Song Car-Tunes: Difference between revisions

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The concept of the "Bouncing Ball" has become such an established cultural icon, that it has been used in television commercials to sell all sorts of products from sleeping tablets to cat food. Just before retiring in 1968, Dave Fleischer used a form of the "Bouncing Ball" for the ending of ''[[Thoroughly Modern Millie]]'' where he shot cutout animation to "bounce" the head of [[Beatrice Lillie]] over the lyrics to the title song.
 
==After DeForest==
The Internet Movie Database lists these Fleischer animation films as being released by Weiss Brothers-Artclass Pictures 1926 and 1927. This suggests the Fleischers turned to Weiss Brothers to release these films -- some sound, some silent -- after they dissolved their partnership with DeForest.
 
*''For Me and My Gal'' (1926)
*''I Love to Fall Asleep'' (1926)
*''In My Harem'' (1926)
*''Just Try to Picture Me'' (1926)
*''My Sweetie'' (1926)
*''Old Pal'' (1926)
*''Alexander's Ragtime Band'' (1926)
*''The Sheik of Araby'' (1926)
*''Annie Laurie'' (1926)
*''Oh How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning'' (1926)
*''When I Lost You'' (1926)
*''Margie'' (1926)
*''When the Midnight Choo-Choo Leaves for Alabam''' (1926)
*''Oh What a Pal Was Mary'' (1926)
*''Everybody's Doing It'' (1926)
*''Yak-A-Hula-Hick-A-Doola'' (1926)
*''My Wife's Gone to the Country'' (1926)
*''Tumbledown Shack in Athlone'' (1927)
*''The Rocky Road to Dublin'' (1927)
*''Beautiful Eyes'' (1926)
*''Finiculee Finicula'' (1926)
*''Micky'' (1926)
*''When the Angelus Was Ringing'' (1926)
*''When I Leave This World Behind'' (1926)
*''Call Me Up Some Rainy Afternoon'' (1927)
*''Oh I Wish I Was in Michigan'' (1927)
 
==See also==