Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
To the tune "I Would Like to Be a Bird", a young mouse fashions wings from a pair of leaves, to the great amusement of his brothers. When his attempts to use them fail, the mouse got blown backwards and his rear end crashes into a thorn, he falls into the tub and shrinks his sister's dress and gets spanked by his mother.
Silly Billy was a type of clown common at fairs in England during the 19th century. They were also common in London as street entertainers , along with the similar clown, Billy Barlow. [ 1 ] The act included playing the part of a fool or idiot, impersonating a child and singing comic songs . [ 2 ]
The kids put on a play about the history of planet Polie; When Olie and Billy start arguing over a game of tag, their fathers step in and show them how to play without arguing; As the comet Sillious heads towards Polieville, color returns to the gray lives of the Polies, but they start to act crazy due to silliness: Olie walks on his hands ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
"Friends Lullaby" (Larry Groce) "Old MacDonald Had a Farm" "The Hokey Pokey" (Larry LaPrise, Charles Macak and Taftt Baker) "She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain" "Ten Little Indians" "The Green Grass Grew All Around" "In the Good Old Summer Time" "Animal Fair" "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" "I'm a Policeman" (Larry Groce) "Pop! Goes the Weasel"
Lullaby Land is a Silly Symphonies animated Disney short film released in 1933. [1] The quilt from Lullaby Land inspired the garden section of the Storybook Land Canal Boats ride at Disneyland California.
Merbabies is a Silly Symphonies animated Disney short film. It was released on December 9, 1938. [2] It is a collaboration between Walt Disney and Harman and Ising, the latter studio having donated artists to Disney to work on the production of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). It is one of the last shorts of the Silly Symphonies series.
Silly Billies is a 1936 American comedy film directed by Fred Guiol from a screenplay by Al Boasberg and Jack Townley, based on a story by Guiol and Thomas Lennon. The film was the twentieth feature for the comedy duo of Wheeler and Woolsey ( Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey ), and also stars Dorothy Lee , who had been in a number of their films.