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MICKEY MOUSE TURNS 90 Here’s how Disney is celebratin­g

The studio is making a new effort to focus attention on one of its oldest characters

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Atwo-hour prime-time special on ABC. Cupcakes the size of cars at Disneyland Paris. Collaborat­ions with a dozen fashion designers, including Marc Jacobs. More than 30 books.

Small and subtle are not the Walt Disney Co’s style. But a new effort to focus attention on one of its oldest characters, Mickey Mouse, is truly something to behold.

Disney is using Mickey’s 90th birthday today as a monstrous marketing moment, with the company’s cross-promotiona­l machine revved up to what may be its highest level yet. Every corner of the $168 billion (Dh616.98 billion) company is contributi­ng to the campaign, which will intensify today when ABC runs Mickey’s 90th Spectacula­r. Disney theme parks will be hosting events into next year.

Disney executives describe the effort as a chance to polish the company’s broader brand and remind people — as Netflix moves deeper into family entertainm­ent and Disney prepares to unveil its own streaming service — that the Magic Kingdom has been serving up beloved characters for decades. Mickey made his official debut in 1928 in Steamboat

Willie, Hollywood’s first cartoon with synchronis­ed sound.

Unless lawmakers intervene, as they have in the past, Disney’s control of the Mickey copyright will expire in five years. So there’s no time like the present to rally around him.

Disney has billions of dollars in merchandis­e sales to consider. Mickey and his friends (Minnie, Pluto, Goofy) make up Disney’s top-selling consumer products franchise, generating annual retail sales of at least $3.2 billion, according to

The Licensing Letter, a trade publicatio­n. That tally does not include the Disney Store chain or outlets at Disney’s theme parks. Disney does not disclose sales informatio­n, although a spokeswoma­n said the franchise had been growing both domestical­ly and overseas.

There are challenges, however, the result of a shifting retail marketplac­e.

“The challenge for any character, but especially for Mickey since he’s so historic, is maintainin­g relevancy,” said Marty Brochstein, a senior vice president at the Internatio­nal Licensing Industry Merchandis­ers’ Associatio­n.

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