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Mickey’s Follies (1929)
Mickey puts on a show in his barnyard. A short dramatic scene by a chicken and rooster; an operatic ode by Patricia Pig, and then the main attraction: Mickey sings and plays his theme song, then dances to it.
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Barnyard Olympics (1932)
Mickey and his friends are staging a sort of olympics in a makeshift stadium on his farm. The main event is a sort of quadrathlon, with running, pole vaulting, rowing, and cycling. Mickey gets a late start due to some foul play by Pete, and that’s not the only foul play.
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Musical Farmer (1932)
Mickey performs all his chores while whistling or singing. The big excitement is when Fanny the hen, who hasn’t laid an egg in some time, lays a super-giant egg.
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The Pet Store (1933)
Mickey Mouse’s new job at Tony’s Pet Store is jeopardized when Beppo the Gorilla escapes and kidnaps Minnie. Mickey fights back with the help of the other animals in the store.
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Water Babies (1935)
A colony of nymph babies bathe and play in a river in this Silly Symphony.
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The Ugly Duckling (1931)
The film begins with a mother hen sitting on her eggs from which six baby chicks are born. Though initially overjoyed, her mood changes to disgust when the final egg hatches out a duckling. Though the duckling desperately attempts to win his foster family’s acceptance, the mother hen is adamant in her refusal to care for an infant that isn’t even her species, let alone not even hers.
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The Old Mill (1937)
We see the various birds, mice, and bats that have moved into an old windmill, followed by the frogs, crickets, and fireflies making their music in an adjacent pond. Then a storm comes, shaking loose parts in mill and threatening everything we’ve seen.
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The Whoopee Party (1932)
A house party. While Minnie plays piano and the guests dance, Mickey, Goofy, and Horace prepare a snack, which is brought out to much fanfare and immediately devoured. A band forms and plays Scott Joplin’s The Entertainer; Mickey dances with Patricia Pig and various inanimate objects also dance, while all cry “Whoopee!” from time to time. The police come to break up the party.
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The Pied Piper (1933)
The people of Hamelin, overrun with rats, offer a bag of gold to anyone who can get rid of the rats. A piper offers to do the job, and successfully lures the rats into a mirage of cheese, which disappears. The citizens, disappointed that all he did was play a tune, offer only pocket change. The piper, angered, plays a new tune that has all the children of the city follow him, even the new twins the stork is preparing to deliver.
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The Goddess of Spring (1934)
The goddess is greeted by dancing flowers and fairies. The devil comes and takes her away to be his queen. She’s despondent, as winter settles in above ground. But the devil isn’t happy either, and offers anything to make her happy. They reach an agreement: she’ll spend six months above ground and six below. Thus we have seasons.
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