Alice of Wonderland in Paris was created by the team of Gene Deitch and William L. Snyder, who had previously collaborated on
Munro, which won the
Academy Award for Animated Short Film in 1961. The filmmakers (along with
Rembrandt Films) were also responsible for producing the 1960–1962
Tom and Jerry theatrical cartoons for
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and also were one of the producers of the
Popeye animated TV series for
King Features Syndicate, aired in syndication between 1960 and 1963. Attracted to the economy and beauty of Prague, Deitch and Snyder produced cartoons for both cinema release and cartoons based on short stories for school
educational film use. Five of these stories were placed in the feature with new Alice sequences to be released as a feature film in the West.
Alice of Wonderland in Paris runs 52 minutes, which is somewhat short for a feature film release, and it was presented for its 1966 U.S. theatrical distribution on a bill with the
short film White Mane. It was originally distributed in the U.S. theaters by a company called Childhood Productions;
Paramount Pictures re-released it in 1975 as
Alice in a New Wonderland, and
White Mane was also part of the bill. ==References==