![]() It is also the first appearance of " Hungarian Rhapsody No. 3/2)", Georges Bizet's Carmen, the Klezmer tune "Chusen Kala Mazel Tov", and " Goodnight, Ladies". The accompanying musical pieces include " Yankee Doodle", Rachmaninoff's " Prelude in C-sharp Minor (Op. This short features no dialogue and consequently its humor relies on a long series of visual gags. Mickey's fight with the piano would be reused and extended seven months later in the cartoon The Jazz Fool. After all you can't expect charm from animated sticks and that is what Mickey Mouse was in his first pictures”. Because of this we could begin to put real feeling and charm into our characterization. “.Our characters were beginning to act & behave like real persons. Walt Disney himself reinforces this idea: Mickey Mouse began interacting within his space in his cartoon world to create a more realistic feel. However, as Mickey Mouse evolved from the silent film era, the cartoons became more intricate. The early Disney cartoons, like Steamboat Willie show many similarities to the Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoons that preceded them. The short shows more realistic animating. This short is an early example of how the Disney studio's animated shorts became more sophisticated. The short became the most expensive early Disney short, its negative cost being almost $2,500 more than the Steamboat Willie cartoon produced just a year before. It was animated mostly by Ub Iwerks, Walt Disney's first employee who later became known as a “Disney Legend”. It appears in black and white, and the audio was recorded using Pat Powers's cinephone system. The Opry House was the fifth Mickey Mouse cartoon released by Walt Disney Productions. The “Asbestos” stage curtains hits Mickey, causing the stars to fill in and towards the screen, and ends the film. Mickey's interactions are highly stylized in order to capture the essence of what a vaudeville performance should be. The cartoon ends with a humorous fight between Mickey, a piano and a stool. Mickey becomes the star of the show, taking on the multiple roles of a vaudeville star. The band takes over, with a large variety of short gags occurring throughout. Mickey is then faced with a large show goer, who must be deflated in order to fit through the doorway. The cartoon starts with the opening of a theater and Mickey Mouse sweeping and using the broom as an instrument and a dance partner. Acts include his impersonation of a snake charmer, his dressing in drag and performing a belly dance, his caricature of a Hasidic Jew and, for the finale, a piano performance of Hungarian Rhapsody No. Mickey performs a vaudeville show all by himself. It cast Mickey as the owner of a small theater (or opera house according to the title). It was the fifth Mickey Mouse short to be released, the second of that year. The Opry House is a 1929 Mickey Mouse short animated film released by Celebrity Pictures, as part of the Mickey Mouse film series.
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