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Disney Animated Shorts

Season 1961 1961
TV-G

  • 1961-02-20T08:00:00Z on ABC
  • 10m
  • 50m (5 episodes)
  • United States
  • English
Airing from 1921 onwards Features all of the animated short films produced by Walt Disney and Walt Disney Animation Studios, from 1921 to the present. This includes films produced at the Laugh-O-Gram Studio which Disney founded in 1921 as well as the animation studio now owned by The Walt Disney Company, called the Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio (1923), The Walt Disney Studio (1926), Walt Disney Productions (1929), Walt Disney Feature Animation (1986), and Walt Disney Animation Studios (2007), and includes all of the cartoons of Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy, Pluto, Humphrey the Bear and the Disney produced Oswald the Lucky Rabbit shorts.

5 episodes

Season Premiere

1961-02-20T08:00:00Z

1961x01 Aquamania

Season Premiere

1961x01 Aquamania

  • 1961-02-20T08:00:00Z10m

Goofy gets the boating bug, but doesn't expect to be in a water skiing race with an octopus.

1961-03-05T08:00:00Z

1961x02 The Coyote's Lament

1961x02 The Coyote's Lament

  • 1961-03-05T08:00:00Z10m

Windwagon Smith blows into town with a strange contraption: a conestoga wagon outfitted with a wind sail. The town fathers figure that since a small windwagon does so well, a big one must do better. They set out to build one (while Smith woos the mayor's daughter) and launch it on it's maiden voyage to very unexpected results.

1961-06-21T07:00:00Z

1961x04 The Litterbug

1961x04 The Litterbug

  • 1961-06-21T07:00:00Z10m

Donald and his nephews are litterbugs: they drop garbage everywhere they go - even when they are out for a drive in Donald's car - until they are stopped by a policeman who makes them pick up everything they have dropped. This was the last Donald Duck cartoon ever made.

1961-06-21T07:00:00Z

1961x05 Donald and the Wheel

1961x05 Donald and the Wheel

  • 1961-06-21T07:00:00Z10m

A father tells his son the invention of the wheel was most important; to prove it, the two hipsters visit the inventor caveman Donald Duck. There follows a survey of the progress of transportation, a digression into the basics of gear ratios, a series of live-action dancers to various styles of music inside a giant jukebox, an illustration of the use of wheels in power generation and space satellites, etc. Ultimately, Donald decides he doesn't want the responsibility, but certainly someone else would take on the task.

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