Orphan's Benefit is a Mickey Mouse short that debuted on August 11, 1934. It would be remade in color in 1941.
Summary[]
An ensemble performance for a crowd of orphans emceed by Mickey includes piano playing, an adagio dance, an operatic number, and numerous attempts by Donald Duck to recite "Little Boy Blue."
Characters[]
- Mickey Mouse (voiced by Walt Disney)
- Donald Duck (voiced by Clarence Nash)
- Goofy
- Clarabelle Cow
- Clara Cluck (voiced by Florence Gill)
- Horace Horsecollar
- The Orphans
Home video releases[]
Laserdisc
- Mickey Mouse: The Black and White Years - Volume One
DVD
- Walt Disney Treasures: Mickey Mouse in Black and White
Trivia[]
- Orphan's Benefit was the first appearance of Donald Duck in a Mickey Mouse series film, marking the characters' first joint appearance. Donald had previously appeared only in the Silly Symphonies series.
- Because of that, this is Donald's first black and white appearance.
- The orphans strongly resemble Mickey and Minnie's "dream babies" from Mickey's Nightmare. They even have the same rambunctiousness and resemblance in 2D animation made by Disney Animation.
- Although Orphan's Benefit was Donald's second appearance, the film was the first to significantly develop his character. Many of Donald's personality traits first seen in Orphan's Benefit would become permanently associated with him, such as his love of showmanship, his fierce determination, belligerence, and most famously his easily provoked temper. The film also introduced some of Donald's physical antics, such as his signature temper tantrum of hopping on one foot while holding out one fist and swinging the other. This was the creation of animator Dick Lundy who termed this Donald's "fighting pose."
- Orphan's Benefit also represented a new direction for Disney cartoons, as noted by Disney historian Marcia Blitz: "It can be seen that the framework of Orphan's Benefit was traditionally slapstick. Audiences laughed at Donald's physical mishaps much as they laughed at Chaplin's or Keaton's. But in this instance, there was the added dimension of Donald's abrasive personality. Surely nothing like it had ever been seen in a cartoon". Animator Ward Kimball who worked on the film called it a "turning point" for the studio, citing its extensive use of character animation which was used to physically convey personality.
- The short was also the first appearance of Clara Cluck who would go on to appear in six other theatrical cartoon shorts.
- In the short, Donald's fighting stance is based on that of a boxer of the period, with one fist positioned over his stomach and the other extended outwards.
- At one point, Donald says, "Am I mortified! Am I mortified!", which is a catchphrase of comedian and singer Jimmy Durante. His bill even transforms into Durante's famous "schnozzola".
- This 1934 version was never released on VHS. But it was released on DVD of the Walt Disney's Treasures: Mickey Mouse in Black and White - Volume One.
Gallery[]