GROWING UP DISNEY

A fan’s reflections on the generation-spanning House of Mouse …

I totally was a Disney kid.

As far back as I can remember, the creations of the studio first founded by Walt Disney and his brother 100 years ago this fall were a major part of my life.

I have fleeting memories of when my mother took me back to her hometown in Wales for an extended visit with my Gran. I  celebrated my 3rd birthday while there and I particularly recall the swings in the town park where, as Mom used to tell me, everyone would point me out as “the little American.”

Of course, it probably wasn’t too difficult for them to spot me, what with the coonskin cap and fringed buckskin jacket I was wearing — two of the hallmarks of a kid growing up in 1955 America, thanks to Walt Disney.

Buddy Ebsen (left) and Fess Parker starred in “Davy Crockett.” (Disney)

Disney had started out making film shorts in the 1920s, then cartoons starring his new character, Mickey Mouse, before graduating to animated features such as “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” and then, in the 1950s, live action films.

Hollywood initially was scared of the latest entertainment medium, television, but Disney, always an innovator, was one of the first movie producers to embrace TV, launching a weekly program on ABC that, not coincidentally, also promoted his movies and his new California amusement park, Disneyland. And Walt himself became a part of our lives as the avuncular host of the program.

Disney’s first big TV success was a three-part miniseries about frontiersman Davy Crockett that debuted on his show (one episode a month) from December 1954 to February 1955, and then was edited into a feature film, “Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier.”

My first film in a movie theater was “Fantasia.” (Disney)

The TV version, seen by an estimated 40 million viewers, produced the first great pop culture merchandising phenomenon of the post-World War II era. Besides the coonskin caps, fringed jackets and two different hit singles of the show’s theme song, there was all manner of Davy Crockett memorabilia sold — an estimated $300 million worth during the eight-month craze in 1955, which would be the equivalent in today’s dollars of more than $3.3 billion.

Davy was played by Fess Parker, an actor with tons of homespun charm who was featured in a number of Disney movies and later would star in a long-running non-Disney TV series about another frontiersman, Daniel Boone. Crockett’s sidekick, Georgie Russell, was played by Buddy Ebsen, who eventually would become everyone’s favorite millionaire hillbilly on TV.

Parker, who at the time was making $350 a week in his Disney contract, asked Walt for a 10 percent share of Disney’s Crockett merchandising and was granted it. But that didn’t amount to nearly as much as you’d expect, because the bulk of the products rushed onto the market during the craze were not from Disney — since Crockett was a historic character not under copyright or trademark protection.

As for Ebsen, when I met him in the mid-1980s (I was a newspaper reporter covering television) and asked him whether he got a piece of the Crockett bonanza, he said he did not.

Mickey Mouse got the whole Disney thing going. (Disney)

“Walt Disney was a fine fella,” Ebsen said with a smile. “He’d give you the shirt off his back. But he was smart enough to surround himself with lawyers who would stop him.”)

But even Walt, who’d already ridden several pop culture crests thanks to Micky Mouse and various hit movies, was surprised by the scope and speed of the Crockett phenomenon — if he’d known, he probably wouldn’t have killed Davy off in the third episode!

(Always the pragmatist, Disney brought the frontier hero back for two more episodes in late 1955 in what we’d now call a prequel. Like the first three Crockett tales, they also were stitched together into a feature film, “Davy Crockett and the River Pirates.”)

Disney’s first live-action comedy was “The Shaggy Dog.” (Disney)

I actually don’t remember watching the original run of Crockett in 1954-55, though I’m sure we did, since I was wearing the coonskin cap and jacket on the visit to Wales. I do, however, recall watching the shows when they were repeated in 1959. And I’ve watched them quite a few times over the years, including as an adult when I bought a Disney Treasures box set of Crockett DVDs.

My other early favorite on the Disney TV program was “The Swamp Fox,” an eight-episode miniseries airing from 1959 to 1961 about Revolutionary War Gen. Francis Marion (played by Leslie Nielsen) and the guerrilla warfare he led in South Carolina against the Redcoats and Tories. Years later, when I watched it with my kids on the Disney Channel, it still held up well.

My earliest Disney memories, of course, are of Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy, Pluto and all the other anthropomorphized animated creatures who populated Disney’s cartoon shorts, many of which I grew to know through his prime-time series (originally called “Disneyland” and then “Walt Disney Presents”) and also the “Mickey Mouse Club,” a Monday-Friday children’s series that ran afternoons in 1955-59 on ABC.

Many consider “Snow White” to be Disney’s greatest achievement. (Disney)

Besides the nonanimated kid Mousketeers (including future beach movie queen and Skippy peanut butter mom Annette Funicello), the latter show included various live-action serials, the most memorable of which were a couple of Hardy Boys mysteries (long before I discovered the venerable book series in fifth grade) and “Spin and Marty,” about a couple of kids at a summer dude ranch out west. A costar of both those serials was Tim Considine, a regular among Disney’s kid actors. In the Hardy Boys story, he was paired with Tommy Kirk, another child actor who starred in many Disney features on into young adulthood.

Another early Disney experience came in 1956, when I was 4. My mother took me to the very first movie I ever saw in a theater — Disney’s animated musical, “Fantasia,” which included my favorite mouse in an unforgettable segment called “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.”

I also remember going the next year with Mom to see “Perri,” one of Disney’s so-called “true life adventures” films about real animals, this one a squirrel. She also took me to 1959’s “The Shaggy Dog,” the first of Disney’s live-action comedies, starring Fred MacMurray (along with Annette, Considine, Kirk and a young child named Kevin Corcoran whom I knew as “Moochie” from “The Mickey Mouse Club”).

The original Mousketeers on “The Mickey Mouse Club.” (Disney)

The next year, Corcoran was the titular star of the Disney circus film “Toby Tyler,” to which my father took me one Sunday afternoon. After we got home, Dad took to calling Timothy, my baby brother, “Moochie of the Circus.”

Of course, in those days, the canny Disney regularly created a new young market for his earlier productions by reissuing them every few years, so I also got taken to see films originally released long before I was born, such as “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” “Pinocchio” (the segment where the puppet boy turns into a donkey scared me, I remember), “Dumbo” (never one of my favorites) and “Bambi,” which also had its scary moments early on when a hunter kills the young deer’s mama.

Parts of “Pinocchio” scared me. (Disney)

(By the time my own kids came along, only Disney’s biggest classics, such as “Snow White,” got the occasional theatrical reissue treatment, with most of them available to watch at home whenever you wanted, thanks to videocassettes and, later, DVDs.)

My father also took me to see “Tonka,” a live-action Western about a Native American boy and his horse (set around Custer’s massacre at the Little Big Horn), as well as “Kidnapped,” Disney’s adaptation of the Robert Louis Stevenson classic, starring James MacArthur, another Disney regular who later would achieve “Book ’em, Danno” fame on the original “Hawaii Five-O.”

Getting to see Disney’s “Kidnapped” provided one of my favorite memories of my wonderful father. I was supposed to attend a showing of the film with some neighbors, but I got stood up. It was the last day the film was playing in town, and Dad got home late from a meeting, but turned right around and took me to the final showing of the movie, because he couldn’t bear to see me disappointed.

Walt Disney became a familiar face on TV. (Disney)

Of course, even those Disney pictures that my parents didn’t take me to see mostly aired in multi-part serial form on Walt’s weekly prime-time program, especially after the show moved to NBC in the fall of 1961, so that the series could be shown in color. (NBC was a color pioneer.)

By that point, the program was called “Walt Disney’s Wonderful World of Color” and was on Sunday nights. Frequently, after visiting my paternal grandmother for Sunday dinner, we’d lobby to stay at her house just a little longer to see the Disney show, because she had one of the earliest color TVs and ours at home was just black-and-white.

Among the Disney films that were released theatrically, but which I remember seeing first on the TV show, are the Irish leprechaun tale ”Darby O’Gill and the Little People” (the film’s costar, a brunette beauty named Janet Munro, was one of my earliest screen crushes), “Johnny Tremain” (a Revolutionary War adventure) and some of those early 1950s adventure flicks Walt had produced in Britain, such as “The Story of Robin Hood” and “Rob Roy, the Highland Rogue.”

The “Zorro” TV series provided me with a Halloween costume. (Disney)

Disney also had another prime-time TV series in 1957-59 — “Zorro,” starring Guy Williams as the masked avenger in old Spanish California. I absolutely loved the show and, for Halloween in 1957, Mom got me an official Zorro costume, which came with black hat, mask and cape (Mom dyed a shirt black to go with it and we used black jeans).

The neatest thing was the plastic sword that came with the costume — it had a place to put a piece of chalk in the tip, so you could do those three quick swooshes and leave the “mark of Zorro” (a Z) without doing any actual damage!

While I saw my first Disney pictures with my parents, it wasn’t long before I was going to the movies by myself — at an age that was surprisingly early by today’s standards. I remember when I was 8 years old being allowed to take a taxi from our house to a downtown theater to see “Swiss Family Robinson” (another one featuring Janet Munro!).

“The Swamp Fox,” starring Leslie Nielsen, was an early favorite of mine. (Disney)

That became one of my all-time favorite films. In fact, I enjoyed it so much that I sat through a second screening that afternoon (they didn’t clear the house between showings in those days). However, because I’d found the chief pirate so scary, I covered my eyes during his on-screen appearances the second go-round!

(A few years later, when I was in junior high, one of my Christmas presents was a little 8mm movie projector on which I could show 3-minute silent b&w reels, such as highlights from the previous Green Bay Packers season or the battle scene from “Swiss Family Robinson.” It was really fun running the latter in reverse, with the logs that the Robinson family unleashed on the horde of pirates tumbling up the hill!)

In addition to serialized versions of Disney’s box-office hits (usually split over two or three weeks), the studio’s weekly TV showcase included a lot of TV originals (quite a few of which were re-edited into films released theatrically in other countries). Among Disney’s TV miniseries were the westerns “The Nine Lives of Elfego Baca” and “Tales of Texas John Slaughter,” a couple of series showing Kevin Corcoran’s Moochie character playing Little League and Pop Warner football, “The Horsemasters” (shot in the U.K., but featuring Annette and Tommy Kirk, along with Janet Munro), the comedy “Sammy the Way-Out Seal,” the Civil War tale “Johnny Shiloh,” “The Horse Without a Head” (a kids mystery set in France), a comedy-western called “The Tenderfoot” (starring Brandon deWilde and Brian Keith, another Disney favorite), a comedy series starring Warren Berlinger  as the title character “Kilroy” and a personal favorite, “Gallegher,” a 12-part series starring Roger Mobley as a copy boy/would-be reporter at a big city newspaper in the late 1800s. (In later episodes, Gallegher went out west for further adventures.)

Dad took me to see Kevin Corcoran in “Toby Tyler.” (Disney)

The Disney TV show also had episodes mixing live-action and animation (frequently presented by Donald Duck’s scientist uncle, Ludwig Von Drake), true-life nature films, educational looks at science and lots of coverage of what was going on at Disneyland (and, later, Disney World).

Earlier, I mentioned a couple of Disney’s British-based productions, and the studio continued making films and series in the U.K. Among them is probably my all-time favorite Disney TV offering, “The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh,” starring a pre-“Secret Agent” Patrick McGoohan.

I’ve written previously about the large role that Disney played in introducing British entertainment to American viewers before The Beatles. In fact, my family ended up having to switch back and forth between the three parts of Disney’s “Scarecrow” and the three February 1964 appearances the Fab Four made on “The Ed Sullivan Show.”

Shot on location in Kent, England, “Scarecrow” is a stirring adventure about a small-town church rector in the 1770s who has a secret life as a Robin Hood-like smuggler. Wearing a scarecrow outfit and cackling like a fiend, he does battle with the king’s tax collectors and troops. It features a great cast (especially McGoohan, one of my favorite actors) and one of Disney’s more memorable theme songs. The miniseries was edited into a theatrical film called “Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow” for release in other countries.

The pirates in “Swiss Family Robinson” were a scary bunch. (Disney)

When McGoohan was doing a Broadway play 21 years later, I interviewed him in New York City. He’d recently done a dinosaur-themed big-screen Disney adventure called “Baby: Secret of the Lost Legend” that had not been one of his favorite experiences, because of trying conditions on location in the Ivory Coast and a balky mechanical dinosaur.

When I mentioned first seeing him in “Scarecrow,” McGoohan replied: “God, that was nearly 30 years ago! I did two Disneys together there. I did that one and a thing called ‘The Three Lives of Thomasina.’ And then I did my third Disney in Africa. … Walt wasn’t there! Walt was there for the other two, and that made quite a difference. He knew what he wanted, and he got it.”

Patrick McGoohan starred in “The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh.” (Disney)

As my brothers Jonathan and Timothy reached moviegoing age, I became the one who took them to Disney films playing local theaters — and, believe me, we rarely missed one! (I do remember, though, Mom accompanying us to “The Incredible Journey,” a live action Disney film about a trio of lost pets that make their way across the country to be reunited with their family.)

My brothers and I attended such reissued films as “Treasure Island” (with Robert Newton setting the template for movie pirates as Long John Silver — argh!), “Alice in Wonderland,” “Peter Pan” (whose supporting character, Tinker Bell, had become a regular part of Disney’s weekly TV show), “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,” “Lady and the Tramp” (even with dogs, we thought the spaghetti-sucking romantic scene was “icky”) and “Old Yeller.”  

Hayley Mills played twins in “The Parent Trap.” (Disney)

The latter film became a sort of rite of passage for kids, as noted in the 1981 military comedy “Stripes” (not a Disney film, most assuredly) in which Bill Murray’s character tries to bond with his fellow recruits by asking, “Who saw ‘Old Yeller’? Who cried when Old Yeller got shot at the end?”

(I suppose the modern-day equivalent would be asking, “Who saw ‘Toy Story 3’? Who cried at the end?” I’d venture that most folks would have to raise a hand in either case.)

As the 1960s progressed, we also hit the newer Disney films, including the animated King Arthur origin story “The Sword in the Stone,” “The Absentminded Professor” (another special-effects-laden comedy with Fred MacMurray), “The Parent Trap” (young star Hayley Mills became another of my screen crushes), “Mary Poppins” (brother Tim had a 45 rpm single of “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious”), “Those Callaways” (another with Brian Keith), “The Monkey’s Uncle” (one of a series of campus comedies with Tommy Kirk), “That Darn Cat!” (Hayley Mills’ last Disney feature), Dick Van Dyke in the comedy “Lt. Robin Crusoe, USN,” the overly sentimental “Follow Me, Boys” (the first of a dozen films young Kurt Russell made for Disney) and one of Disney’s lesser offerings, “The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin” (a comedy Western starring Roddy McDowell).

“Mary Poppins” was one of Disney’s most popular films. (Disney)

I also took my brothers to the animated Disney musical “The Jungle Book,” which boasted very catchy songs and one of the greatest voice casts ever, including Phil Harris, Sterling Holloway, Louis Prima, George Sanders and Sebastian Cabot. (Trivia: Disney tried to get The Beatles to voice the film’s four vultures. When that gambit failed, the studio gave them Liverpudlian accents anyway.)

As I got older, of course, I started venturing to see movies that weren’t as family-friendly as Disney’s fare, which continued long after Walt’s death in 1966. However, I still made it to such Disney studio releases as “Blackbeard’s Ghost” and “The Love Bug,” two of a number of films comic actor Dean Jones made for the studio. “The Love Bug” was the biggest box office hit of 1969 and led to a slew of Disney films featuring the VW bug named Herbie in future years.

“The Love Bug” launched a series of films featuring Herbie. (Disney)

While I didn’t always make time for Disney’s 1970s films — missing such releases as the teen comedy “The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes” (with Kurt Russell) or the comedy Western “The Apple Dumpling Gang” (with Bill Bixby, Don Knotts and Tim Conway) — I still was a Disney kid at heart, even as I reached adulthood.

An example of that came shortly after I’d finished college, when a bunch of friends wanted to attend “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” but my future wife, Leslie, and I opted instead for “Island at the Top of the World,” a Disney version of a Jules Verne story starring a pre-“Good Morning America” David Hartman.

Leslie also has fond memories of watching Disney productions when she was growing up. Her favorites have a definite Haley Mills slant, with “The Moonspinners,” “Polyanna,” “The Parent Trap,” “In Search of the Castaways” and “Summer Magic” topping her list. (The latter film, I recall my family seeing on movie night at the lodge during a week we spent at a lake resort owned by the bank for which my father worked.)

The mermaid fantasy “Splash” appealed to kids and adults. (Disney)

Other favorites of Leslie’s include “Swiss Family Robinson” (a film almost every ardent Disney fan mentions) and the 1962 TV miniseries “The Prince and the Pauper,” which she still remembers featured Jane Asher (before she was Paul McCartney’s girlfriend) as Lady Jane Grey.

A week or so before we got married in November 1975, we went to an Atlanta area cinema for — you guessed it — a Disney film. It was “Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow,” which finally got its belated theatrical release in the U.S. that month.

As the 1980s came long, Disney still was doing popular sequels (like “Herbie Goes Bananas”) and big animated features aimed at kids (including “The Great Mouse Detective” and “The Little Mermaid”), as well as family-oriented adventures (“Never Cry Wolf”) and comedies (“Honey, I Shrunk the Kids”). But it also started doing co-productions with other studios, including “Popeye” (with Robin Williams as the sailor man) and “Who Framed Roger Rabbit?” (the latter done with Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment).

My son and I both enjoyed “The Rocketeer.” (Disney)

Besides “Roger Rabbit,” some of the Disney films I caught in theaters during this period were “The Watcher in the Woods” (a supernatural horror film with Bette Davis), “Dragonslayer” (a dark, violent fantasy-adventure) and “Something Wicked This Way Comes” (another dark fantasy, this one with Jason Robards and Jonathan Pryce).

The studio also started trying to appeal more to adults with films released by its Touchstone Pictures and Hollywood Pictures divisions, some of which even were R-rated. Among the new divisions’ pictures were “Splash” (a sexy mermaid comedy starring Tom Hanks and Daryl Hannah), “Good Morning Vietnam” (a wartime comedy-drama tour de force for Robin Williams) and “Dick Tracy,” with Warren Beatty as the comic strip detective.

“Toy Story” launched a beloved movie franchise. (Disney)

By the time the latter film came out in 1990, I regularly was taking our son Bill to films, including Disney releases. I remember going with him to a 1988 reissue of “Bambi” that I believe was his first time ever in a movie theater. He was only 3 years old and, standing in his seat, he turned around and shushed the chatty crowd during the coming attractions.

(Bill went through a phase when he was 3 where he gave family members and friends cartoon nicknames. Mine was the non-Disney “Popeye,” but Leslie was “Daisy Duck,” and my parents were “Mickey and Minnie Mouse.”)

I also remember taking Bill to see “The Rocketeer” (a nifty comic book adventure set in the late 1930s and starring Bill Campbell, Jennifer Connelly, Alan Arkin and Timothy Dalton) and “DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp.” The latter was based on the “DuckTales” animated TV series that was part of the “Disney Afternoon” block of children’s programming that played on one of our local TV stations, which young Bill watched regularly.

Our daughter became a big fan of Disney’s version of Winnie the Pooh. (Disney)

We also subscribed to the Disney Channel on cable and Bill got to see a lot of my childhood favorites through its “Vault Disney” blocks. (Back then, the channel also put on evening programming that appealed to boomers, such as a 1992 documentary on the making of The Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper” album and even a special featuring Ringo Starr taking one of his sons on a tour of his old haunts in Liverpool.)

This was the heyday of home video, too, so we supplemented the Disney Channel with frequent purchases of Disney classics on VHS. I have to admit, I still got quite a bit of enjoyment out of those tapes, too.

But, after all, I had a Mickey and Donald screensaver on my computer at work. And when Leslie and I bought a few individual stocks back in the 1990s, we decided to focus on companies that we patronized, so we had a stake in Coca-Cola, Turner, Apple and, of course, Disney.

I took my daughter to see “Mulan,” a terrific film. (Disney)

Really, though, it was with the birth of our second child, Olivia, that Disney took over our household. Livvy really embraced being a Disney kid as she was growing up in the 1990s. She latched on to our collection of Winnie the Pooh cassettes early on, never tiring of watching them over and over, and also watched “The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh” on TV.

She also noted recently that the animated film “Cinderella” (which dates back to 1950) was one of her biggest favorites, judging by the fact that the VHS cassette of the film (which she still has) “shows considerable wear and tear.”

“Peter Pan” was one of the classics I saw on reissue and my kids saw on home video. (Disney)

Livvy also remembers “Snow White” being the Disney film she watched over and over at her Grandma and Papa’s house. (When she stayed with my parents, she recalls, she began every day watching the morning programming block called “Playhouse Disney,” which my mom would let her stick with until it was time for the news and then “Days of Our Lives.”)

Being a Disney kid, Livvy naturally got Disney-themed presents. The Christmas that she was 5, one of her gifts was some Winnie the Pooh bedding that I had spotted in a store window in New York City. She still has it, she told me recently.

As she grew a little older and started school, Livvy continued her devotion to the House of Mouse, including some of the Disney Channel original TV movies — a particular favorite being “Get a Clue” with Lindsay Lohan.

Disney’s version of “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea” was another film we picked up on VHS. (Disney)

When I asked my daughter the other day to name some of her other Disney favorites, it was an interesting mix of classics that predate her parents, movies Leslie and I grew up with and pictures released during Olivia’s and her brother’s childhoods. Among them: “Swiss Family Robinson” (of course!), “The Sword in the Stone,” “The Parent Trap” (the Haley Mills original version, not the Lohan remake), “The Aristocats,” “The Jungle Book,” “Beauty and the Beast” (the first animated film to be nominated for a Best Picture Oscar), “The Lion King,” “Hercules,” the “Toy Story” films from Disney’s Pixar computer-generated animation division and the more classically animated “Tarzan” and “Mulan,” both of which I took her to see in theaters.

(I still think “Mulan” is a terrific film, and I’m talking about the 1998 original, not the 2020 live-action remake.)

Livvy said another of her favorites is “The Fox and the Hound,” adding: “If you didn’t cry during ‘The Fox and the Hound,’ there’s something wrong with you.”

Sounds familiar.

Olivia celebrated her 18th birthday at Disney World. (Olivia King)

Even during her teens — when Livvy was all about the “Lord of the Rings” and “Harry Potter” franchises — she still would watch her old Disney VHS collection, and one of her most memorable birthdays was her 18th, celebrated with a friend at Disney World in Orlando.

We continued to patronize Disney films in cinemas in the 2000s, including the “Pirates of the Caribbean” films with Johnny Depp and the “National Treasure” films starring Nicolas Cage and one of my adulthood screen crushes, Diane Kruger. On one spring break visit to my hometown, I even joined my daughter at a screening of Anne Hathaway and Julie Andrews in “The Princess Diaries II.”

And, 10 years ago, Livvy and I made it a point to go see “Saving Mr. Banks,” a Disney film about the making of a Disney film (“Mary Poppins”), with Tom Hanks playing Walt. (I mean, talk about an actor and a role being a perfect match!)

Our granddaughter has become a fan of a Winnie the Pooh book our daughter gave her. (Disney)

More recently, Olivia has played an instrumental role in introducing our granddaughter to Disney. Last Christmas, Livvy gave her niece a book of 5-minute Winnie the Pooh stories, and she was pleased to find out recently that Nora now is obsessed with the book. And, Livvy added triumphantly, “apparently she will only look at the entire book and not just one or two stories; she’s all or nothing!”

I think we have another Disney kid in the making.

Of course, Disney isn’t just the House of Mouse anymore. In recent decades, the company has grown to include Pixar, ABC, ESPN, Marvel, Lucasfilm and 20th Century Fox. And, as the Disney universe has expanded, it has gotten a lot more diverse, too, with a lesbian kiss in one of its “Star Wars” spinoffs, a gay romance in last year’s animated comedy-adventure “Strange World” and Black actress Halle Bailey as Ariel in this year’s “The Little Mermaid,” one of those live-action remakes of classic animated features that the Disney company has undertaken in recent years. Others include “Alice in Wonderland,” “Beauty and the Beast,” “Cinderella,” “The Jungle Book” and “Mulan.”

And, as our consumption of entertainment has started moving into the streaming world, Disney is there, as well. Of course, it was Olivia who signed us up for the Disney+ streaming service, which over the past year has become involved with my primary pop culture interest, The Beatles.

“The Beatles Get Back” debuted on Disney+. (Disney)

It was Disney+ that first presented us two years ago with Sir Peter Jackson’s “The Beatles Get Back,” the long-awaited documentary assembled from the many hours of footage shot during the recording of the band’s “Let It Be” album.

And, since then, Disney+ has presented “If These Walls Could Sing,” an excellent documentary about Abbey Road Studios directed by Mary McCartney (daughter of Sir Paul), and it was on that same streaming service that I recently watched “Now and Then — The Last Beatles Song,” a documentary short about the making of the Fabs’ current hit single.

Watching my favorite band, about whom I’ve published a magazine for 45 years, on a channel carrying the name of the movie studio I’ve followed since I was 3-years-old somehow seems just … perfect.

Happy birthday, Disney! Here’s to the next hundred years!

Bill King

Getting Ready for The Beatles …

The “Camelot” original Broadway soundtrack album drew major turntable time in our home.

What came before the so-called British Invasion that The Beatles kicked off in 1964? In this piece, originally published in Beatlefan #260, I take a look back at some of the British pop culture that Americans experienced in those pre-Fab days.

In the U.K., this spring marks 60 years since The Beatles’ first album, “Please Please Me,” was released. It initially came out on March 22, 1963, as a mono LP, followed just over a month later by a stereo version.

By May that year, it was atop the U.K. album chart, where it would remain for 30 weeks, until being replaced by the next Beatles album, as the Fabs reached phenomenon status in their home country. The London press tabbed it Beatlemania.

In the U.S., however, it was pretty much the sound of crickets, as far as The Beatles were concerned, in the spring of 1963. Americans, in general, wouldn’t really begin to hear about the Fab Four until late that fall, and our own Beatlemania erupted early in 1964.

Up until 1963, many Americans hadn’t really thought of Britain as much of a source of entertainment, though I was somewhat of an exception, since my mom was from the U.K., making me more inclined to take note of folks pronouncing words with a long A.

Beatles influence Lonnie Donegan had a couple of U.S. hits.

In the years since then, it has become a sort of cultural shorthand to say that, before The Beatles, British music was pretty much a nonhappening in the former colonies. And, as far as pop-rock music goes, that was sort of true, with few British teen-oriented acts hitting the U.S. charts in the pre-Beatles era.

The biggest hits imported from the U.K. during my younger years — none of which I remember identifying as being of British origin at the time — were “Rock Island Line” by Lonnie Donegan (an early Beatles influence in Britain), which hit No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1956; Laurie London’s “He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands,” which topped the Billboard singles chart in 1958; the Donegan novelty tune “Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavor (On the Bedpost Overnight?),” which hit No. 5 on the Billboard chart in ’61; Acker Bilk’s dream-like instrumental “Stranger on the Shore,” which topped the chart in 1962 (and which I remember listening to, before going to sleep, on the local middle-of-the-road station that our radio always was tuned to, pre-Beatles); and The Tornados’ instrumental “Telstar,” which spent three weeks atop the chart starting in late 1962, making it the first U.S. No. 1 hit by a British group. 

“Beyond the Fringe” was a comedy stage revue written and performed by (from left) Peter Cook, Jonathan Miller, Dudley Moore and Alan Bennett.

Also hitting the U.S. charts before The Beatles (but totally escaping my notice) were jazzman Kenny Ball’s instrumental “Midnight in Moscow,” Frank Ifield’s yodeling countryish hit “I Remember You” and the Springfields (led by future star Dusty and her brother Tom) doing “Silver Threads and Golden Needles.”

And, there was another British performer with a hit single in the U.S. pre-Beatles, but we’ll get to that later on.

Still, the general rarity of Brits on the U.S. Top 40 (or Dick Clark’s afternoon “American Bandstand”) doesn’t mean that Americans growing up in the 1950s and early ’60s didn’t experience British entertainers before the Fab Four.

We did, but those performers pretty much were in the realm of stage, film and television, with Walt Disney providing the greatest exposure to British stars.

Meanwhile, the highest profile musical figure from the U.K. was actress-singer Julie Andrews.

Julie Andrews starred with Rex Harrison in “My Fair Lady” on Broadway.

As far as pop culture went in the first half of 1963, the Brits were not big news in the U.S. At school, my classmates’ only previous British fascination had been with notorious party girl Christine Keeler, though we weren’t sure exactly what she’d done other than pose nude, as my buddy Chip informed us in fifth grade.

(Chip also told me the facts of life that year, and, the next year, he would tip me off to The Beatles, the week before their “Ed Sullivan Show” debut. Chip was a good guy to know.)

Although the U.S. release of the first James Bond film, “Dr. No,” was in May 1963, it wasn’t until the following year, after The Beatles had invaded our shores, that Sean Connery really was elevated to superstar status, as the spy craze became a sort of action-film variant of Beatlemania.

However, for those of us interested in things from the U.K., there’d been a lot of ground broken before then, though in a rather low-key manner (which seems particularly appropriate for the Brits).

My Gran in Wales used to send me Rupert Bear annuals.

My first exposure to any sort of entertainment from the U.K. was in the form of monthly packets of British comics weeklies that my Gran and Auntie Helen sent me from Wales. Birthdays and Christmas also brought hardcover annual books starring Rupert Bear (a favorite of Paul McCartney’s, I’d later learn) and Sooty, another bear. The latter (a favorite of George Harrison’s) was based on the TV adventures of a little bear glove puppet, some of which made occasional U.S. appearances on Disney’s weekday afternoon “Mickey Mouse Club” series.

However, my first real recollection of TV with a British accent was the “The Adventures of Robin Hood” TV series starring Richard Greene, which aired 1955-59 on CBS, and then for years in syndication. It was the first of many British series that Lew Grade would peddle to American TV, with one of the most notable being “The Saint,” starring future 007 Roger Moore, who drew some early notice in the U.S. for the 1958-59 “Ivanhoe” series, and replaced James Garner in “Maverick,” as the Maverick brothers’ cousin from England, for about half of the 1960 season.  

Another British series that was a favorite of my family in the pre-Beatles era was “The Adventures of Sir Francis Drake,” starring Terence Morgan. We were disappointed that only one season was made of that show, and it aired on NBC in 1962, as a summer replacement for “Car 54, Where Are You?”

Richard Greene starred on U.S. TV as Robin Hood.

There had been British stars in Hollywood movies for decades, of course, including such names as Vivien Leigh, Deborah Kerr, Cary Grant, David Niven and Albert Finney, whose 1963 star turn in “Tom Jones” even had TV commercials riffing on it.

However, since most of the films those Brits starred in were not aimed at kids, they didn’t make as great an impression on me as did the actors in the films Disney made in the U.K. in the 1950s, starting with “Treasure Island,” starring Robert Newton as the prototypical movie pirate character, Long John Silver.

Other Disney U.K. productions that were a big hit with younger American moviegoers included yet another tale of Sherwood Forest in “The Story of Robin Hood,” starring Richard Todd; “The Sword and the Rose,” with Todd and Glynis Johns; and “Rob Roy: The Highland Rogue,” again teaming Todd and Johns.

I was a bit too young for moviegoing when those films initially were released, but I saw them on TV. However, I did see Disney’s 1960 “Kidnapped” (starring American James MacArthur and a host of British actors, including Peter Finch, Bernard Lee and Peter O’Toole) in a movie theater with my father, who liked taking me to Walt’s movies.

One of Disney’s biggest British-themed hits with my age group was 1959’s “Darby O’Gill and the Little People,” an Irish tale of leprechauns that featured Sean Connery (before he became 007) and almond-eyed British starlet Janet Munro, who won a Golden Globe and quickly became my first real movie crush. When she appeared in a 1959 “Hallmark Hall of Fame” adaptation of “Berkeley Square,” I managed to talk Mom into letting me stay up past my bedtime to watch it, even though it wasn’t really the sort of show a 7-year-old boy enjoyed, and I soon was nodding off.

Disney star Janet Munro was one of my earliest on-screen crushes.

Old Walt also was taken with Munro, and he signed her to a five-year deal. She showed up opposite James MacArthur (a Disney regular) in “Third Man on the Mountain,” and played opposite MacArthur again in the epic 1960 adventure “Swiss Family Robinson,” which I sat through twice in one afternoon in a local theater. (It remains one of my all-time favorite films.) Munro also was featured on Disney’s Sunday night TV show in “The Horsemasters.”

The star of “Swiss Family Robinson” was British actor John Mills, and his daughter, Hayley, became Disney’s latest child star that year, headlining “Pollyanna.”

The next year, young Hayley hit it really big, playing twin daughters of divorced parents in Disney’s “The Parent Trap,” in which she did the double-tracked lead vocal of a song, “Let’s Get Together,” which was released as a single (billed as Hayley Mills and Hayley Mills). It became a Top 10 hit in the U.S., peaking at No. 8. It also beat The Beatles to the phrase “yeah, yeah, yeah” by a couple of years. Mills went on to star in three other Disney films.

Interestingly, in my elementary school days, my taste in female movie stars skewed older (Munro), and I found the on-screen Mills a bit bratty in her early Disney days. But, by the time she’d become a young romantic lead as a teenager, I was smitten. (Mills’ first truly adult role in 1966 was in the very un-Disney “The Family Way,” for which Beatle Paul McCartney did the music.)

At first, I thought Hayley Mills was bratty, but she won me over in her teens.

Disney also presented us with another British star in 1963. Patrick McGoohan would go on to become one of my mother’s on-screen crushes and one of my TV heroes in the mid-1960s. He already had been seen on CBS in a brief run of “Danger Man,” which we somehow had missed, but Disney put him in “The Three Lives of Thomasina” and, of more interest to me, the TV miniseries “The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh,” one of my all-time favorites.

I’ve told Beatlefan readers before how we were watching “Scarecrow” on the night The Beatles made their American debut on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” and, in the era before home video recording, we had to switch back and forth between the last half of “Scarecrow” and the first half of “Sullivan,” so that we didn’t miss the Fab Four’s performances.

Speaking of the Sullivan show, it provided, along with Disney, the primary exposure in the U.S. for a lot of British performers in the late 1950s and early 1960s. One of those performers was Julie Andrews, who rose to American stardom through Broadway, and made several key appearances on the Sullivan show.

Patrick McGoohan starred in “The Three Lives of Thomasina.”

I first became aware of her when Mom got the original Broadway soundtrack LP for the 1956 Broadway smash “My Fair Lady,” in which Andrews played Eliza Doolittle opposite Rex Harrison’s Henry Higgins. That album, featuring such songs as “I Could Have Danced All Night,” “Show Me,” “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly,” “Just You Wait” and “The Rain in Spain,” was played frequently in our house, and we also enjoyed Andrews performing on various TV variety shows, as well as that local MOR radio station.

She also starred in a 1957 live production of “Cinderella” on CBS that was seen by more than 100 million viewers.

Then came 1961’s “Camelot,” with Andrews starring on Broadway as Guinevere opposite Welshman Richard Burton (another of Mom’s faves) as King Arthur. Sullivan had Andrews and Burton on his show, performing in costume as they sang the title song from the stage musical, along with “What Do the Simple Folk Do?” The Broadway soundtrack album for “Camelot” also occupied a lot of time on our turntable.

Andrews then teamed up with rising American comedy star Carol Burnett for 1962’s “Julie and Carol at Carnegie Hall,” an hourlong CBS special that kicked off with a number called “You’re So London.”

(Of course, Andrews’ greatest fame would come later, starring in quite a few big movies, beginning with Disney’s “Mary Poppins,” but that was after The Beatles had arrived.)

Julie Andrews and Richard Burton starred in “Camelot” on Broadway.

Andrews had two LPs top the Billboard album chart in the U.S. in the pre-Beatles era: the soundtracks for “My Fair Lady” (which hit No. 1 at various times in 1956, 1957, 1958 and 1959) and “Camelot,” in 1961. Interestingly, both albums dislodged Elvis Presley LPs from the top of the chart. The soundtrack to the TV production of “Cinderella” starring Andrews hit No. 15 in 1957, while the soundtrack to “Julie and Carol at Carnegie Hall” made it to No. 85 in 1962.

Another British “invasion,” of sorts, that predated The Beatles was on Broadway. Following in the footsteps of Andrews’ success, Anthony Newley starred in 1963’s “Stop the World — I Want to Get Off”; Georgia Brown starred in “Oliver!”; the satirical revue “Beyond the Fringe” introduced Americans to Dudley Moore and Peter Cook; and British music hall veteran Tessie O’Shea was featured in “The Girl Who Came to Supper” (which led to her being on the Sullivan show the same night the Fabs debuted).

However, none of that really was on my pre-teen radar.

“The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh” aired on Disney opposite The Beatles on “The Ed Sullivan Show.”

The other way I was exposed to British entertainment before 1964 was through U.K. magazines sent to my mother by her family back in Wales. I flipped through the pages of some of them, but generally didn’t spend much time on one called Woman’s Own. Because of that, I missed something about the new big thing in Britain that my mother picked up on.

And that’s how it came to be that, one night, in the fall of 1963, Mom was saying goodnight to me and one of my brothers when she noticed my hair, as I was lying in bed. In an age when the crew-cut still was king, my hair had grown out a bit since summer, so that I actually could comb it. And, as she looked at my bangs down over my forehead, she said, “You look like a Beatle.”

I didn’t know what she meant. I asked her what a Beatle was.

“Oh,” she said, “it’s a British singing group.”

A few months later, I finally knew what she was talking about.

Bill King