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"Baby mine, don't you cry
Baby mine, dry your eyes
Rest your head close to my heart
Never to part
Baby of mine"
The
Walt Disney full length feature film "Dumbo," released in 1940,
introduced to the world one of the greatest characters in the Disney
pantheon, Dumbo the flying elephant! Dumbo was the only character in the
film who never uttered a single word, and yet he is one of the most
remembered Disney stars. All of his feelings were conveyed through body
movements and facial expressions. The extraordinary animation skill
needed in order to do this with a human, but in this case a baby
elephant, can not be underestimated.
The
Disney Studio animation artists were still fairly new to feature
animation, having only started in 1937 with "Snow White and the Seven
Dwarfs." The film prior to "Dumbo" was "Fantasia," with one of the most
successful sequences being "Night on Bald Mountain." Here again, the
main character Chernabog, a huge winged devil, sitting on top of a
mountain, commanding the undead below, and never uttering a single word;
made a huge impression on the viewing public.
"I gave him everything I thought he should have," said Tytla. "It just happened. I don't know a damn thing about elephants. It wasn't that. I was thinking in terms of humans, and I saw a chance to do a chracter without using any cheap theatrics. Most of the expressions and mannerisms I got from my own kid. There's nothing theatrical about a two-year-old kid. They're real and sincere- like when they damn near wet their pants from excitement when you come home at night. I've bawled my kid out for pestering me when I'm reading or something, and he doesn't know what to make of it. He'll just stand there and maybe grab my hand and cry... I tried to put all those things in Dumbo."
Mrs. Jumbo, Dumbo's mother, was voiced by Verna Felton; but she only utters a single line in the film "Jumbo. Junior." Felton was also the voice for the Elephant Matriarch in "Dumbo" and also voiced Flora and The Queen in "Sleeping Beauty," Fairy Godmother in "Cinderella," Queen of Hearts in "Alice In Wonderland," Aunt Sarah in "Lady and the Tramp," and Winifred the elephant in "The Jungle Book." There is no credit for Mrs. Jumbo's singing voice, but is thought to be that of Betty Noyes. Joe Grant and Dick Huemer changed Dumbo's mother's name from "Mother Ella" in the book to Mrs. Jumbo, as a reference to the famed Barnum & Bailey Circus elephant.
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