spoofs, with Mighty Mouse saving damsel in distress Pearl Pureheart (sometimes "Piddling Nell") from the villainous, mustache-twirling cat Oil Can Harry. Terrytoons revived the concept from their earlier Fanny Zilch serial, a melodrama spoof that ran for seven cartoons from 1933 to 1937. Fanny was constantly tormented by a man version of Oil Can Harry, and protected past her lover, J. Leffingwell Strongheart.
A Fight to the Stop begins with a snatch of Cole Porter'south song "And The Villain Still Pursued Her", which had also been used equally the theme for the Fanny Zilch cartoons. The narrator opens with an urgent recap of the (nonexistent) previous episode: "In our last episode, we left Mighty Mouse at the onetime Beaver River station. As you remember, folks, he was locked in a desperate struggle with a villain. Simply on with the story..." Mighty Mouse is engaging in "a fight to the finish" with Oil Can Harry, at present a villainous true cat with a mustache, a superlative lid and a big black cloak, voiced by Tom Morrison.[8] The blonde heroine, Pearl Pureheart, is tied upwards in the other room, merely refuses to give upwardly promise. Harry manages to knock out Mighty Mouse, and leaves him tied to the railroad track with a bomb on his head, and the 5:15 train due to pass by. Harry drives Pearl abroad to his home, where he woos her in song, to no avail. Mighty Mouse manages to blow out the fuse, terminate the railroad train and escape from his bonds, and rushes to Pearl'due south rescue. At Harry's business firm, they fight with fists, guns and swords, as Pearl slips out the window and onto a passing log which is floating down the river into a manufactory. Mighty Mouse throws Harry into the river and rushes to rescue Pearl, who's heading for the buzzsaw. The narrator asks, "Is our little heroine doomed to destruction in the sawmill? Volition Mighty Mouse get in in time? Come across the post-obit episode, next calendar week!" The camera starts to iris out, but then stops, every bit the narrator relents, "Stop! Gosh, nosotros can't wait until next week. Please, show united states of america what happens, won't you?" Mighty Mouse grabs Pearl in time, and the pair take a brief romantic chorus together every bit the cartoon delivers a happy ending.
The melodrama spoofs continued as an occasional serial over the side by side half-dozen years, with Oil Can Harry and Pearl Pureheart returning in thirteen more cartoons. Another memorable brusque was 1949's The Perils of Pearl Pureheart, in which Oil Can Harry hypnotizes Pearl into singing "Carry Me Back to Quondam Virginny" on phase at an old saloon, where he vacuums up the tips thrown by the audience. Hypnotized for three and a half minutes of the six-infinitesimal cartoon, Pearl continues to sing equally the battle between Harry and Mighty Mouse rages around her, even underwater.
To vary the formula, the melodramas started traveling to exotic locales, including Italian republic (Sunny Italy, 1951), Switzerland (Swiss Miss, 1951), Holland (Happy Holland, 1952) and even prehistoric times (Prehistoric Perils, 1952) and medieval times (When Mousehood Was in Flower, 1953).
The 14 Oil Can Harry melodrama theatricals were:
- A Fight to the Finish (1947)
- Loves Labor Won (1948)
- The Mysterious Stranger (1948)
- Triple Trouble (1948)
- A Cold Romance (1949)
- The Perils of Pearl Pureheart (1949)
- Finish, Look and Mind (1949)
- Beauty on the Beach (1950)
- Sunny Italy (1951)
- Swiss Miss (1951)
- Prehistoric Perils (1952)
- Happy Holland (1952)
- A Soapy Opera (1953)
- When Mousehood Was in Flower (1953)
Television [edit]
Mighty Mouse Playhouse [edit]
Mighty Mouse had little theatrical bear on, but became Terrytoons' most popular character and a cultural icon on television. In 1955, Paul Terry sold the Terrytoons studio to CBS, which repackaged the theatrical cartoons as a popular Sat morning show, Mighty Mouse Playhouse. The testify aired from Dec x, 1955[nine] until Sep. 2, 1967, using the existing film library. Only three new cartoons were produced after the sale. The final flavour included a new characteristic: The Mighty Heroes.
Tom Morrison of Terrytoons provided the speaking voice of Mighty Mouse in the show's new framing sequences.
The evidence'due south theme song was credited on some early records to "The Terrytooners, Mitch Miller and Orchestra". However, writer Mark Evanier credits a group called The Sandpipers (non the 1960s easy listening grouping of the same name).[10]
The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle & Jeckle [edit]
In 1979–1980, Filmation made television receiver cartoons starring Mighty Mouse and fellow Terrytoon characters Heckle and Jeckle in a prove called The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle & Jeckle. The bear witness introduced 2 new characters: a vampire duck named Quacula (not to be confused with Count Duckula), and Oil Can Harry'south bumbling, large, but swift-running, henchman Swifty. The show premiered in 1979 and lasted ii seasons. In the Filmation series and movie, Mighty Mouse and Oil Can Harry were performed by veteran voice creative person Alan Oppenheimer, and Pearl Pureheart was voiced by Diane Pershing. Frank Welker played Heckle, Jeckle and Quacula, and Norm Prescott played Theodore H. Deport.[11]
Each episode included ii traditional Mighty Mouse cartoons, as well every bit an episode of a Mighty Mouse science-fiction serial, "The Smashing Space Chase". The hour was rounded out with two Heckle & Jeckle cartoons and one Quacula cartoon, plus short bumpers with tips about safety and the environment. The total cartoons produced for the serial were 32 Mighty Mouse cartoons, 32 Heckle & Jeckle cartoons, 16 episodes of "The Keen Space Chase" and sixteen Quacula cartoons.[eleven]
The "Space Chase" episodes were edited together into a theatrical matinee flick, Mighty Mouse in the Smashing Space Chase, which was released on December 10, 1982.
Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures [edit]
In 1987 and 1988, animation producer Ralph Bakshi (who began his career at Terrytoons in the late 1950s and worked on the last Mighty Mouse shorts filmed by that company) created a new serial of Mighty Mouse cartoons entitled Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures for the CBS Saturday morning children's lineup. In this serial, Mighty Mouse has a existent identity, Mike Mouse (both identities voiced past Patrick Pinney), and a sidekick, Scrappy Mouse (voiced by actress Dana Colina), the trivial orphan. Though a children'southward cartoon, its heavy satirical tone, risqué humor and adult jokes made the Bakshi Mighty Mouse serial a collector'southward item for collectors of older television series.
The best-remembered episode of this series featured a crossover with Mighty Mouse and some other Bakshi creation, the Mighty Heroes (Stiff Human being, Tornado Man, Rope Human, Cuckoo Homo and Diaper Man). In the 1988 episode "Heroes and Zeroes", the Mighty Heroes were center-aged men (except for Diaper Man, who was 36) and were all accountants with the firm of Man, Man, Man, Human, and Man.[12]
Later on years [edit]
Marvel Comics produced a x-outcome comic book series (gear up in the New Adventures continuity) in 1990 and 1991. Nix new has been produced using the Mighty Mouse character except for an arcade game by Atari and a 2001 "The power of cheese" television commercial.[xiii] That commercial shows Mighty Mouse dining calmly on cheese in a restaurant, utterly unconcerned with a scene of chaos and terror visibly unfolding in the street outside. The commercial was hastily withdrawn in the wake of the September xi, 2001 attacks.[ citation needed ]
The character appeared in the 1999 pilot Curbside.[fourteen]
Until 2019, the rights to Mighty Mouse were divided as a upshot of the 2006 corporate split of Viacom (the former owner of the Terrytoons franchise) into two split up companies. CBS Operations (a unit of measurement of the CBS Corporation) owns the ancillary rights and trademarks to the grapheme, while Paramount Home Entertainment/CBS Home Entertainment holds home video rights. The outset official release of Mighty Mouse material has been announced and what is at present CBS Media Ventures has television set syndication rights (the shorts are currently out of circulation). On December four, 2019, CBS Corporation and Viacom re-merged into a single entity, ViacomCBS (at present Paramount Global), officially reuniting the rights to Mighty Mouse under the same visitor.
Feature picture show adaptation [edit]
Equally early as 2004, Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon Movies announced their intention to bring Mighty Mouse dorsum to the movement movie screen with a CGI Mighty Mouse feature film that was tentatively scheduled to be released some time in 2013.[15]
In April 2019, Jon and Erich Hoeber signed on to script the moving picture for Paramount Blitheness while Karen Rosenfelt (Wonder Park) and Robert Cort (Terminator: Genisys) are set to produce.[16]
Terrytoons theatrical shorts [edit]
The first 7 films starred the character named Super Mouse. In these early films the character'due south costume is much closer in design to that of Superman (blue tunic and tights with red trunks and cape).
Release # | Title | Release Date | Director | Writer | Producer | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
01 | "The Mouse of Tomorrow" | Oct sixteen, 1942 (1942-x-16) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster, Isadore Klein | Paul Terry | |
In Mouseville, the town's cats capture all the mice except i, who escapes to a Supermarket, where he uses Super Soap, and eats Super Celery and Super Cheese, transforming into Super Mouse, who then vanquishes the cats and saves the mice of Mouseville. | ||||||
02 | "Frankenstein's Cat" | November 27, 1942 (1942-11-27) | Manny Davis | John Foster | Beak Weiss | |
Super Mouse must rescue the mice from a monster cat brought to life by a strike of lightning. | ||||||
03 | "He Dood It Again" | February five, 1943 (1943-02-05) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Super Mouse protects a grouping of mice who like to swallow and political party at a local diner at night. | ||||||
04 | "Pandora's Box" | June 11, 1943 (1943-06-xi) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Greek mythology provides the background as Super Mouse must battle bat-similar cats to salve a female person mouse from the Troubles she unleashes from a box mysteriously dropped from the sky. | ||||||
05 | "Super Mouse Rides Again" | August 6, 1943 (1943-08-06) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Cats battle a group of mice with everything imaginable (including Tommy guns) that only Super Mouse can thwart. | ||||||
06 | "Downwards With Cats" | October 7, 1943 (1943-10-07) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Super Mouse comes to the rescue of some mice enjoying winter sports. The influence of World War II is evident in this film. | ||||||
07 | "The Panthera leo and the Mouse" | November 12, 1943 (1943-xi-12) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Aesop's tale is reborn as Super Mouse faces a king of beasts. (Technicolor) |
In the eighth cartoon, the character'south proper noun was changed to Mighty Mouse.
Release # | Title | Release Date | Director | Writer | Producer | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
08 | "The Wreck of the Hesperus" | February 11, 1944 (1944-02-eleven) | Mannie Davis | John Foster, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow | Paul Terry | |
An onetime captain and his daughter are caught at sea in a hurricane. Mighty Mouse saves the captain, his girl and the send's crew and receives a hero'southward tickertape parade. | ||||||
09 | "The Champion of Justice" | March 17, 1944 (1944-03-17) | Manny Davis | John Foster | Neb Weiss | |
An elderly couple dies and leaves their fortune to some mice who had befriended them. Willy the Spender, a afar relative of the couple, vows to get the money abroad from the mice. (NOTE: The villain in this film is a human, rather than the usual cat. Likewise, Mighty Mouse uses a gun in the course of fighting the villain.) | ||||||
x | "Mighty Mouse Meets Jekyll and Hyde True cat" | April 28, 1944 (1944-04-28) | Manny Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse rescues a group of mice who sought shelter from a storm but accidentally hid away in the laboratory of Dr. Jekyll and are threatened past his cat who has taken the Medico'south horrific formula. | ||||||
xi | "Eliza on the Ice" | June sixteen, 1944 (1944-06-xvi) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse has to salvage Eliza from the clutches of Simon Legree in this story with characters named afterwards those in Uncle Tom's Cabin. (Technicolor) | ||||||
12 | "Wolf! Wolf!" | June 22, 1944 (1944-06-22) | Manny Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Little Bo Peep and her sheep are the victims in this story that tips the hat to the Pied Piper of Hamelin as Mighty Mouse goes up against the wolves with a jazz soundtrack. | ||||||
13 | "The Green Line" | July 7, 1944 (1944-07-07) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mice and cats alive in relative peace in a town divided in half by a green line until an evil spirit convinces the cats to cantankerous the line. Mighty Mouse puts everything aright again. | ||||||
14 | "Mighty Mouse and the Ii Barbers" | September 1, 1944 (1944-09-01) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Terrytown is the setting for this need for Mighty Mouse to rescue the mice who are threatened by a gang of alley cats. | ||||||
xv | "Sultan's Birthday" | October 13, 1944 (1944-10-xiii) | Bill Tytla | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
World War Two mixes with The Arabian Nights as Mighty Mouse rescues a sultan'southward harem girl from the set on of cats on flying carpets. | ||||||
16 | "At the Circus" | November 17, 1944 (1944-11-17) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse flies to the circus this time to rescue the cute highwire performer from the escaped lions. | ||||||
17 | "Mighty Mouse and the Pirates" | January 12, 1945 (1945-01-12) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Pirate cats capture an island mouse princess who Mighty Mouse must rescue. | ||||||
18 | "The Port of Missing Mice" | February 2, 1945 (1945-02-02) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
More pirate cats, this fourth dimension in San Francisco equally Mighty Mouse battles cats to save a grouping of sailor mice from their clutches. | ||||||
19 | "Raiding the Raiders" | March 9, 1945 (1945-03-09) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Rabbits are the victims this time, and vultures are the villains that Mighty Mouse must vanquish. | ||||||
20 | "The Kilkenny Cats" | April 13, 1945 (1945-04-13) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
City mice are forced to battle a gang of cats with armed forces weapons, until Mighty Mouse arrives to save the twenty-four hours. | ||||||
21 | "The Silver Streak" | June eight, 1945 (1945-06-08) | Eddie Donnell | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mice living in an old shack are safe under the protection of their dog, until the cats capture the canis familiaris and get out him on the train tracks as the Silver Streak bears down on him. Only Mighty Mouse can save anybody concerned while educational activity the cats a leson. | ||||||
22 | "Mighty Mouse and the Wolf" | July 20, 1945 (1945-07-xx) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Iii fairy tales are inverted as the Wolf tries to show how he takes all the blame unjustly. Spoofs Cherry Riding Hood, Little Bo Peep and the Three Little Pigs simply to let Mighty Mouse accept out the Wolf iii times. | ||||||
23 | "Gypsy Life" | Baronial 3, 1945 (1945-08-03) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
The bat-cats are back. This time they kidnap a gypsy princess who Mighty Mouse must rescue while putting the bat-cats in their place. | ||||||
24 | "Mighty Mouse Meets Bad Pecker Bunion" | November 9, 1945 (1945-11-09) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse must relieve the saloon gal vocalizer from the clutches of the outlaw Bad Nib Bunion. | ||||||
25 | "Krakatoa" | December fourteen, 1945 (1945-12-14) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Dancing mouse Krakatoa Katie offends the island volcano which spews lava to punish the mice. A betoken for help is received by a scientist, who drinks a potion and changes (a la Jekyll/Hyde) into Mighty Mouse who must terminate the volcano'south threat and gear up the isle aright. | ||||||
26 | "Svengali's True cat" | Jan 8, 1946 (1946-01-08) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A hypnotist cat forces a girl mouse to act every bit allurement to lure other mice to be captured and eaten by the cats until Mighty Mouse comes to the rescue. | ||||||
27 | "The Wicked Wolf" | March eight, 1946 (1946-03-08) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Goldilocks and the Three Bears go mixed in with the Wolf every bit Mighty Mouse must set everything right. | ||||||
28 | "My Old Kentucky Home" | March 29, 1946 (1946-03-29) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Humans are the recipients of Mighty Mouse'due south help this time when the Wolf comes to collect the mortgage on the home of The Colonel and Nellie. A jockey promises to win the horse race and apply the money to pay the mortgage. The Wolf plans to forbid the jockey from winning, simply Mighty Mouse won't let that happen. | ||||||
29 | "Throwing the Bull" | May 3, 1946 (1946-05-03) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A wealthy Castilian merchant offers a reward and marriage to his daughter to anyone who can defeat a bull. All comers fail, until Mighty Mouse enters the ring to win the fight and the merchant's girl. | ||||||
30 | "The Johnstown Inundation" | June 28, 1946 (1946-06-28) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
In a re-imagining of the Johnstown Flood, mice and dogs are defenseless in the devastating drench as Mighty Mouse battles to rescue them while averting farther disaster. | ||||||
31 | "The Trojan Horse" | July 26, 1946 (1946-07-26) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A render to mythology, this time Troy (the mouse version) where the unsuspecting rodents take in a horse statue which hides cats inside waiting to pounce. Mighty Mouse descends from Mount Olympus to save the day. | ||||||
32 | "Winning the West" | August 16, 1946 (1946-08-xvi) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
American myth sets the stage this time as Mighty Mouse turns up in the old west to battle cats threatening pioneer mice. | ||||||
33 | "The Electronic Mouse Trap" | September 6, 1946 (1946-09-06) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
An evil scientist cat invents a robot mouse trap that goes after all the mice in the city. The Diminutive Historic period begins to make its presence known as Mighty Mouse must boxing a robot powered by atomic bombs. | ||||||
34 | "The Jail Break" | September xx, 1946 (1946-09-20) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Another story set in the classic American west. This fourth dimension, Bad Neb Bunion returns to commit crimes until Mighty Mouse defeats him and send him dorsum to prison at Alcatraz Island. | ||||||
35 | "The Crackpot King" | November xv, 1946 (1946-11-fifteen) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse must battle the insane cat king and his evil wolf wizard to rescue the fair damsel mouse in distress. | ||||||
36 | "Mighty Mouse and the Hep Cat" | December 6, 1946 (1946-12-06) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
The fairy tale theme returns as a city of well-to-do suburban mice are lured to their demise by cats using the magic flute of the Pied Piper of Hamelin. Mighty Mouse must assist the mice who cannot help themselves. | ||||||
37 | "Crying Wolf" | January 10, 1947 (1947-01-ten) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A faithful sheepdog cares for the lambs under his intendance, but it's ever the blackness sheep of the family that causes the problems and needs the help of Mighty Mouse when his practical jokes become awry. | ||||||
38 | "The Expressionless Finish Cats" | February 14, 1947 (1947-02-14) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse must confront downwardly a 1930s-style mob of racketeer cats. | ||||||
39 | "Aladdin's Lamp" | March 28, 1947 (1947-03-28) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
The Arabian Nights return as Mighty Mouse becomes involved with rescuing the daughter of Aladdin in this retelling of the story. | ||||||
40 | "The Sky Is Falling" | April 25, 1947 (1947-04-25) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse rescues some undiscriminating animals who accept been tricked by the pull a fast one on into believing the sky is falling. | ||||||
41 | "Mighty Mouse Meets Deadeye Dick" | May 30, 1947 (1947-05-30) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Dorsum to the American western as the sheriff and the bad guy boxing it out until Mighty Mouse arrives to end the fight. | ||||||
42 | "A Appointment for Dinner" | August 29, 1947 (1947-08-29) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A game of cat and mouse, until the cat catches the mouse. The mouse makes a promise to deliver an even improve mouse if the cat volition release him. When the mouse returns, dinner is...Mighty Mouse. | ||||||
43 | "The Starting time Snowfall" | October x, 1947 (1947-10-10) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
In the winter, the rabbits are enjoying life when a play tricks shows up. They tin handle him for a while, but when the infant bunnies are threatened, only Mighty Mouse tin save the day. | ||||||
44 | "A Fight to the Finish" | November 14, 1947 (1947-11-14) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
The spoofs of series bewilderment films begin as Oil Tin can Harry threatens Pearl Pureheart and Mighty Mouse must come to the rescue. | ||||||
45 | "Swiss Cheese Family Robinson" | December 19, 1947 (1947-12-19) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Even superheroes need fourth dimension off, and every bit the mouse version of The Swiss Family unit Robinson gets underway Mighty Mouse is enjoying a vacation on a beach somewhere. The Robinsons send a note in a bottle for help, which finds its way to Mighty Mouse and he quickly returns from holiday to save the mice. | ||||||
46 | "Lazy Little Beaver" | December 26, 1947 (1947-12-26) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A young beaver runs abroad from home simply soon discovers the globe tin can be an unsafe place. Fortunately, Mighty Mouse volition help him acquire a lesson almost work and sloth, safely. | ||||||
47 | "Mighty Mouse and the Magician" | March 27, 1948 (1948-03-27) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A mouse village magician'southward show is interrupted by an invasion of cats. The magician bravely tries to hold off the cats, but they gain his wand and become invisible. Only Mighty Mouse with his powers can rout the cats and save the mice. | ||||||
48 | "The Feudin' Hillbillies" | June 23, 1948 (1948-06-23) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse must settle a clan feud between the cats and the mice. | ||||||
49 | "The Witch'due south Cat" | July 15, 1948 (1948-07-15) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A mouse Halloween party attracts a witch and her cat. Mighty Mouse, it seems, tin can be poisoned, but is revived by the rain to finish the task. | ||||||
50 | "Loves Labor Won" | September 15, 1948 (1948-09-15) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Another operatic bewilderment serial spoof with Oil Can Harry and Pearl Pureheart. (Technicolor) | ||||||
51 | "Triple Problem" | September 30, 1948 (1948-09-xxx) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Another series cliffhanger sets the stage as Mighty Mouse faces vultures while Oil Can Harry threatens the Colonel and kidnaps Pearl Pureheart. (Technicolor) | ||||||
52 | "The Magic Slipper" | December 2, 1948 (1948-12-02) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Cinderella is the framework for this retelling, with a wolf who might resemble Oil Can Harry and Pearl Pureheart as Cinderella. Of course, Mighty Mouse will set up everything as it should exist past the terminate of the story. | ||||||
53 | "The Mysterious Stranger" | December 21, 1948 (1948-12-21) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A mortgage is at stake, but this time Oil Tin Harry holds the deed to a circus, and wants the hand of Nell, the highwire performer. Only everything Harry tries is foiled past a mysterious stranger in a trenchcoat. Who is that masked man? | ||||||
54 | "The Racket Buster" | December 26, 1948 (1948-12-26) | Mannie Davis | John Foster, Tom Morrison | Paul Terry | |
Gangster cats return to threaten Mighty Mouse and Pearl Pureheart. | ||||||
55 | "A Cold Romance" | April x, 1949 (1949-04-10) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
It'due south the return of Little Nell this time, with Oil Can Harry as the villain against Mighty Mouse set at the Due north Pole. | ||||||
56 | "The Catnip Gang" | July 22, 1949 (1949-07-22) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse battles the Catnip Gang, a group of cats that have escaped from jail. | ||||||
57 | "Perils of Pearl Pureheart" | October 11, 1949 (1949-10-xi) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Oil Tin can Harry and Pearl Pureheart return, with Harry hypnotizing Pearl to sing at his saloon. | ||||||
58 | "Terminate, Look and Heed" | December 1, 1949 (1949-12-01) | Eddie Donnelly | TBA | Paul Terry | |
Another melodrama operetta, with Oil Tin Harry having tied Pearl Pureheart to the horns of a rampaging bull and Mighty Mouse to its tail as they are chased past a locomotive. | ||||||
59 | "Comic Book Land" | Jan 1, 1950 (1950-01-01) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
In this Sourpuss/Gandy Goose cartoon, Mighty Mouse puts in a guest appearance by flight out of a Mighty Mouse comic book, inside a dream, to relieve the twenty-four hours. (Technicolor) | ||||||
threescore | "Anti-Cats" | March i, 1950 (1950-03-01) | Mannie Davis | TBA | Paul Terry | |
To avoid a wintertime storm, a group of mice have refuge in a home with a hungry cat. Mighty Mouse dons his trenchcoat disguise to cause the cat no end of grief. | ||||||
61 | "Police and Lodge" | June 23, 1950 (1950-06-23) | Eddie Donnelly | TBA | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse rescues mice being sold as frozen treats by a gang of cats. (Technicolor) | ||||||
62 | "Beauty on the Beach" | November 1, 1950 (1950-11-01) | Connie Rasinski | TBA | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse faces downwardly Oil Can Harry for the rubber of Pearl Pureheart in an amusement park. | ||||||
63 | "Mother Goose'south Altogether Party" | December i, 1950 (1950-12-01) | Connie Rasinski | TBA | Paul Terry | |
All of Mother Goose's characters requite her a party of honor, but when the Big Bad Wolf appears, merely Mighty Mouse tin save the party. | ||||||
64 | "Sunny Italy" | March i, 1951 (1951-03-01) | Connie Rasinski | TBA | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse and Oil Can Harry battle all beyond Italian history and geography for the affections of sweet Pearl Pureheart. | ||||||
65 | "Goons from the Moon" | April 1, 1951 (1951-04-01) | Connie Rasinski | TBA | Paul Terry | |
Scientific discipline fiction arrives with alien cats and bat-cats that want to capture the mice of TerryTown. | ||||||
66 | "Injun Problem" | June 1, 1951 (1951-06-01) | Eddie Donnelly | TBA | Paul Terry | |
The Colonel has mortgage trouble again, and sets out to strike it rich in gilded to pay information technology off, simply it never works out. Mighty Mouse will over again rescue the Colonel. (Technicolor) | ||||||
67 | "A Swiss Miss" | August 1, 1951 (1951-08-01) | Mannie Davis | TBA | Paul Terry | |
Another cliffhanger (literally) every bit Oil Tin Harry threatens Pearl Pureheart in the Swiss Alps. | ||||||
68 | "The True cat's Tale" | Nov ane, 1951 (1951-11-01) | Mannie Davis | TBA | Paul Terry | |
A cat narrates this origin story near Mighty Mouse. | ||||||
69 | "Prehistoric Perils" | March ane, 1952 (1952-03-01) | Connie Rasinski | TBA | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse, Oil Tin can Harry, and Pearl Pureheart time travel dorsum to prehistoric times. (Technicolor) | ||||||
lxx | "Hansel and Gretel" | June i, 1952 (1952-06-01) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse battles the witch and her true cat to relieve mouse versions of Hansel and Gretel. | ||||||
71 | "Happy Holland" | Nov 1, 1952 (1952-11-01) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Oil Can Harry and Pearl Pureheart meet Mighty Mouse in Kingdom of the netherlands this fourth dimension. | ||||||
72 | "Hero for a Day" | April i, 1953 (1953-04-01) | Mannie Davis | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
A humble mouse dreams of being Mighty Mouse so he can impress the girl of his dreams, but the cats know the difference. | ||||||
73 | "Hot Rods" | June 1, 1953 (1953-06-01) | Eddie Donnelly | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Teenage mice driving their hot rods go into problem that merely Mighty Mouse tin can fix. (Technicolor) | ||||||
74 | "When Mousehood Was in Flower" | July i, 1953 (1953-07-01) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry, Beak Weiss | |
Taxes are at the heart of the troubles for the nobleman and his daughter Pearl. The Black Night (Oil Can Harry) wants the daughter'south mitt in marriage, and just Mighty Mouse can set things in order. | ||||||
75 | "A Soapy Opera" | Jan 1, 1953 (1953-01-01) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Pearl Pureheart is the laundry maid beholden to Oil Can Harry, and only Mighty Mouse tin rescue her. | ||||||
76 | "The Helpless Hippo" | March 1, 1954 (1954-03-01) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse meets his match when he tries to rescue a baby hippo and discovers that every infant creature in the jungle wants him as their babysitter. | ||||||
77 | "The Reformed Wolf" | October one, 1954 (1954-10-01) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse convinces a wolf that carrots are preferable to mutton. | ||||||
78 | "Spare the Rod" | January i, 1954 (1954-01-01) | Connie Rasinski | John Foster | Paul Terry | |
Mighty Mouse must teach respect to a group of unruly mice children. | ||||||
79 | "Outer Infinite Visitor" | November 1, 1959 (1959-11-01) | Dave Tendlar | John Foster | Gene Deitch | |
Cheeseville is invaded by an baby, robot-like conflicting. Anybody thinks it's beautiful, until they learn that its parent plans to wipe out Cheeseville. | ||||||
80 | "The Mysterious Package" | December 15, 1961 (1961-12-fifteen) | Mannie Davis | Bob Kuwahara | Paul Terry, Pecker Weiss | |
A mechanical monster is kidnapping the children of Mouseville. Mighty Mouse must get to the alien world to bring them back. | ||||||
81 | "Cat Alarm" | December 31, 1961 (1961-12-31) | Connie Rasinski | Larz Bourne, Tom Morrison | Neb Weiss | |
The cats use Mighty Mouse to capture the mice of Cheeseville by making him believe the dam has burst and threatens the town. While trying to warn them, he sends the mice into the waiting clutches of the waiting cats. |
Comics [edit]
Mighty Mouse'due south start comic book advent was in Terry-Toons Comics #38 (November 1945), published past Timely Comics.[17] Mighty Mouse was featured in:
- Terry-Toons Comics #38–85 (1945–1951)
- Paul Terry's Comics #86–125 (1951–1955)
Mighty Mouse was also featured in two main titles by several different publishers: Mighty Mouse and The Adventures of Mighty Mouse.
Mighty Mouse
- Timely Comics #1–4 (1946)
- St. John Publications #v–67 (1947–1955)
- Pines Comics #68–83 (1956–1959)
The Adventures of Mighty Mouse (renaming of Paul Terry'south Comics, where Mighty Mouse appeared)
- St. John Publications #126–128 (1955)
- Pines Comics #129–144 (1956–1959)
- Dell Comics #144–155 (1959–1961) NOTE: Dell's series also started with an issue numbered 144
- Gold Key Comics #156–160 (1962–1963)
- Dell Comics #161–172 (1964–1968)
- Mighty Mouse, Spotlight Comics, #ane–2 (1987)
- Mighty Mouse, Curiosity Comics, #1–10 (1990), based on the Ralph Bakshi version (Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures)
- Mighty Mouse, Dynamite Entertainment, #i–5 (2017–2018, nerveless as Book 1: Saving the Day, ISBN 978-1-5241-0386-6)
In 1953, Mighty Mouse was featured in Three Dimension Comics #ane, the kickoff three-dimensional comics publication, produced past St. John Publications.[18] Co-ordinate to co-creator Joe Kubert, the three-D event sold an extraordinary 1.2 million copies at 25 cents each, more than twice the standard comic price of 10 cents.[19]
DVD releases [edit]
- Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures, the first official release of Mighty Mouse fabric, was released on January v, 2010.[xx]
At least one episode, Wolf! Wolf!, has fallen into the public domain and is available at the Cyberspace Archive.[21]
Video games [edit]
- In October 2008, CR Terry Toons – Mighty Mouse ( CRテリーテューンズマイティマウス , CR Terīte~yūnzu Maiti Mausu ) a series of two pachinko games was released in Nippon past Fuji Shogi.
- On Feb 22, 2012, a video game titled MIGHTY MOUSE My Hero was released for iOS, every bit well equally an exclusive version for the iPad titled MIGHTY MOUSE My Hero Hd .
- In the beginning quarter of 2019, Worldwide Video Entertainment Inc. started to sell the Mighty Mouse Mini Claw Machine .
Controversy [edit]
Stills from the Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures episode "The Littlest Tramp". Top left: the flower is crushed past the rich man. Top right: Mighty Mouse receives the remains of the flower, which falls apart in his hand. Bottom left: Mighty Mouse thinks fondly of the girl, and brings out what's left of the bloom. Bottom right: Mighty Mouse smells the flower, inhaling it in the procedure.
In 1988, Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures was the subject area of media controversy when one scene was interpreted as a depiction of cocaine employ. In the episode "The Littlest Tramp" a poor mouse daughter attempts to sell flowers, and is repeatedly harassed by a rich man who crushes her flowers.[22] She runs out of flowers and makes new ones from sundry items she finds, such as love apple slices, but the man crushes these likewise.[23] Mighty Mouse attempts to purchase the flowers with his chunk of cheese, and to avenge the daughter, but she gives Mighty Mouse the crushed flowers and insists that others need help more than she does. Afterwards successfully saving several dissimilar characters, he is reminded of the daughter, and attempts to smell the flowers she gave him (now a pink powder), inhaling them in the procedure. He then finds the human that has been harassing the girl, and spanks him. The girl is sympathetic to the man, and he is so moved that the two are married.
A family in Kentucky saw the episode and reportedly interpreted the scene every bit Mighty Mouse snorting cocaine. The family called the American Family Association in Tupelo, Mississippi. The group demanded Bakshi be removed from production of the series.[24] Bakshi and CBS denied the allegations, Bakshi stating the whole incident "smacks of McCarthyism. I'm not going to get into who sniffs what. This is lunacy."[23] To defuse the controversy, Bakshi agreed to cut the 3.5 seconds from the episode. Rev. Donald Wildmon claimed that the editing was a "de facto access" of cocaine utilise, though Bakshi maintained that the episode was "totally innocent".[25]
It's because of Fritz that they're going later on Mighty Mouse. I grew upward in Brownsville in Brooklyn and attended High School for Industrial Arts. I remember teachers who quit. Considering of McCarthyism they weren't able to teach what they wanted. This is the same thing. Mighty Mouse was happy afterward smelling the flowers because it helped him remember the little daughter who sold it to him fondly. But even if you're right, their accusations become part of the air we breathe. That'south why I cut the scene. I can't have children wondering if Mighty Mouse is using cocaine.
Cultural influences [edit]
In the book Astro Boy Essays, author Frederik L. Schodt quotes Japanese animator Osamu Tezuka as saying that Mighty Mouse was the influence that inspired him to proper noun his well-known character Mighty Atom (also known as Astro Boy). He also chose to imitate Mighty Mouse's signature flying pose with one arm stretched ahead with a clenched fist.[26]
Mighty Mouse was planned to brand a cameo in the deleted scene "Acme'southward Funeral" from the 1988 film Who Framed Roger Rabbit.[27]
Mighty Mouse was featured on famed guitarist Tom Scholz's Les Paul guitar.[28]
The song "Astro Human being" by Jimi Hendrix, a part of the Black Gold session, includes a version of the 'Hither I come to save the day!' fanfare.
A clip of the episode "Wolf! Wolf!" was featured in Serj Tankian'due south music video "Harakiri".
As part of Andy Kaufman's human action he would play the Mighty Mouse theme while standing perfectly still and lip-sync only the line "Here I come to save the day" with neat enthusiasm;[29] a 1975 performance of this deed on Saturday Dark Alive [xxx] is recreated in the 1999 biopic Man on the Moon.
Mighty Mouse was on the uniform of NASCAR commuter Alan Kulwicki and on the front stop of his #seven Hooters "Underbird" during the final race at the Atlanta Motor Speedway's 1992 Hooters 500.
Apple trademark dispute [edit]
On August 2, 2005, Apple released the company's first multi-command USB computer mouse. The production was designed by Mitsumi Electric and premiered under the name Apple Mighty Mouse. Apple continued to use the name when the product was redesigned as a Bluetooth device in 2006. Prior to its release, CBS licensed the right to utilise the Mighty Mouse proper name to Apple tree. In 2008, Man and Machine, Inc., a company that produces medical form, chemic-resistant, mice and keyboards, sued both Apple and CBS for trademark infringement.[31] Man and Motorcar claimed that it had used the proper name since 2004 and that CBS did not take the correct to license the name for computer peripherals.[32] In 2009, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office ruled in favor of Man and Motorcar and Apple tree inverse the name of its product to the "Apple Mouse".[33]
Run across also [edit]
- Dinkan, a Malayalam comic superhero mouse
References [edit]
- ^ Nolan, Frederick (August 29, 1998). "Obituary: Marshall Barer". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2022-05-14. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- ^ a b c d east f g Hamonic, W. Gerald (2018). "Here I Come to Save the Mean solar day!: The Mouse that Saved a Cartoon Studio, 1942-1945". Terrytoons: The Story of Paul Terry and His Classic Drawing Factory. John Libbey Publishing Ltd. pp. 207–223. ISBN978-0861967292.
- ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Blithe Cartoons. Checkmark Books. pp. 110–111. ISBN0-8160-3831-7 . Retrieved half dozen June 2020.
- ^ Maltin, Leonard (1987). Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Blithe Cartoons (Revised ed.). New York: Feather Books. pp. 141–147. ISBN0-452-25993-2.
- ^ "Mouse of Tomorrow". Variety: 8. Dec 2, 1942. Retrieved Feb 22, 2020.
- ^ Markstein, Don. "Supermouse, the Big Cheese". Toonopedia . Retrieved 15 February 2020.
- ^ "18th Academy Awards". The University of Move Movie Arts and Sciences. 1946. Retrieved 14 May 2012.
- ^ Markstein, Don. "Oil Can Harry". Don Markstein'southward Toonopedia . Retrieved 10 February 2020.
- ^ Rodriguez, Robert (2006). The 1950s' about wanted the summit 10 book of stone & roll rebels, Cold War crises, and all-American oddities (1st ed.). Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books. p. 219. ISBN978-1-61234-030-2 . Retrieved fourteen May 2012.
mighty mouse.
- ^ Evanier, Mark (January xviii, 2004). "Sandpiper Stuff". News from Me (Archive). Archived from the original on 24 May 2013. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
- ^ a b Scheimer, Lou; Mangels, Andy (2012). Creating the Filmation Generation. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 164. ISBN978-one-60549-044-1.
- ^ Eury, Michael (2017). Hero-A-Go-Go: Campy Comic Books, Crimefighters, & Civilisation of the Swinging Sixties. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 117. ISBN9781605490731.
- ^ "The Power of Cheese, Mighty Mouse". America's Dairy Farmers. 2001. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
- ^ DataBase, The Big Cartoon. "Curbside (Nickelodeon)". Big Cartoon DataBase (BCDB) . Retrieved 2018-11-28 .
- ^ Beck, Jerry (2010-04-16). "Mighty Mouse on again at Paramount". Cartoon Brew. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
- ^ Hither They Come, To Save The Twenty-four hours: Jon & Erich Hoeber To Script 'Mighty Mouse' For Paramount Animation
- ^ Becattini, Alberto (2019). "Super-Animals". American Funny Beast Comics in the 20th Century: Volume Two. Seattle, WA: Theme Park Press.
- ^ "Advertising & Marketing". The New York Times. June 27, 1953. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- ^ Hamonic, W. Gerald (2018). "Relinquishing the Reins: The New Claiming of Television, the Sale of Terrytoons to CBS, and the Retirement of Paul Terry, 1952-1956". Terrytoons: The Story of Paul Terry and His Classic Cartoon Mill. John Libbey Publishing Ltd. pp. 255–266. ISBN978-0861967292.
- ^ Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures Archived 2009-12-27 at the Wayback Machine official site
- ^ "Mighty Mouse: Wolf! Wolf!". Internet Annal. Retrieved eleven May 2012.
- ^ "Did Mighty Mouse Snort or Just Sniff the Flowers?". The Deseret News. June 10, 1988. p. A3. Retrieved 7 May 2012.
- ^ a b "Minister says cocaine fabricated mouse mighty". Toledo Blade. Associated Press. June ten, 1988. p. 1. Retrieved 7 May 2012.
- ^ Wolff, Craig (July 26, 1988). "Mighty Mouse Flying Loftier On Flowers?". New York Times . Retrieved 7 May 2012.
- ^ "Mighty Mouse's flowers clipped". Boca Raton News. Associated Printing. July 26, 1988. p. 2A. Retrieved seven May 2012.
- ^ Schodt, Frederik L. (2007). The Astro Boy essays : Osamu Tezuka, Mighty Atom, and the manga/anime revolution. Berkeley, Calif.: Stone Bridge Printing. p. 248. ISBN978-1-933330-54-ix . Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ^ Hill, Jim. "From the JHM Archives: Scenes that were cut out of "Who Framed Roger Rabbit"". jimhillmedia.com . Retrieved 24 June 2020.
- ^ "Tom Scholz's Mighty Mouse guitar". Glory Guitars. Archived from the original on 24 July 2012. Retrieved x May 2012.
- ^ Drash, Wayne (April vii, 2012). "The Not bad Ruse: The comedic genius who rocked wrestling". CNN. Retrieved April nine, 2012.
- ^ SNL: The Consummate Commencement Flavor, 1975–1976. DVD recording.
- ^ "https://www.bizjournals.com/washington/stories/2008/05/19/daily34.html". www.bizjournals.com . Retrieved 2018-xi-28 .
- ^ Jane McEntegart (May 21, 2008). "Company Sues Apple and CBS For Mighty Mouse Copyright Infringements". Tom's Guide. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ^ Siegler, MG (Oct 7, 2009). "Apple's Mighty Mouse Never Lived Upwards To Its Proper name. And At present Information technology Can't". Techcrunch. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
Further reading [edit]
- The Animated Movie Guide by Jerry Beck, Chicago Review Press, October 2005, ISBN 978-1-55652-591-ix
- Unfiltered: The Complete Ralph Bakshi, Universe, April 2008, ISBN 978-0-7893-1684-4
- Castle Films: a hobbyists's guide by Scott MacGillivray, iUniverse, Inc., ISBN 978-0-595-32491-0
- The Encyclopedia of Drawing Superstars: From A to (Almost Z), by John Cawley and Jim Korkis, Pioneer Books, November 1990, ISBN 978-1-55698-269-9
- Who's Who in Animated Cartoons, by Jeff Lenburg, Applause Books, June i, 2006, ISBN 1-55783-671-10
- Modernistic Masters Book 3: Bruce Timm, by Eric Nolen-Weathington & Bruce Timm, TwoMorrows Publishing, June ane, 2004, ISBN 978-one-893905-xxx-6
- Truth and Rumors: The Reality Behind TV's Nearly Famous Myths, by Bill Brioux, Praeger, December xxx, 2007, ISBN 978-0-275-99247-7
- American Animated Cartoons of the Vietnam Era: A Study of Social Commentary in Films And Television Programs, 1961–1973, Christopher P. Lehman, McFarland & Company, October 27, 2006, ISBN 978-0-7864-2818-2
External links [edit]
- Mighty Mouse at the Big Cartoon DataBase
- Mighty Mouse at TVShowsOnDVD.com
- Terrytoons – The Tv set Serial via the Wayback Automobile at Toontracker
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mighty_Mouse
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