From the ill-tempered
Donald Duck to the loveable Seven Dwarves, Walt Disney Productions created some 1,200
designs during World War II. Such recognizable characters were used for
aircraft nose art, flight jacket patches, pins and other memorabilia for
American and allied units alike. The Disney brand was done by the studio free
of charge as a donation to the war effort.
Disney’s
relationship with the military dates back to 1917, when Walt Disney’s older
brother Roy joined the Navy. Walt himself served a year later as a Red Cross
ambulance driver when he was only sixteen. A sign of what was yet to come, he
decorated his ambulance, and others in his unit, with drawings and cartoons.
Walt Disney
Productions created their first military insignia in 1933 and created many
public information and training films during the war years. Disney also created
more than 1,200 unit insignia during World War II for all branches of the U.S.
armed forces. It did the same for allied military units from the United
Kingdom, Canada, China, France, New Zealand, South Africa and Poland. In fact,
the only major Disney character that didn’t appear in any insignia designs was
Bambi.
Two notable
Walt Disney artists during this effort were Hank Porter and Roy Williams. Williams
created the Flying Tiger insignia for the 14th Air Force and later became the
inventor of the “mouse ears” worn on “The Mickey Mouse Club.”
In June
1942, the Disney studio in California became a war plant. By 1944, they
employed 600 people and 25 percent of them either voluntarily enlisted or had
been drafted. According to David Lesjak, author of “Service with Character. The
Disney Studio and World War II,” the studio had a service flag with 165 blue
colored stars on it. Each star represented an employee serving in the military.
The studio’s 1944 annual report noted the breakdown of staff serving included
85 Army, 49 Navy, 21 Marines, two Merchant Marines and one WASP, or Women
Airforce Service Pilots. They also had five gold colored stars, each
representing a staff member killed in the line of duty.
Today, the
military’s century-long relationship with Disney continues to evolve. The
studio continuously coordinates film productions with the military, and service
members and their families enjoy discounts at Disney’s theme parks. Given the
longevity of Mickey Mouse, there’s no sign of that relationship slowing.
Fin…
Well done tribute!
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