. Pictured, Plane Crazy''.|left Disney began secretly producing the first
Mickey Mouse films while still contractually required to finish some
Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoons for producer
Charles Mintz. The first two films,
Plane Crazy and ''
The Gallopin' Gaucho, were previewed in theaters but failed to pick up a distributor for a broad release. For the third film, Disney added synchronized sound, a technology that was still in its early stages at the time. Steamboat Willie'' debuted in New York in November 1928 and was an instant success. The revenues from the film provided the studio with much needed resources, and the studio quickly began to produce new cartoons as well as releasing sound versions of the first two. Production slowed towards the end of the 1930s as the studio began to focus on other characters and feature-length films. The series was informally retired in 1953 with the release of
The Simple Things, but was revived in 1983 and 1990 with two
featurettes, or three reel short films. 1995's
Runaway Brain returned the series to its single reel format, while the latest installment, 2013's
Get a Horse!, combines the black-and-white style of the early films with color CGI animation scenes. The cartoons were directed by 20different people. Those with the most credits include
Burt Gillett (34),
Wilfred Jackson (18),
Walt Disney (16),
David Hand (15), and
Ben Sharpsteen (14); the director of the most recent installment,
Lauren MacMullan, was the first female director. Notable animators who worked on the series include
Ub Iwerks,
Norm Ferguson,
Ollie Johnston,
Frank Thomas, and
Fred Moore. Mickey's voice is mostly provided by Walt Disney, with some additional work by
Carl Stalling and
Clarence Nash. By 1948,
Jimmy MacDonald had taken over Mickey's voice.
Wayne Allwine voiced the mouse in the three films released from 1983 to 1995. In the most recent film,
Get a Horse!, Mickey's dialogue was compiled from archival recordings primarily of Walt Disney's voice work. ==List of films==