Saturday, August 21, 2021

PBS American Experience – Walt Disney subtitle voiceovers

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FLOYD NORMAN: Every time
Walt walked down a hallway,
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RICHARD SHERMAN:
In Bambi, there's a line:
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ROLLY CRUMP: He walked
through the door and, you know,
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SHERMAN:
There was no joking around.
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NARRATOR: Walt Disney was an
international celebrity
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NARRATOR: Won more Academy
Awards than anybody in history,
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NARRATOR: and invented a new kind
of American vacation destination.
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RON SUSKIND: Disney's a
Rorschach in America.
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RICHARD SCHICKEL: Nobody who
does stuff on the scale that he did
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NEAL GABLER: Walt Disney is in
many ways a very dark soul.
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SARAH NILSEN: He is feeling
so much inside,
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GABLER: Most successful people,
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SCHICKEL: Walt Disney was as
driven a man as I've ever met in my life.
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NARRATOR: Walt Disney was still
a few months shy of his 18th birthday
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DON HAHN: He's got all these
ideas and he starts acting on them.
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NARRATOR: Walt was determined
to do work he loved,
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TOM SITO: It was an exciting
and very dynamic medium.
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NARRATOR: Disney was captivated.
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SARAH NILSEN: He was really
into modern culture.
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NARRATOR: Disney's first efforts
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HAHN: I can imagine
a young Walt Disney
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STEVEN WATTS:
He has stars in his eyes.
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NARRATOR: Just as he was
beginning to get some traction
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GABLER: It's hard to find a father
and son who are more different
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NARRATOR: Disney and his
Laugh-O-Grams crew
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WATTS: Hollywood in the 1920s
is a beacon of the future.
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GABLER: He's not thinking
about animation now.
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NARRATOR: The wannabe movie man
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GABLER: When he gets that
telegram, the first thing he does is
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NARRATOR: The two brothers
scraped up a little cash
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HAHN: Walt loves to draw,
and he can draw,
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ERIC SMOODIN: Iwerks is
incredible and can work fast.
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NARRATOR: Iwerks began
restyling the Alice's Wonderland shorts
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WATTS: The difference
between Laugh-O-Grams
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NARRATOR: The brothers
enjoyed their early success
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NARRATOR: Disney was
understandably obsessed with his rivals
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NARRATOR: The key to challenging
the supremacy of Felix the Cat,
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WATTS: I think the two sides
of Disney emerge.
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NARRATOR: Charles Mintz,
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GABLER: Ub Iwerks comes to
Walt Disney and says,
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WATTS: Disney doesn't believe it.
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NARRATOR: Walt went to New York
in February of 1928
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NILSEN: Things are unfolding
that most people would understand,
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NARRATOR:
When Disney boarded the train
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HAHN: Oswald the Rabbit
gets taken away from him
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NARRATOR: It was a long
cross-country ride for Disney.
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WATTS: Walt was living in the
country on the edge of this town,
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NILSEN: Marceline represents
really the one moment in his childhood
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SUSKIND: Marceline was this
seemingly idyllic place
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NARRATOR: The Disney family
business was a tough go.
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DISNEY: My dad sold the farm,
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GABLER: Walt Disney once said that
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NARRATOR: When Walt and Lillian
arrived at Union Station
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GABLER: Coming from
the Disney family,
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NILSEN: Where his dad just continually
gets more and more depressed,
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NARRATOR: Disney held daily
brainstorming sessions
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NARRATOR: Disney was unable
to find a distributor
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NILSEN: "How can I do something
better with animation
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NARRATOR: Disney saw no
good option but to take the chance.
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NARRATOR: The crowd at the
Colony Theater was in thrall.
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SMOODINSteamboat Willie
was such a huge hit,
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NARRATOR: Mickey was a
multi-talented charmer...
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NARRATOR: While the country
slid toward economic disaster in 1930,
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SUSKIND: Mickey's a little bit
in your face.
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WATTS: Walt Disney was certainly
not a social theorist.
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NARRATOR: Mickey Mouse Clubs
began sprouting up
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WATTS: He was an ad man.
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NARRATOR: The Disney brothers
gave Kamen
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SMOODIN: Mickey is understood
as being the creation of Disney,
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HAHN: When everybody
else is suffering,
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SUSKIND: Mickey and Walt
are talking to each other.
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SUSKIND: So he's gotta
do Mickey's voice.
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NARRATOR:
Walt Disney was not yet 30,
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MICHAEL BARRIER: His role
was changing in the studio.
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NARRATOR:
Disney had talked of having
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DISNEY: In 1931,
I had a hell of a breakdown.
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NARRATOR: In October 1931,
Walt Disney took his doctor's advice
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GABLER: Walt comes back
from his nervous breakdown,
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NARRATOR: Disney had never been
shy about spending money on his vision,
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SMOODIN: The Silly Symphonies
were much more about animation as art.
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NARRATOR: Silly Symphonies
raised Walt to near mythic status
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NARRATOR: Men ruled the studio,
as they did all studios in the 1930s.
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NILSEN: It becomes, like,
the studio to work at.
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BOB GIVENS: It was like
a renaissance to us.
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NARRATOR: Disney's new series
was the test ground for innovation,
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GABLER: Walt intended
the studio tone the place
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GABLER: That was so instrumental.
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SITO: He was very jovial.
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RUTH TOMPSON: Boss?
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GIVENS: We used to play
volleyball at noon,
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NARRATOR: Disney offered
drawing classes at the studio
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HAHN: He was always very much
about not only hiring the artists
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SUSKIND: He wanted a family,
a community, a place.
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NARRATOR: Walt Disney, not yet 35,
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GABLER: Disney is lit
on the sound stage,
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WATTS: What he did was to go
through the whole movie as he saw it,
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NARRATOR: What Disney was
proposing had never been done,
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WATTS: Roy Disney was pretty
skeptical about all of this.
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NARRATOR: Walt would not let it go.
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NARRATOR: Walt's excitement
was catching.
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GABLER: In the shorter cartoons,
you can make people laugh.
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NARRATOR: One key, Disney believed,
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WATTS: They would bring in actors,
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BARRIER: What he was after
was something different,
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NARRATOR: Walt's stubborn
insistence on getting the story right,
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GABLER: To draw each
of these characters,
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GIVENS: We were the crew that did
most of the Snow White drawings,
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NARRATOR: The production
process did not change.
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SMOODIN: Making the film
required an army of people,
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NARRATOR:
The Disney had already built
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NARRATOR: As the production
dragged into its second
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NARRATOR: Walt kept upping the
ante, which meant Roy had to raise
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TOMPSON: I was working
the 12 hour deal,
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DON LUSK: I worked my tail off.
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GIVENS: The ink-and-paint
gals were...
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NARRATOR: The animators
finished in early November,
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NEWS ANNOUNCER:
Blasé Hollywood,
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GABLER: Walt was in a state
of high anxiety.
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RADIO REPORTER: Well, Walt, I think
you're due to do all the talking tonight.
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DISNEY: Well,
it's been lot of fun making it,
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REPORTER:
Well, I'm sure they won't be,
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NARRATOR:
Audience members gasped
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NARRATOR: They howled in laughter
at the antic dwarfs.
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SNOW WHITE:
Uh-uh-uh, just a minute!
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NARRATOR: They hissed
disapproval at the Evil Queen.
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NARRATOR: He sat gripping
Lillian's hand for nearly 75 minutes,
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NARRATOR: When it arrived,
the apparent death of Snow White,
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GABLER:
The audience started weeping.
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SUSKIND: Clark Gable and Carole
Lombard are weeping.
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NARRATOR:
When the curtain came down,
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NARRATOR: "I could not help but
feel," one rival movie producer gushed,
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SCHICKEL:
I know the first movie I saw
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TOMPSON: I loved the queen.
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SCHICKEL: Kids had a be carried
screaming out of Radio City Music Hall.
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SUSKIND: Think about what he does.
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NARRATORSnow White
and the Seven Dwarfs
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SMOODIN: There are Snow White jars
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NARRATOR: Walt Disney was
celebrated as a true American original,
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SUSKIND: He's hailed in Paris.
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NARRATOR: Disney cultivated the
look of the artist in public,
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GABLER: There's no question,
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WATTS: He was very domestic,
very nurturing
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NARRATOR: He had had only
sporadic contract with his own parents
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DISNEY: Well, you know,
here it is, 1937,
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FLORA: We're not gonna celebrate.
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DISNEY: Why not?
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FLORA: Oh, what's the use?
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DISNEY: Well, Dad likes to celebrate.
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FLORA: We've been celebrating
for 50 years.
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DISNEY: What about you, Dad?
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ELIAS: Oh, we don't want to
go to any extremes with it at all.
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DISNEY: Well, I expect you...
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FLORA: He don't know
how to make whoopee.
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NARRATOR: Walt sometimes seemed
compelled to talk about the old days.
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HIGGINBOTHAM: He feels it very
important to identify and to make note
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NARRATOR: Walt Disney had been
a player in the movie business
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NARRATOR: Disney had
dreams of producing
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GABLER: They struggled mightily
with the story of Pinocchio.
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NARRATOR: Disney was still
puzzling out the Pinocchio story
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NILSEN: It was something
he dealt with within himself
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GABLER: Walt Disney once
exploded during a story session
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SUSKIND: Art doesn't work unless
it gets to the big stuff.
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NARRATOR: Disney wasn't thinking
small on Pinocchio.
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DOUGLAS BRODE: Pinocchio becomes
about what it means to be human,
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HAHN: They take huge liberties.
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NARRATOR: Difficult as they were
and engaging as they were,
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HAHN: So here's Stravinsky,
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GABLER: Well, he's dealt with
realism and realistic emotions,
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NARRATOR: The Disney studio
ran to the rhythms
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GABLER: It was designed
for absolute efficiency,
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NARRATOR: The day after Christmas
1939, most of the Disney staff
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LUSK: It was wonderful.
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SITO: It had a cafeteria.
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NARRATOR: By the time the studio
was ready to launch Pinocchio
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NARRATOR: He was singing
the praises of Jiminy Cricket,
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NARRATOR: He was also talking
up the studio's breakthroughs
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NARRATOR: "For the first time
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SCHICKELPinocchio has
richness and dimensions
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HIGGINBOTHAM:
And instead, any indiscretion
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BLUE FAIRY: Prove yourself
brave, truthful, and unselfish,
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SUSKIND: That's what the goal is.
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GEPPETTO: You've alive!
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NARRATOR: Audiences across the
country walked away from Pinocchio
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NARRATOR: "For it will
be said that no generation
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NARRATOR:
The downside of Pinocchio
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NARRATOR: Roy Disney had a plan.
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WATTS: Fantasia opens with the Bach
Fugue and Toccata in D minor,
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HIGGINBOTHAM:
Fantasia is wildly ambitious.
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WATTS: When the movie worked,
it's spectacular.
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HIGGINBOTHAM: Fantasia raises
a number of questions
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NARRATORFantasia's financial losses
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WATTS: The new Burbank studio
was a kind of a case study in
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NARRATOR: There was something
unmistakably mechanical
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GIVENS: I missed the
old Hyperion place.
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SITO: Some of the people who
told me about the cafeteria,
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NARRATOR: Workers at the
bottom of the Disney ladder
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SITO: Even after organizing
MGM and Warner Brothers
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NARRATOR: Walt Disney
saw little reason to be worried.
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HIGGINBOTHAM: Walt sees
himself as the father of this company,
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GABLER: "Why in the world
would anyone need a union
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NARRATOR: There were plenty
of people at Burbank
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GABLER: He was rather
a large personality.
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SITO: Babbitt used to tell the story
about a young painter
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NARRATOR:
Disney didn't see the problem,
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DISNEY: In the 20 years
I have spent in this business,
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NARRATOR: Much of the staff
left the auditorium infuriated.
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HAHN: The street's full of strikers,
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NILSEN: He poured his passion,
everything he believed in
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BRODE: A certain light,
if not had gone out,
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NARRATOR: Another man might
have walked away
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NEAL GABLER: Walt Disney
could deal with anything creatively.
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NARRATOR: Employees at the
Walt Disney Studios
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TOM SITO: As the strike lingered
and kept going,
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NARRATOR: A month into the strike,
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SITO: There was one day
where Art Babbitt noticed Disney
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NARRATOR: As the crowd cheered,
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NANCY KOEHN: He needed
to have a bad guy.
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ERIC SMOODIN: He becomes
then like a typical industrial boss.
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GABLER: Walt Disney
is being bombarded
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NARRATOR: "The entire situation
is a catastrophe,"
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STEVEN WATTS: What Walt Disney
was doing was getting away, period.
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GABLER: South America is a
real relief for Walt Disney.
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NARRATOR: Disney was still on
the road in South America
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WATTS: Roy Disney sees
the writing on the wall.
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NARRATOR: By the time Walt did
finally return at the end of October,
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SITO: After the strike,
Walt distrusted everybody.
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NARRATOR: Just a few months
after the bruising strike,
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NARRATOR: Walt was counting
on a big box-office hit
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NARRATOR: When it was finally
released in August of 1942,
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DON HAHN: A generation
was and still is traumatized
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HAHN: And it's done
almost in pantomime
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GABLERBambi is a triumph for Disney
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NARRATORBambi did not make
back its costs in its initial run.
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SITO: One of the things that was lost
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SITO: And the Big Five is
Snow White, Pinocchio, Fantasia,
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SITO: Now, if you look at
those films individually,
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GABLER: The paradise that
Disney had at Hyperion
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JOHNNY MERCER:
Walt, how did you happen to
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DISNEY: Well, Johnny, I first heard
the stories of Uncle Remus
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MERCER: Your favorites
and a million others.
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CARMENITA HIGGINBOTHAM:
The Uncle Remus stories
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NARRATOR: Disney took a
cost-conscious approach
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WATTS: It's the story of outsiders:
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NARRATOR: Disney had been thinking
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HAHN: The core issue is,
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HIGGINBOTHAM: Walt Disney
has never been, up until this point,
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NARRATOR: Disney solicited notes
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NARRATOR: Disney chose
to celebrate opening night
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HIGGINBOTHAM: It is as if Walt
has divorced himself
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NARRATOR: Critics were split.
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NARRATOR: Others, like the usually
friendly New York Times,
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HIGGINBOTHAM:
Disney was utterly dismayed
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NARRATOR: Disney decided the
attacks were being engineered
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SITO: "Who says the natural
goal of animation is realism?
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ROBERT GIVENS: We had a
whole new approach,
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NARRATOR: Disney was keeping
an eye on UPA.
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SITO: The Burbank River
goes past the Disney Studio,
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GIVENS: Walt was curious,
because he'd send his spies over there
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NEWS REPORTER: Labor strife
on the movie front.
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NARRATOR: Hollywood had
been hit by another wave of strikes
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NARRATOR: The first thing Disney
did was reassure the committee
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DISNEY: They bought
the Three Little Pigs
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NARRATOR: But then he
started to name names,
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SITO: All his testimony was
focused on the union leaders.
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GABLER: The HUAC
testimony is 1947.
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SITO: He basically had
this narrative ins mind
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SITO: He couldn't actually
prove he was a Communist.
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SITO: That's not enough for a trial.
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NARRATOR: Disney and other
friendly witnesses
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SMOODIN: The black list is designed
to rid the industry of leftists.
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NARRATOR: Walt Disney beat a hasty
retreat from the political battlefield
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REPORTER: Oh, Mr. Disney,
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NARRATOR: Disney was producing
more than ever by 1948,
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HAHN: If Disney's gonna
make nature movies,
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DOCUMENTARY NARRATOR:
Since no one else will nurse him,
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HAHN: So to him, it's a way
of getting an animated film,
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DOCUMENTARY NARRATOR: Yes,
here they are at last, right on schedule.
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HAHN: He has to diversify.
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DOCUMENTARY NARRATOR:
having a final fling of single blessedness.
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NARRATOR: Seal Island
won an Academy Award
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ROLLY CRUMP:
She was a very pleasant lady.
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GABLER: Well, Hazel George
becomes one of those very few figures
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WATTS: He's very famous.
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GABLER: Walt Disney is at low ebb.
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NARRATOR: In the fall of 1948,
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WATTS: It's Disney
returning to his roots.
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NARRATOR: Disney arrived home
with a new obsession,
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GABLER: Walt Disney
was building these trains
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NARRATOR: When a film critic
from the New York Times
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NARRATOR:
Roy optimistically told Walt
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NARRATOR: Walt was happy
to have the financial cushion
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WATTS: He builds a scale model
of the old Marceline barn
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RICHARD SCHICKEL:
It was funny, you know,
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NARRATOR:
There was more in that train
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KOEHN: It's comfort and
salvation and a working surface
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NARRATOR: Lillian Disney
could sense something big brewing
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WATTS: He gets a little building,
the back part of the studio lot,
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GABLER: "I'll get a few guys,
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NARRATOR: Walt Disney
had one very specific vision in mind,
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ALICE M. DAVIS: When he had his
girls and they were very young,
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NARRATOR: Disney first dubbed
the park Mickey Mouse Village,
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GABLER: Roy thinks it's a nutty idea.
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SUSAN DOUGLAS: Amusement
parks were carnivalesque places.
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NARRATOR: Disney's newest
notion was not unlike
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RON SUSKIND:
This is a "leap from the tub,
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NARRATOR: Disney had been
looking for the best way
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NARRATOR: The three major networks
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HAHN: So Walt can stand there
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NARRATOR: The two men put
the drawing on a plane that Monday,
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SCHICKEL: That was a pretty
dangerous moment for him,
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HIGGINBOTHAM: He saw this as his
personal statement about who he was,
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NARRATOR: Disney's plans for
the 160-acre building site
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BOB GURR: The first time
I ever saw Disneyland,
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NARRATOR: The desire for escape
and amusement was growing
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DOUGLAS: These kids are eight
and nine years old,
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TV ANNOUNCER: American Motors,
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ANNOUNCER: Each week,
as you enter this timeless land,
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SKLAR: I think he was one
of the great salesman of our time
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GABLER: Now Walt Disney is
creating anticipation for Disneyland.
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SARAH NILSEN:
He was very humble and open
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HIGGINBOTHAM: Walt becomes
the master of dreams and hopes
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HIGGINBOTHAM:
He's actually an individual
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DISNEY: Shooting out from here,
like the four cardinal points.
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NARRATOR: The Disneyland TV show
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DISNEY: They are Adventureland...
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NARRATOR:
It was a Frontierland offering,
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NARRATOR: Davy Crockett
aired on three separate Wednesdays
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TV ANNOUNCER:
Davy Crockett, Indian Fighter.
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Children across
the country fell hard
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DOUGLAS:
Davy Crockett was homespun,
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DOUGLAS BRODE: Davy Crockett
is incredibly anti-authoritarian
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BRODE: Disney films told children
to emulate Davy Crockett,
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WATTS: The ratings just went
through the roof,
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NARRATOR: By the time
the third and final episode
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NARRATOR: The show's theme song
became a Number One hit record.
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GABLER: The Davy Crockett series
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Davy Crockett even
proved a powerful pop culture symbol
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WATTS: Davy Crockett's
famous saying was,
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GABLER: His animations created
a perfect and artificial world,
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SKLAR: You're walking into the story.
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NARRATOR: Walt was down
in Anaheim almost every day.
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GURR: Walt was literally down
there every day, watching everything.
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GABLER: Walt is interested
in every blade of grass.
_________________________________
NARRATOR:
Disney's constant demands
_________________________________
SKLAR: So many things were
finished at the last minute.
_________________________________
NARRATOR: "People can buy
Pepsi-Cola," Disney explained,
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GURR: Well, the interesting
thing about Walt,
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NARRATOR: The park was a-bustle
the day before the opening.
_________________________________
WATTS: They have dozens of
cameras all through the park,
_________________________________
NARRATOR: The audience for
the live broadcast that Sunday
_________________________________
GURR: It was so hot.
_________________________________
CRUMP: The lines were so packed,
we didn't try to eat
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SKLAR: Oh, it was awful.
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Newspaper reporters
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Disneyland was thrown
open to the public
_________________________________
WATTS: What introduces all of it,
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RIVERBOAT ANNOUNCER:
On Tom Sawyer's island,
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM:
Disneyland is a space
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Frontierland and
Adventureland pointed back,
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DISNEYLAND ANNOUNCER:
Welcome to Monsanto's Plastics
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HIGGINBOTHAM: Disneyland
is the idealization of the past
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GABLER: What people find there
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NARRATOR: Disneyland materializes
bigger than life and twice as real,"
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GURR: Walt treated that park
as his personal toy.
_________________________________
RON MILLER: It was a good place
for Walt to relax,
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CRUMP: If you saw him in person,
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NARRATOR: At a dinner party one
evening, a friend suggested to Disney
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HAHN: Mark Twain had his Hannibal,
_________________________________
NILSEN: For him, everything
springs out of Marceline.
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM: It almost
feels like it's locked in time.
_________________________________
NARRATOR: By 1960, Walt Disney
stood atop one of the world's
_________________________________
SUSKIND: "Brand" wasn't used
back then, but you know,
_________________________________
TV ANNOUNCER: Walt Disney
and Mickey Mouse present
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM:
He starts to internalize
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HIGGINBOTHAM:
As he solidifies as a brand,
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MILLER: He invited Diane and
I over to watch a film.
_________________________________
HAHN: It is entertained that
is bounded by Walt's ethics
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Disney made
no apologizes for his work.
_________________________________
DISNEY: Hello!
_________________________________
NARRATOR:
When ABC expressed frustration
_________________________________
SCHICKEL: He liked his fame.
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CRUMP: They would write scripts
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM: There is something
very affable about Walt Disney the host.
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM:
He's there every week.
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM: He speaks to you
as if you mattered to him.
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HIGGINBOTHAM: Is it really him?
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NARRATOR: Walt was aware of the
gap between himself
_________________________________
FLOYD NORMAN: Every time
Walt walked down a hallway,
_________________________________
RICHARD SHERMAN:
In Bambi, there's a line:
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Disney's
company was bigger than ever
_________________________________
MILLER: For the most part,
he was patient,
_________________________________
NORMAN: Walt was not
generous with praise.
_________________________________
SHERMAN: Walt Disney
could be very hard on someone
_________________________________
SCHICKEL: I don't think he
was totally grounded.
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Walt Disney
had no real intimates
_________________________________
MILLER: There was no
animation in Mary Poppins.
_________________________________
SHERMAN: He's basically a story man.
_________________________________
SHERMAN: Mary Poppins
is not a children's story.
_________________________________
NARRATORMary Poppins
debuted in the summer of 1964
_________________________________
NARRATOR: You have made
a great many pictures
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM: He is able
to produce a film on his terms
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM:
About the healing of the family.
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM: So he's staying
true to what he believes personally
_________________________________
NARRATORMary Poppins was
nominated for 13 Oscars,
_________________________________
NARRATORMary Poppins premiered
into a different America
_________________________________
DOUGLAS: The gap is growing
wider and wider
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Walt's defenders
pointed to his movies
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Critics slammed him.
_________________________________
NILSEN: Watered down, no edge.
_________________________________
NARRATOR: The truth was,
Disney's commercial success
_________________________________
DOUGLAS: There were a lot of ways
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Disney was aware
of the knocks against him,
_________________________________
MILLER: There was a film critic
for the New York Times,
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Word started
to get around in 1965
_________________________________
HAYDON BURNS: Walt Disney, who
will bring a new world of entertainment,
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Walt remained cagey
about the scope and outlines
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Only a handful
of company insiders
_________________________________
HAHN: It's like,
"I did the mouse, that was great.
_________________________________
KOEHN:
What can you leave the world?
_________________________________
GURR: A lot of people
had talked about it,
_________________________________
NORMAN: He was now being
a futurist, a visionary,
_________________________________
CRUMP: He used to get so goddamn
excited about EPCOT.
_________________________________
ANNOUNCER: No city of today
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Disney's design called
for a high-density town center
_________________________________
CRUMP: He wanted all the major
companies in the United States
_________________________________
ANNOUNCER: But most important,
_________________________________
GURR: Walt's got these
drawings of EPCOT
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Disney allowed himself
a rare treat in the summer of 1966:
_________________________________
MILLER: This gentleman offered
Walt his yacht
_________________________________
NARRATOR: On October 27, 1966,
_________________________________
NARRATOR: The effort winded
the 64-year-old so badly
_________________________________
DISNEY: Community of Tomorrow.
_________________________________
GURR: He didn't look good.
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Disney's old polo
injury was giving him trouble.
_________________________________
MILLER: Walt, the optimist that he was,
felt he was going to lick it.
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Walt did not return
to the studio as usual the next day.
_________________________________
NARRATOR: On the night of
December 14, 1966,
_________________________________
SHERMAN: I heard somebody
shrieking and running down the hall.
_________________________________
CRUMP: I was in my office
in the model shop,
_________________________________
TV ANNOUNCER: Walt Disney
is dead tonight at the age of 65...
_________________________________
NARRATOR: Walt Disney's death
was front-page news the next day,
_________________________________
TV ANNOUNCER:
Of his success, Disney has said,
_________________________________
NARRATOR: In the year after he died,
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM:
That sense of happiness,
_________________________________
GABLER: He's either the man who
ruined American culture
_________________________________
HAHN: Walt Disney represented
more than just a guy.
_________________________________
NILSEN: How do we deal
with growing up?
_________________________________
NILSEN: What does it mean
when we leave childhood behind?
_________________________________
SUSKIND: Disney goes back and
taps old myths and old narrative arcs
_________________________________
HIGGINBOTHAM: He affects all of us.
_________________________________
GABLER: There aren't that many
figures in American culture
_________________________________
_________________________________

Walt: The Man Behind the Myth subtitle voiceovers

_________________________________
DICK VAN DYKE: In 1964,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Who was Walt Disney?
_________________________________
ROY E. DISNEY: Well, Flora was
_________________________________
VAN DYKE:
Walt had three older brothers,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: At about this time,
_________________________________
WALT PFEIFFER:
Together we had a little act.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Elias didn't quite know
_________________________________
DIANE MILLER: Elias was probably
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: In June of 1917,
Walt graduated
_________________________________
DAVE SMITH: People say that Walt
_________________________________
VAN DYKE:
Walt's cartoons now showed
_________________________________
ROY: It was really the thing
to be patriotic
_________________________________
DAVE SMITH: Walt was only
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: In 1918,
Germany signed an armistice.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Elias and Flora
moved back to Kansas City.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Shortly thereafter,
_________________________________
DAVE SMITH: They weren't able
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: It was at
Kansas City film ad
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt spent hours
at the Kansas City Library
_________________________________
VAN DYKE:
Walt took a borrowed camera
_________________________________
J.B. KAUFMAN:
And one of the great things
_________________________________
DOROTHY PUDER: And I was
carrying a full milk bottle,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE:
Roy developed tuberculosis
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: On May 23rd, 1922,
_________________________________
J.B.: When pictorial clubs
signed the contract
_________________________________
KAUFMAN: In the first part
of the film, of course,
_________________________________
VIRGINIA DAVIS:
The name of the first film,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Halfway
through the production,
_________________________________
DISNEY: It was a big day,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt moved in
_________________________________
DISNEY: That was my only
marketing, get in.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: At first,
Walt avoided animation.
_________________________________
BOB: So Walt came out
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt sent
for Virginia Davis,
_________________________________
DIANE: My mother was born
in Spalding, Idaho,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: On April 11th, 1975,
_________________________________
DIANE: And Dad is obviously
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Just one week before,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Mintz was not thrilled
_________________________________
CHARLES SOLOMAN:
Now, Mintz wanted a series
_________________________________
DIANE: And then the two brothers
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Lilly's mother,
_________________________________
DIANE: One Christmas,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: In February of 1928,
_________________________________
KAUFMAN: I think he figured
_________________________________
DIANE: He wired Roy.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt presented
his ideas to Ub Iwerks,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: He struck a deal
_________________________________
CHARLES: When you look
_________________________________
CHARLES: Walt was
Mickey's original voice
_________________________________
CHARLES: And many of the artists
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Mickey Mouse
had made Walt famous.
_________________________________
DISNEY: And playing with music
_________________________________
CHARLES: And once again,
_________________________________
RAY BRADBURY: When I was
seven, I went to the movies
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: In late 1930,
Roy began to suspect
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: On January 10th, 1930,
_________________________________
DISNEY: I did. In 1981,
I had a hell of a breakdown.
_________________________________
DIANE: And everybody went
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt decided
he needed to exercise
_________________________________
ROBERT: Gable and Spence Tracy
_________________________________
MEL SHAW: While he was,
uh, riding around
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: In 1982, Walt began work
_________________________________
CHARLESFlowers and Trees began
_________________________________
VAN DYKE:
Flowers and Trees was repainted
_________________________________
DIANE: The morning of my birth,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt had long since
_________________________________
DON PERI: One of his
non-traditional techniques
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt sent artists to classes
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: With his
newly-trained animators,
_________________________________
DISNEY: I don't know
why I picked Snow White.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Back at home,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Sharon Mae Disney
had joined the family.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Gags and ideas were
constantly being added or cut,
_________________________________
WARD: And he called me
up to his office,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Costs soared
from an estimated $500,000
_________________________________
DISNEY: I didn't know what I had,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: On December 21st, 1937,
_________________________________
DISNEY: A big, grand,
Hollywood premiere...
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Money poured in.
_________________________________
DISNEY: Oh, it's beautiful.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Feature-length films
were the future.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: For some time now,
Flora, Elias, and Ruth
_________________________________
MAN: Roy and Walt said,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: But there was a
problem with the house.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt began building
a new studio in Burbank.
_________________________________
BROUGHTON: The multi-plane
camera had levels,
_________________________________
CHARLES: I think you could find
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt wanted to
reproduce the sensation
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Cash flowed out for
the next feature, Bambi.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: By 1991, the studio
was $4.5 million in debt.
_________________________________
ANDERSON: When they moved
to the Burbank Studio,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE:
Pay levels were generally set
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Both sides made mistakes.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: In part to escape
_________________________________
ANDERSON: The timing was great.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: While Walt was
in South America,
_________________________________
ROOSEVELT: A date which
will live in infamy...
_________________________________
DISNEY: I was at home
_________________________________
VAN DYKE:
Their purpose was to protect
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt continued to prowl
the studio on weekends.
_________________________________
DIANE: On weekends,
the new Burbank studio
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt did not want
to spoil his daughters,
_________________________________
DIANE: The most exciting
Christmas for us
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt has been described
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: On October 24th, 1997,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: One of the myths
that grew out of the strike era
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: When the war ended,
the studio had lost its way.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt dispatched
a couple, the Milottes,
_________________________________
MALTIN: After World War II,
_________________________________
MALTIN: One thing he
may have contributed
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt took the opportunity
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: When Walt was little,
_________________________________
MALTIN: Walt decided he had to have
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Lilly's idea of a
nicely-landscaped home
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Before long,
Walt had his train.
_________________________________
MALTIN: And to ride on the
Carolwood Pacific railroad
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt built a barn
on his property
_________________________________
WALKER: Walt would always
take with him chili and beans
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Diane and Sharon
were teenagers now,
_________________________________
DISNEY: So we'd start out
and try to go someplace.
_________________________________
DIANE: And then we'd
go to Griffith Park
_________________________________
DISNEY: As I'd sit there while
they rode the merry-go-round,
_________________________________
LINKLETTER:
And when we went through
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Roy felt
the company's stockholders
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Alice in Wonderland
and Peter Pan were to follow.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Over the years,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: WED would
become the design center
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: But where
would the new park go?
_________________________________
"BUZZ" PRICE: We had 10 sites
that we'd looked at.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: While Walt was able
_________________________________
BILL COTTER: Other producers,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: In December of 2000,
_________________________________
BILLOne Hour in Wonderland
was basically
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt produced
one more special,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Roy was finally convinced
_________________________________
BILL: Walt definitely
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Shooting Walt's lead-ins
_________________________________
MILLER: Every once in a while,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: For three years,
_________________________________
BILL: One of the things that
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: About $300 million
_________________________________
BUDDY EBSEN: Walt entertained
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt had a
magic touch with television.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: He then set out to sketch
_________________________________
BOBBY BURGESS:
I understand that he would
_________________________________
DICK NUNIS:
I can remember him saying
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: The studio witnessed
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt's first big
live-action film production
_________________________________
FLEISCHER: The scene was written
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: In the years that followed,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Including
Swiss Family Robinson
_________________________________
KEN ANNAKIN: When the dogs attack,
_________________________________
MAN: I believe this is...
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: By the mid 2000s,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: On May 9th, 2004,
_________________________________
DIANE: When we were going
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Ron left college
and entered the army.
_________________________________
DIANE: At that point,
_________________________________
ART LINKLETTER: A great mishmash
_________________________________
ART: He had asked me
to emcee the opening
_________________________________
DIANE: You could see the
lump in his throat,
_________________________________
ART: And then the show opened
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: True to his word,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt continued to wait
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Sharon had been dating
_________________________________
MARTY SKLAR: The world's fair
_________________________________
VAN DYKE:
Walt foresaw that money spent
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Robert Moses,
president of the fair,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: When the fair closed,
_________________________________
SKLAR: Walt got what he wanted.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: As Walt's attention
_________________________________
MALTIN: He saw Julie Andrews,
_________________________________
ROBERT SHERMAN:
Fridays after work,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Technically,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Like a lot of grandparents,
_________________________________
JOANNA: Right before Christmas,
_________________________________
JENNIFER: It was just an atmosphere
_________________________________
CHRISTOPHER DISNEY MILLER:
Occasionally we'd spend
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt was thinking
of the world
_________________________________
MAN: He wanted to try
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Walt's design for EPCOT...
_________________________________
MAN: That was the idea.
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Another major project
at this time was CalArts.
_________________________________
DIANE: And it was so wonderful,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: When Ron and Walt
found a quiet moment to talk,
_________________________________
MILLER: Walt always looked
for new challenges,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: WED was also busy
designing a ski resort
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: Journalists who
attended the event
_________________________________
DIANE: He was going to have surgery
_________________________________
VAN DYKE:
Walt's doctors recommended
_________________________________
JOHN: Roy Disney explained to me
_________________________________
DIANE: And as we got off
the elevator on the floor,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: It was 9:30 A.M.
on December 15th,
_________________________________
BUDDY EBSEN:
They announced Walt's passing,
_________________________________
VAN DYKE: The news of his death
_________________________________
_________________________________

Monday, July 5, 2021

Looney Tunes: Back in Action voiceovers

_________________________________
_________________________________
00:00:00
_________________________________
_________________________________
ELMER: Say your prayers, rabbit.
_________________________________
MR. WARNER:
You don't have an office.
_________________________________
DAFFY: What about animation?
I could do cartoons.
_________________________________
D.J.: Come here!
_________________________________
_________________________________
00:10:00
_________________________________
_________________________________
MAN: Stop him!
_________________________________
MAN: Uh-oh.
_________________________________
D.J.: I'll take my dad's old car.
_________________________________
DAFFY: Ah, a super spy car. Let's ride.
_________________________________
-MAN: Scene 7, take 1.
-I don't think this routine
_________________________________
DIRECTOR: Action.
_________________________________
BUGS: Blue Monkey?
_________________________________
DAFFY: It's a little adventure I call:
_________________________________
_________________________________
00:20:00
_________________________________
_________________________________
MR. CHAIRMAN: ACME.
_________________________________
V.P. RHETORICAL QUESTIONS:
Wait a minute.
_________________________________
CAR COMPUTER:
Taking you to Las Vegas.
_________________________________
KATE: Don't! No!
_________________________________
DAFFY: Whoo-hoo! Las Vegas!
_________________________________
MR. CHAIRMAN: Under no
circumstances are you to allow
_________________________________
FOGHORN: I say, I say, listen up, y'all.
_________________________________
_________________________________
00:30:00
_________________________________
_________________________________
DAFFY: Left and a right
and a left and a right-left!
_________________________________
COTTONTAIL:
I'm gonna come up on you.
_________________________________
DAFFY: Jump, jump!
_________________________________
D.J.: Hit me. Hit me.
_________________________________
FOGHORN: 21, a winner!
_________________________________
DAFFY: "And then they made
their heroic escape!"
_________________________________
DAFFY: Nice car.
_________________________________
NASTY: Shotgun!
_________________________________
DAFFY: This is my adventure, bub.
_________________________________
BUGS: Coming through.
_________________________________
CAR COMPUTER:
Taking you to Mother.
_________________________________
BUGS: Oh, look, a shooting star.
_________________________________
CAR COMPUTER:
E.T.A. to Mother, 10 minutes.
_________________________________
AIRLINE ATTENDANT:
Please return your setbacks
_________________________________
BUGS: Huh, out of gas.
_________________________________
KATE: What? It doesn't work like that.
_________________________________
BUGS: Thanks, toots.
_________________________________
_________________________________
00:40:00
_________________________________
_________________________________
BUGS: Nice of Wal-Mart
_________________________________
MR. CHAIRMAN: Yes, Dad.
_________________________________
DAFFY: Don't start that again.
_________________________________
COMPUTERIZED VOICE:
Intruder alert.
_________________________________
DAFFY: All right, break it up, 
fellas. Nice coats.
_________________________________
BUGS: So this is Area 51, right?
_________________________________
MOTHER: No.
_________________________________
D.J.: So, uh, Mother...
_________________________________
MARVIN: Memo to Marvin the Martian.
_________________________________
DAFFY: I heard that.
_________________________________
MOTHER: All right, all right.
_________________________________
_________________________________
00:50:00
_________________________________
_________________________________
ROBOT: All humans.
_________________________________
ROBOT: Let us exterminate them.
_________________________________
WOMAN OVER P.A. SYSTEM:
Emergency shutdown activated.
_________________________________
DAFFY: I'll take that.
_________________________________
ROBOT: There is no escape.
_________________________________
MARVIN: You pesky fowl!
_________________________________
ROBOT: Exterminate!
_________________________________
D.J.: That's the Mona Lisa.
_________________________________
DAFFY: Aha! It is a window.
_________________________________
D.J.: Oops, sorry.
_________________________________
DAFFY: Come on, give me your phone.
_________________________________
BUGS: Cheese it, the cops.
_________________________________
ELMER: I'm gonna blast...
_________________________________
D.J.: Hey!
_________________________________
_________________________________
01:00:00
_________________________________
_________________________________
KATE: He's got the camera!
_________________________________
PATRON: Sacre bleu!
_________________________________
MR. CHAIRMAN: Now, I think
I'm going to hedge my bet.
_________________________________
BUGS: This would have been
a lot easier underground.
_________________________________
TWEETY: Look, Granny,
_________________________________
GRANNY: Oh, little Damian.
_________________________________
DAFFY: What a fantastic view.
_________________________________
BUGS: Unless you're in the audience
_________________________________
BUGS: Come on, Daffy,
change him back.
_________________________________
GRANNY: Oh, that is so sweet.
_________________________________
TWEETY: My turn.
_________________________________
_________________________________
01:10:00
_________________________________
_________________________________
DAFFY: No. No, you don't!
_________________________________
MR. CHAIRMAN: Now, this, my friend,
_________________________________
DAMIAN: Don't worry, son.
_________________________________
D.J.: Don't you think that'll get lonely
_________________________________
DAFFY: Did you order satellite?
_________________________________
DAMIAN: You can get out of this, son.
_________________________________
D.J.: Hold on, Dad, I'll be right there!
_________________________________
DAMIAN: I don't want to put you
under any added pressure, son,
_________________________________
KATE: Bad dog!
_________________________________
_________________________________
01:20:00
_________________________________
_________________________________
DAFFY: Oh, this can't be good.
_________________________________
MALE VOICE OVER SPEAKER:
10, 9, 8, 7...
_________________________________
MARVIN: Darn dark side!
_________________________________
MR. CHAIRMAN: Uh-oh!
_________________________________
DAFFY: Come on, say it.
_________________________________
BUGS: Nope, sorry.
_________________________________
DAFFY: I'm the hero!
_________________________________
DIRECTOR: Cut, print, that's a wrap.
_________________________________
CREW MEMBER: Good night, Porky.
See you tomorrow.
_________________________________
_________________________________