Happy Mickey Mouse Day and Disney.
Oh come on surely not. You'd be forgiven for thinking that this one had been literally a cartoon with a speech bubble attached to it. So today is National Mickey Mouse Day and you're still in the land of dreams, safely cocooned in your own childhood and this is happening. It's surely a national day that belongs in the realms of the ridiculous and just preposterous? But it really is a good idea because everything seems possible in the best possible world.
Some of us of course were the legend who is Mickey Mouse since he was the cartoon character who sent us into wild paroxysms of laughter, giggling, chuckling and then blowing out yet more expressions of happiness and delirium. Mickey Mouse belonged to the Walt Disney childhood factory, a place where all the conveyor belts and machinery seemed to be always working and never stopping. Everywhere, that now familiar back story of Walt Disney, controversial as it might have been, always remained faithful to the concept of childish fantasy, never let up for a minute in his quest to produce some of the greatest cartoons ever conceived and executed on the movie silver screen.
Even now in hindsight whatever you may have thought of the man who was Disney, there can never be denying his phenomenal impact as a film maker, producer and director. When Disney settled down in front of his vast collections of drawing boards, pens and pencils, you knew that there was something pretty special on his feverishly fertile mind. Walt Disney was, of course, an artistic genius, unparalleled cartoonist of the highest quality and a man with a veritable stable of fun kids characters and a huge repertoire of animal sketches that suddenly turned into glorious technicolour on the cinema screen.
But let's concentrate on Mickey Mouse. Now, as you may or may not know, Mickey Mouse, originally started out his life as a work in progress. Before he became Mickey, he was formerly known as Mortimer Mouse. The USA was still in the grip of the Great Depression and there were soup kitchens in the streets of New York, California, Los Angeles, Hollywood, Detroit and every American city trapped in a downward spiral of poverty and economic depression.
So who do you think waved a wand and made America feel so much better about themselves. Al Jolson, who had just revolutionised the world of movies with the first talkies movie called the Jazz Singer, found himself up in fierce competition with a remarkable man with a wonderfully prophetic vision of the future. Walt Disney had now given us Steamboat Willie, then a black and white revelation that underwent an astonishing metamorphosis that changed us overnight from hard bitten scepticism into lifelong converts who had to believe in miracles.
From those heady and early days of Disney's development, Walt Disney knew he had something when Mickey Mouse started clowning around in that remarkable sequence of fun loving tomfoolery, knockabout antics that had kids rolling in the aisles. Mickey spoke with a distinctive high pitched voice, squeaky clean at all times and determined to play with the rest of Disney's lovable friends such as Donald Duck, Pluto, Daffy Duck and then there was epic movie era which underlined Disney's pre-eminence and cinema domination.
Before long we had Jumbo, the stunningly impressive Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, followed by yours truly was introduced to Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Book and that endearing deer known as Bambi. But the magnitude of Disney's achievements can never be truly measured because the man was so prolific and constant.
During the 1960s author Pam Travers had already written the superlative Mary Poppins, the nanny who was entrusted with the welfare of two children who just happened to have an umbrella which took her flying over a thousand smoky rooftops. But a recent film about Travers cast a much darker shadow over Disney's now questionable reputation. Travers believed that the Mary Poppins character had been completely undermined and then destroyed by Disney's insistence on reducing Poppins to some comic pastiche of the one Travers had in mind.
But we are still on the subject of Mickey Mouse because, it is, after all. His female counterpart Minny Mouse probably feels like a little hard done by, completely overlooked. Mickey Mouse may well be wandering around those flourishing and spectacular theme parks, walking around jauntily with that black and white suit and those big ears which can hear about the latest news in Mississippi, Colorado or Alabama. He'll be recalling those far off days when Mickey held our beautiful children in thrall when lining up for Mickey Mouse's autograph just before breakfast. Mickey was Florida and Florida was Mickey.
So for those who still remember the TV kids programmes the Mickey Mouse club, this is your day. We may not know that much about Mickey Mouse but thanks to the marvels of cinematography, we are considerably more enlightened about this wondrous Disney creation. Mickey Mouse is the leader of his cartoon gang, a world exclusive to children, unreal of course but very much alive in the world of our children and their grandchildren in perpetuity.
There he goes as jolly and upbeat as always, shaking the hands of Mickey sociably and never less than friendly. He'll wave at the crowds, dancing and moving with a rhythmic beat, constantly understanding kids because that friendship will never go away. Mickey Mouse has spanned a whole multitude of generations, a cult figure in both Florida and Paris. And that's the way it should always be.