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The Nifty Nineties

 The Nifty Nineties
type
TVTItem
 The Nifty Nineties
label
The Nifty Nineties
 The Nifty Nineties
page
TheNiftyNineties
 The Nifty Nineties
comment
The Nifty Nineties is a 1941 animated short film from Disney.Starring Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse, this cartoon places them back in the olden days of the '90s — the 1890s, that is to say. The plot, such as it is, consists of Mickey meeting Minnie in the park, taking her to a vaudeville show, and then taking her for a ride in his "horseless carriage." But really, the storyline is just an excuse to showcase and/or parody tropes associated with the Mauve Decade.
 The Nifty Nineties
fetched
2024-04-24T19:03:02Z
 The Nifty Nineties
parsed
2024-04-24T19:03:02Z
 The Nifty Nineties
processingComment
Dropped link to Vaudeville: Not a Feature - ITEM
 The Nifty Nineties
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DBTropes
 The Nifty Nineties / int_127fc252
type
Creator Cameo
 The Nifty Nineties / int_127fc252
comment
Creator Cameo: The vaudeville performers Fred and Ward are caricatures of animators Fred Moore and Ward Kimball, who also provide the voices.
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The Nifty Nineties / int_127fc252
 The Nifty Nineties / int_16d8476f
type
Protest Song
 The Nifty Nineties / int_16d8476f
comment
Protest Song: "Come Home, Father!" is a real nineteenth-century song that was used to advocate for prohibition prior to the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment. The W.C.T.U. even adopted it as their anthem. This cartoon, having been made several years after prohibition ended, it doesn't take the song's temperance message seriously.
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_1b65dfad
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The Cameo
 The Nifty Nineties / int_1b65dfad
comment
The Cameo: During the "In the Good Old Summertime" sequence, Mickey and Minnie pass by Goofy on a pennyfarthing, and Donald, Daisy, Huey, Dewey, and Louie on a tandem bicycle.
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The Nifty Nineties / int_1b65dfad
 The Nifty Nineties / int_1fffccf7
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No Plot? No Problem!
 The Nifty Nineties / int_1fffccf7
comment
No Plot? No Problem!: There’s not much of a story here: Mickey and Minnie meet, go to a vaudeville show, then take a ride on Mickey’s car. The real purpose of the cartoon is to take a nostalgic look back at life some fifty years earlier.
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Alliterative Title
 The Nifty Nineties / int_26b2747
comment
Alliterative Title: "The Nifty Nineties".
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The Nifty Nineties / int_26b2747
 The Nifty Nineties / int_27a42ebc
type
Spiritual Successor
 The Nifty Nineties / int_27a42ebc
comment
Spiritual Successor: Nine years later, in 1950, a Donald Duck short entitled Crazy Over Daisy was released, using the same 1890s setting, and many of the characters make brief appearances wearing the same costumes.
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_358d6f63
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Anachronistic Soundtrack
 The Nifty Nineties / int_358d6f63
comment
Anachronistic Soundtrack: The song "In the Good Old Summer Time" is actually from 1902. The other featured songs all existed in the 1890s,note With the obvious exception of "The Gay Nineties," the opening song that was written specifically for the cartoon. although some originated earlier.
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The Nifty Nineties / int_358d6f63
 The Nifty Nineties / int_381c2e91
type
Forgotten Trope
 The Nifty Nineties / int_381c2e91
comment
Forgotten Trope: Modern viewers may be perplexed by the inclusion of the rather morbid "Father, Dear Father" segment featuring a vaudeville slideshow version of the song "Come Home, Father!", about a little girl trying to get her drunkard father to leave the tavern and return to his family. This is a caricature of art produced by the temperance movement; the way it portrayed the effects of alcohol consumption would have been familiar to those who remembered the 1890s and who saw the short at the time it was released.
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_3bd384bf
type
Parasol of Prettiness
 The Nifty Nineties / int_3bd384bf
comment
Parasol of Prettiness: Minnie carries one.
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_51e0938e
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Picture-Perfect Presentation
 The Nifty Nineties / int_51e0938e
comment
Picture-Perfect Presentation: The cartoon opens with an old black-and-white photograph fading into the real scene.
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The Cover Changes the Gender
 The Nifty Nineties / int_6b6edbda
comment
The Cover Changes the Gender: Well, not exactly the gender, but the cartoon's rendition of "The Fountain in the Park" does come with a pronoun change. In the original version, it's sung from the perspective of the man, who refers to himself in the first person ("A smile was all she gave to me"). Here, it's sung by an off-screen chorus, with both parties referred to in the third person ("A smile was all she gave to him").
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The Nifty Nineties / int_6b6edbda
 The Nifty Nineties / int_6fd83482
type
Ocular Gushers
 The Nifty Nineties / int_6fd83482
comment
Ocular Gushers: Minnie sheds massive gobs of tears while seeing "Father, Dear Father" while Mickey tries to comfort her.
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The Nifty Nineties / int_6fd83482
 The Nifty Nineties / int_782fdff
type
Storybook Opening
 The Nifty Nineties / int_782fdff
comment
Storybook Opening: Like several other Disney cartoons, the short opens this way.
 The Nifty Nineties / int_782fdff
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The Nifty Nineties / int_782fdff
 The Nifty Nineties / int_912b24c4
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Art Shift
 The Nifty Nineties / int_912b24c4
comment
Art Shift: The vaudeville sequence has a non-animated slideshow done in the sketchy style of John Held, a 1920s illustrator who also liked to send up the 1890s.
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_a4c37cbe
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Mood Whiplash
 The Nifty Nineties / int_a4c37cbe
comment
Mood Whiplash: The first segment of the vaudeville sequence is a magic lantern show entitled "Father, Dear Father", about a little girl trying to get her alcoholic father to leave the tavern as her little brother is dying at home. Minnie bawls her eyes out as Mickey tries to comfort her. The next segment features the dancing, joke-cracking duo of Fred and Ward, "two clever boys from Illinois". Mickey and Minnie share a good laugh over their antics.
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The Nifty Nineties / int_a4c37cbe
 The Nifty Nineties / int_bd2116fd
type
Accidental Kiss
 The Nifty Nineties / int_bd2116fd
comment
Accidental Kiss: After crashing into a haystack, Mickey and Minnie try to kiss, but a cow that got caught up in the crash pops her head between them and they both end up kissing her instead.
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_c1f719af
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Chicken Joke
 The Nifty Nineties / int_c1f719af
comment
Chicken Joke: The vaudeville audience cracks up at hearing this joke. Apparently, the 1940s writers assumed this ancient joke was still fresh in the 1890s. In reality, the joke dates from the 1840s, and it was considered old hat even in the 1890s.
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_c7a9137e
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Universal-Adaptor Cast
 The Nifty Nineties / int_c7a9137e
comment
Universal-Adaptor Cast: Mickey, Minnie, and the rest are all the same, just relocated to the 1890s.
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_cc5c18b6
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Iris Out
 The Nifty Nineties / int_cc5c18b6
comment
Iris Out: Like most Classic Disney Shorts, the cartoon ends this way.
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_f3fe041f
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Wallet Moths
 The Nifty Nineties / int_f3fe041f
comment
Wallet Moths: A pair of moths fly out of Mickey’s money purse as he pays for tickets for the vaudeville show.
 The Nifty Nineties / int_f3fe041f
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 The Nifty Nineties / int_fe7ae988
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TheGayNineties
 The Nifty Nineties / int_fe7ae988
comment
The Gay '90s: The cartoon covers many of the tropes that a 1940s audience would have associated with the 1890s, from the newfangled "horseless carriage" (with a speedometer that only goes up to 20 mph) to vaudeville shows to maudlin temperance propaganda to penny-farthings and tandem bicycles.
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The Nifty Nineties

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 The Nifty Nineties
hasFeature
Creator Cameo / int_72dca880