This classic Mickey, Donald and Goofy cartoon depicts the three in a bind and they need to move before their furniture is auctioned off. Unfortunately for them their furniture doesn't want to leave and the results are hillarious! Date: Sunday June 14 2009: 1001268 views (Thanks EVERYONE!) Monday July 5 2010 6339454 views (WOW!!!! Thanks to everyone around the world for supporting classic Disney!) Sunday May 1 2011 15501538 views (GO CLASSIC DISNEY!!!) Be sure to check out my channel for MORE Disney!!! :D (C) Disney If you are the owner or the lawyer of the owner of this film, please contact me before Flagging the video. This is merely for promoting the film to the public.
The orchestra is performing the William Tell overture, but then Donald Duck (in his third appearance in a Mickey cartoon) appears selling ice-cream. Uninvited, Donald takes out his flute and distracts the band into playing Turkey in the Straw. The cartoon is notable for being the first Mickey Mouse film in Technicolor, although two more Mickey cartoons were made in black and white before they were produced in colors on a permanent basis; Mickey's Service Station and Mickey's Kangaroo. It is said that when conductor Arturo Toscanini first saw the cartoon in a movie theater, he was so delighted with it that he ran up to the projection booth and asked the projectionist to run it again. In 1994 it was voted #3 of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time by members of the animation field. Also, according to Leonard Maltin in a commentary for this film when it was included in one of the Walt Disney Treasures, The Band Concert was remade (somewhat) years later as Symphony Hour.
This is a short clip from an early b&w Mickey Mouse cartoon called "The Opry House". It shows the first time in an animated film where the "Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in C-sharp minor" is used. This tune would become famous in animation history due to later cartoons such as "Rhapsody in Rivets", "The Cat Concerto" and "Rhapsody Rabbit". And if you watch closely, you'll see that "Rhapsody Rabbit" borrowed heavily upon this performance by Mickey, as they use the same general situation and have a number of similar gags. ==================== Note that I am now moderating the comments because of some bad apples.