
Walt Disney Interviews
20 videos
Updated 9 months ago
Very few interviews of Walt Disney exist. This playlist is the largest collection of Walt Disney interviews anywhere online.
Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.
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Walt Disney & Donald Duck Interview - Elza Schallert Reviews (June 8, 1937)
Rediscovering Walt DisneyThis rare 1937 interview of Walt Disney by Elza Schallert also features guests Donald Duck (Clarence "Ducky" Nash) and Clara Cluck (Florence Gill) Some of the studio history here is this was conducted shortly after the Silly Symphony the Country Cousin won an Oscar for Best Animated Short, Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs is under production, and Donald Duck's birthday is just around the corner. What a great piece of animation history! Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.58 views -
Walt Disney on Lux Radio Theater (Dec 20, 1937)
Rediscovering Walt DisneyLux Radio Theater was a classic radio anthology series broadcast on the NBC Blue Network (1934–35) (owned by the National Broadcasting Company, later predecessor of American Broadcasting Company [ABC] in 1943–1945); CBS Radio network (Columbia Broadcasting System) (1935–54), and NBC Radio (1954–55). Initially, the series adapted Broadway plays[1] during its first two seasons before it began adapting films. These hour-long radio programs were performed live before studio audiences. The series became the most popular dramatic anthology series on radio, broadcast for more than 20 years and continued on television as the Lux Video Theatre through most of the 1950s. The primary sponsor of the show was Unilever through its Lux Soap brand. The show reenacted theatrical films as radio plays and was hosted by the legendary film director Cecil B. deMille. For their Christmas 1937 program, Song of Song, Walt Disney dropped in at the end of the show to plug the world premiere of his new film, Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs. Snow White would premiere less than 24 hours after this. In this rare clip you can hear Walt list of future films that were years away such as Bambi and Fantasia. Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.80 views -
Walt Disney - Our American Culture Radio Address (March 1, 1941)
Rediscovering Walt DisneyOn March 1, 1941 Walt Disney was the guest on the radio program "Our American Way of Living." This Showcase aired during the intermission of the weekly Metropolitan Opera Broadcast. The host, Lucy Richardson Milligan, created this series featuring prominent Americans discussing different aspects of American ideals in hopes of combating the communist, socialist, and fascist leaning entering the culture at that time. This was mere months prior to America's involvement in World War II and the famous Walt Disney Studios labor strike. Milligan was President of the National Council of Women and was an advocate for racial and gender equality, modesty in the public square, and was a volunteer in numerous pro-American groups. She also saw what was happening in the world and feared for the future of our country. Being one of the few proactive women in the radio format, she organized these speeches to air on one of the most popular radio shows of the time so more people would hear them. This was a similar tactic the autocratic leftists had used in Europe and were using in the United States. The theme of these speeches were that every American should educate him or her self on the Constitutional principles of freedom and be a shining light onto the world in the face of totalitarianism. Some of the notable guests included J. Edgar Hoover, Carl Sandburg, David Sarnoff, and Walt Disney. Topics covered included "Out American Freedom," "The Soul of the American People," "Women in America," "Why I Became an American Citizen," "Our American Tomorrow," and others. Walt Disney's speech is titled "Our American Culture." By 1941, Walt's creations were already a fixture unique in American culture and he was regarded as a "common man's" artist making him the obvious choice to discuss this topic. It was an already well-known part of his story that he had come from the Midwest and hailed from humble means. This was believed to be one of the secrets of his success; he understood what culture was to the average American. Walt's animated cartoons also occupied a unique place in global culture having become ambassadors of American ideal into the world. Although, often excerpted in text form, this audio has rarely been heard or quoted in its entirety since its initial 1941 airing. Walt Disney's words are just as relevant for us today in our time as they were to the world in his because they are principled. The faces and names may change, but the root issues never do. This clip is presented in its complete unaltered for, Walt's flubs and all just as it originally aired in 1941. Original airdate March 1, 1941 Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.854 views 4 comments -
1941 Walt Disney Studios Strike
Rediscovering Walt DisneyOn May 29, 1941 a little over 200 members of Walt Disney's animation staff went on strike led by top animator Art Babbit. The communist influence on the Labor Movement is documented. Known communist Herbert Sorrell was the ring leader of this strike and it's what led to Walt Disney testifying before congress against communists in 1947. The strike went on across several months with the strikers threatening to murder Walt in effigy. (You can see footage of that in this montage. In one shot the strikers haul out a guillotine as they're dressed as executioners and behead a dummy of Walt over and over again.) It's no wonder this event was one of Walt Disney's pivot points. The strike affected Walt's health and he was sent on a tour of South America that eventually resulted in the films Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros. The strike ended on Sept 21, 1941 with the strikers getting nearly all of what they'd demanded. Many of the strikers left the Walt Disney Studios and founded UPA. Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.88 views 2 comments -
Walt Disney Testifies Against Communists before Congress (1947)
Rediscovering Walt DisneyWalt Disney testifies against communists in Hollywood before congress on Oct 24, 1947. In the wake of the 1941 Studio Strike, Walt Disney testified against the communists behind the strike. Revisionist historians claim there were no communists in Hollywood and call this a witch hunt but the documentation proves otherwise. Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.91 views -
A Message from Walt Disney - United Cerebal Palsy Charity Film (1956)
Rediscovering Walt DisneyIn 1956, Walt Disney made this short film to be run in theaters asking audiences to donate toward the United Cerebral Palsy Charity. This is a very rare film and we're fortunate it survives. Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.87 views -
Walt Disney on the Civil War (1956)
Rediscovering Walt DisneyOn May 30, 1956 this episode of Walt's TV show aired (Behind the Scenes with Fess Parker) to advertise the release of Walt's latest big budget film, the Great Locomotive Chase. The Great Locomotive Chase was filmed in Cinemascope and a very ambitious project. There were only a few Cinemascope lenses in existence at the time and only very prestigious productions were produced in this format then. The film told the true story of when Union spies were sent behind enemy lines to cut off Confederate communications as they stole a train headed north. The story evenly portrayed the Americans on both sides of the war and this TV episode demonstrated the great lengths Walt always went to in order to ensure historical accuracy in his films. This is also a story that doesn't end happily but Walt knew it was an important story for families to hear. In many cases, the stories Walt dramatized in film were either the first time they had ever been told in cinema or they became the definitive cinematic versions. In this excerpt is Walt's intro for this TV episode where he talks about how he knew veterans from both sides of the Civil War when he was a boy. The theme of Walt's intro and the film is about the nation healing and coming together. It's a message just as timely for today. You also see Walt show the well-worn copy of the book the film is based on from his family library when he was a boy. If you've not seen the Great Locomotive Chase it's a film worth seeing. Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.167 views -
Walt Disney on America's Founding (1957 & 1958)
Rediscovering Walt DisneyOn May 29, 1957 Walt's TV show aired the episode called the Liberty Story to promote the release of his film Johnny Tremain. The film is based on the book by Ester Forbes that was published during WWII and won the Newberry Medal in 1944. It is one of the twenty top-selling children's novels of the 20th century. Walt felt this story was important to tell at the height of the Cold War. In this Liberty Story excerpt, Walt briefly discusses man's history of freedom correctly tying it in with Robin Hood (which he'd made into a film in 1952) before revealing his plans to add Liberty Street to Disneyland. Liberty Street had been announced along with Edison Square but the plans for both were put on hold as Walt and his team focused on the 1964-1965 World's Fair. Neither land was built at Disneyland. Edison Square evolved into the General Electric Carousel of Progress and Liberty Street was re-imagined as Liberty Square at Walt Disney World. In fact, some of the audio for the Hall of Presidents had originally been recorded under Walt's supervision back in 1958. The film Johnny Tremain aired in two episodes of Walt's TV show in 1958. The Boston Tea Party on November 21 and The Shot Heard Around the World on December 5. We have included Walt's intros to these episodes as well. These two episodic versions of Johnny Tremain were also distributed in schools for decades. When the film bombed in the UK Walt opted to not release it in Europe. A few years later Walt would reach Europeans with another story on Independence set at the time of America's founding but not released theatrically in America, Dr Syn/the Scarecrow of Romney Marsh. Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.125 views 2 comments -
Walt Disney BBC Interview (July 6, 1959)
Rediscovering Walt DisneyWalt Disney interviewed about his creations on the BBC July 6, 1959. Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.45 views -
Walt Disney Interview - Hollywood Past (1959)
Rediscovering Walt DisneyIn 1959 Tony Thomas interviewed Walt on his early career for the radio show Hollywood Past. This is one of the rare interviews Walt gave that still exists. Posted for historical purposes. This channel is not affiliated with the Walt Disney Company.123 views