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Mickey Mouse (often referred to simply as Mickey) has been a Walt Disney character since 1928.

 

It's a little black mouse with red overalls. In the early comics he was accompanied by Donald, and today he is most often seen with his friend Goofy.

 

His fiancée is called Minnie Mouse, a very pretty little black mouse. Mickey is known around the world. This is the second Disney character created.

 

 

The birth of Mickey Mouse has always been surrounded by an aura of legend. Many versions circulate, it is true, on his creation, including several from the mouths of Walt Disney or Ub Iwerks.

 

 

Walt disney

 

Lillian disney

 

Roy O. Disney

In February 1928, when half of the cartoons in the Oswald series, the Lucky Rabbit had already been produced and the rabbit's success was growing, Walt Disney joined New York by train, for - he thought then - simply renegotiated his contract with its distributor, Charles Mintz. His series winning all the votes, he hopes, in fact, to obtain a notable extension on the price of a film, imagining it going from $ 2,250 to $ 2,500. The meeting with the distributor unfortunately quickly turns to berezina. Not only does the latter demand a drop in the cost per episode but also announces that it has concluded contracts in its name with all the key hosts. He purely and simply dismembered, for his profit, the Walt Disney team and its production capacity. The hosts, with two exceptions, Les Clark and Ub Iwerks, showed no loyalty and secretly "sold" themselves to the distributor. Oswald's fallen dad quickly realizes the obvious. He gives up scandalized any ambition on his lucky rabbit, breaks all contact with Charles Mintz and Universal, limiting himself strictly to honoring his initial contract and completing the delivery of the planned cartoons. Walt Disney is now convinced that he has to stand on his own feet. He left New York on March 13, 1928 after having sent a telegram to his brother Roy O. Disney telling him that all was well and that he would give him details on his return.

 

 

Telegram from Walt Disney to his brother dated March 13, 1928

 

This is where the legend begins. Walt Disney would indeed have imagined Mickey on the train that brought him back to Hollywood after his stormy interview in New York. The master of animation in the making is, at this precise moment, both scandalized and devastated and the journey back to California, made by train with his wife Lillian, remains for him one of his worst professional moments. His studio was, it is true, now an orphan and his team, decimated even if it still included its most precious pillars. Still, the great Walt retains an unwavering faith in his rebounding abilities. This unfortunate episode is, in fact, not his first, and he has long learned that success is anything but a long river. Better, he draws from this mishap a rule from which he will never deviate. He now knows the imperative need to always keep total ownership of his works to himself and to ensure draconian control at all times. Walt Disney is therefore in the absolute obligation to find a new hero to restart the machine and produce a new series of cartoons. An anthropomorphized mouse quickly appeared to him as the ideal solution since there was no other having the main role: dogs, cats or rabbits being always preferred to him ... Legend also has it that the choice to focus on a mouse would come from the fact that Walt had managed, in his old studio in Kansas City, to tame a specimen he had called Mortimer, a name he attributed in the process to his new character. His wife Lillian, not adhering to the surname, considered too solemn for a cartoon animal, quickly renamed him Mickey.

 

 

Walt Disney's first mice

 

The choice to make his character a mouse is not much of a surprise. The little story about the tamed mouse indeed reveals that Walt Disney had a certain attachment to these rodents. If it is however very difficult to know if the anecdote is true, it is easy to find traces of these small animals in his works preceding the birth of Mickey Mouse. Many mice dot, it is true, the cartoons of the series Alice Comedies and Oswald, The Lucky Rabbit. They are certainly secondary characters but they are very present even allowing themselves to appear in advertising posters like those of Alice the Peacemaker in 1924 or of The Ol 'Swimmin' Hole in 1928. Similarly, they stand out in the last episodes of Alice Comedies and serve as a test ban for the animators of Walt Disney. With the disappearance of the cat Julius, many secondary characters make, it is true, their appearance, and in particular, precious mice who see their

 

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