Animation Magazine

The Mouse Is Back!

Mickey and his pals move into a silly talking funhouse in their new Disney Junior show.

- Mickey Mouse Funhouse debuts with the primetime special “Mickey the Brave!” on Friday, July 16 at 7:30 p.m. on Disney Junior. The show premieres Friday, Aug. 20 at 8 a.m. on both Disney Channel and Disney Junior.

Mickey and his pals move into a silly talking funhouse in their new Disney Junior show.

No, you’re not imagining things. Disney is unveiling yet another new animated show starring Mickey Mouse, Donald, Goofy, Minnie, Daisy and Pluto this summer. The new preschool show Mickey Mouse Funhouse features the classic Disney characters and a few new ones, including a magical talking playhouse called Funny, a pet doghouse named Teddy and Windy the Weathervan­e!

The colorful new series is executive produced by Emmy-winning animation veteran Phil Weinstein, whose numerous credits include Hellboy Animated, Curious George 3, Mickey Mouse Clubhouse and Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures. Thomas Hart is co-exec producer and supervisin­g story editor, Mark Drop is story editor and Emmy winner Alan Bodner (Rapunzel’s Tangled Adventure) serves as art director

“We wanted to put all these familiar characters in a magical and more whimsical setting,” says Weinstein during a recent interview. “We borrowed a lot from Disney theme parks and classic animators and artists such as Mary Blair, Evyind Earle and Freddie Moore. For me, it was really important to give our audience a fun look at this magical world that Mickey and his friends were living in. We started with

Freddie Moore’s original design of Mickey, but fans will sense some subtle adjustment­s. We wanted the characters to live in a fun, magical world, and the CG was more design-oriented, cartoony and definitely not photoreali­stic.”

In Praise of Funny

The animation veteran says he gets a special kick out of the new character of Funny, voiced by Harvey Guillén. “Getting that character was challengin­g because we didn’t want him to be a teacher or a parental figure, not like Bear in the Big Blue House,” he explains. “Funny is Mickey’s buddy and he makes you laugh, and he’s silly and definitely not perfect!”

Weinstein points out that preschool shows tend to be deceptivel­y challengin­g. “It reminds me of that time when Walt Disney was asked about the importance of the learning components of his movies and TV shows, and he responded, ‘I’d rather have an audience be entertaine­d first and then maybe learn something along the way than have to teach the audience something and hope that they’re entertaine­d by it.’ We are trying to make an entertaini­ng show, but we include important social lessons and wish fulfillmen­t elements, and teach them about creativity and friendship as well.”

Like most animated shows made during the pandemic, Mickey Mouse Funhouse was made remotely from the homes of the production team. “I started working on the show just before the pandemic, but we had to put the crew together (about 50 people) after the lockdown. Our studio partner overseas is Technicolo­r, India.”

When asked about the phenomenal longevity of Mickey Mouse, who turns 93 on November 18 (release date of the short Steamboat Willie), Weinstein has a simple answer: “What’s pretty cool about Mickey and all these classic characters is that you immediatel­y know and recognize them: If I ask you what Mickey’s like, you know he’s an earnest and positive sort of dude. Donald is a cranky guy, etc. Of course, not everything is perfect in Mickey’s life. He has to work on these relationsh­ips!” ◆

 ??  ?? Mice at Play: The new series Mickey Mouse Funhouse features Disney favorites like Mickey, Goofy, Minnie and Donald, and introduces a magical talking playhouse named Funny.
Mice at Play: The new series Mickey Mouse Funhouse features Disney favorites like Mickey, Goofy, Minnie and Donald, and introduces a magical talking playhouse named Funny.

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