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The Film Daily (September 1, 1929): "Very Good: Mickey Mouse does his cartoonatics as a hot dog vendor at the circus grounds. The hot dogs come to life and the cartoonist gets a series of clever and funny gags that will make anybody laugh. Winds up with a serenade by two cats assisting Mickey win his gal.
Goofy offers to help Lunar Clarabelle make hot dogs the right way. Once that was done, Goofy helps Lunar Clarabelle make hot dogs attract customers as he finds himself in a dilemma regarding the fireworks show as Mickey, his friends, and Rocket Mouse come to his aid. Meanwhile Martian Mickey & Martian Minnie Gets Goofy Dogs for the fireworks show.
Mickey Mouse, along with Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Daisy Duck, Goofy and sometimes Pluto, meet Funny, an enchanted and energetic talking funhouse who residing in the Funhouse Forest outside of Hot Dog Hills alongside his pet doghouse Teddy and a sentient weathervane named Windy.
Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures centers around the Sensational Six (Mickey, Minnie, Goofy, Donald, Daisy and Pluto) as they live and race around their town of Hot Dog Hills and around the world. Unlike the previous series, this show contains two 11-minute stories as opposed to Clubhouse ' s full-length 22-minute stories.
Before this he had only whistled, laughed, and grunted. His first words were "Hot dogs! Hot dogs!" said while trying to sell hot dogs at a carnival. [54] Mickey's Follies (1929) introduced the song "Minnie's Yoo-Hoo" which would become the theme song for Mickey Mouse films until 1935. The same song sequence was also later reused with different ...
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The show is based on the Mickey Mouse Clubhouse episode "Minnie's Bow-tique" and follows Minnie Mouse's adventures as the owner of a bow-making store, where she creates and sells bows for clothing and home decor with her friend Daisy Duck. The series features interactions with various characters from Mickey Mouse Clubhouse.
The short features Oswald selling hot dogs, the gag would be similarly re-used in the Mickey Mouse short, The Karnival Kid, in 1929. [5] The aforementioned cartoon was the ninth Mickey cartoon released following his creation, which came after Walt Disney lost the rights to Oswald.