Peter Pan (1953 film)
- This article is about Walt Disney's 1953 film. For the J. M. Barrie novel and play it is based upon, see Peter Pan.
Peter Pan | |
---|---|
Directed by | Clyde Geronimi Wilfred Jackson Hamilton Luske |
Written by | J.M. Barrie (original author) Milt Banta William Cottrell Winston Hibler Bill Peet Erdman Penner Joe Rinaldi Ted Sears Ralph Wright |
Produced by | Walt Disney Productions |
Starring | Bobby Driscoll Kathryn Beaumont Hans Conried Paul Collins Tommy Luske Bill Thompson Candy Candido Heather Angel Tom Conway Roland Dupree Don Barclay |
Distributed by | RKO Radio Pictures |
Release dates | February 5, 1953 |
Running time | 76 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $4,000,000 USD (est.) |
Peter Pan is the fourteenth animated feature in the Disney animated features canon. It was produced by Walt Disney Productions and was originally released to theaters on February 5, 1953 by RKO Radio Pictures. This would be the final Disney animated feature released through RKO, as Walt Disney established his own distribution company, Buena Vista Distribution, by the end of 1953.
Voice cast
- Bobby Driscoll as Peter Pan
- Kathryn Beaumont as Wendy Darling
- Hans Conried as Captain James Hook and Mr. Darling
- Paul Collins as John Darling
- Tommy Luske as Michael Darling
- Bill Thompson as Mr. Smee and other pirates
- Candy Candido as Indian Chief
- Heather Angel as Mrs. Darling
- Tom Conway as The Narrator
- Roland Dupree as miscellaneous characters
- Don Barclay as miscellaneous characters
Crew
The movie was adapted by Milt Banta, William Cottrell Winston Hibler, Bill Peet, Erdman Penner, Joe Rinaldi, Ted Sears, and Ralph Wright from the play and novel Peter Pan by J. M. Barrie. The film was directed by Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson, and Hamilton Luske.
History
Production
Its story is based on the play and novel Peter Pan by J. M. Barrie. Walt had been trying to buy the rights to the play since 1935. He finally received them four years later, after he arranged with the Great Ormond Street Hospital in London (to whom Barrie had bequeathed the rights to the play). His studio started the story development and character designs in the early 1940s as a follow-up to Bambi, but World War II forced the project to be put on hold. Before the war, just like Pinocchio before it, the character designs for Peter Pan were much different than the final product. The original version actually had Nana go to Neverland with Pan and the Darling children. Also, the original version was a little darker. It wasn't until after the war that actual production of the film commenced.
Until this movie, the role of Peter Pan had always been played by a young woman. Instead, Walt Disney chose to portray him as a 12-year-old boy. Walt explained the age by saying, "He is 12 years old forever simply because he refuses to grow up beyond that comfortable age." There are numerous other differences, including the revision of Tinker Bell's "death" (whereas in the original play she gets knocked out by a poison, in the animated film she gets knocked out by a bomb), but can be attributed to Disney's history of artistic license and reshaping of content to be more suitable for younger audiences. The animated film not only marked the first time in which Pan was played by a male, it was also the first time in which Tinker Bell, Nana and the Crocodile (named Tick-Tock the Croc in comics published later on) were all shown as believably as what Barrie had originally intended (whereas on stage, Tinker Bell was shown as not much more than a mere spot of light, Nana was played by an actual actor, and the Crocodile was represented by offstage ticking, Tinker Bell was represented as an actual sprite, Nana was a real dog, and the Crocodile was a real crocodile who had ingested an alarm clock).
Tinker Bell owes her shapely form to the Pin-up girls of the war. Margaret Kerry was Tinker Bell's live-action reference model, contrary to rumors that it was Marilyn Monroe. Margaret Kerry posed on a soundstage, while animator Marc Davis drew Tinker Bell. Kerry was also the voice of the red-headed mermaid in the movie.
Like Margaret, Bobby Driscoll was the live-action reference for Peter Pan's character, primarily in close-up scenes. Peter's graceful flying and action reference shots were provided by dancer Roland Dupree.
Kathryn Beaumont, the voice for Wendy, also performed the live action references. In an interview, she said she had to hold out her arms and pretend to fly for all the scenes requiring it.
One of the few stage traditions that Walt did retain for the animated film was for to have Captain Hook and Mr. Darling be played by the same actor. In this case, Hans Conried not only voiced both characters, he was the live-action reference for them as well. Speaking of Hook, in the original play, Hook lost his right hand, but the Disney artists felt that would limit his actions too much, and so relocated the hook to his left hand.
Re-release schedule and home video
The film was reissued to theaters in 1958, 1969, 1976, 1982, and 1989, and on videotape in 1990 (as a Walt Disney Classics release) and 1998 (as a Masterpiece Collection release). A Limited Issue DVD was released in 1999, and a special edition DVD came out in 2002.
Peter Pan theatrical release history
- February 5, 1953 (original release)
- May 14, 1958
- June 18, 1969
- June 18, 1976
- December 17, 1982
- July 14, 1989
Characters
- Peter Pan: Protagonist, the boy who won't grow up
- Tinker Bell: Pan's hot-headed pixie pal
- Wendy Darling: The eldest of the Darling children; adores Peter Pan
- Captain Hook: The villain of the film; a pirate captain who wants revenge on Pan for getting his hand lopped off and fed to the Crocodile
- John and Michael Darling: Wendy's siblings
- Mr. Smee: Hook's right-hand man
- The Other Pirates: The rest of Hook's crew. Their names include Mullins, Turk, Skylights, Black Murphy Bill Jukes and Starkey
- Mr. and Mrs. Darling: The Darling children's parents; their mother likes Peter Pan and their father doesn't; in fact, he wishes they'd grow up to be practical
- Nana: The Darlings' maid, a dog
- The Lost Boys: Pan's right-hand men, dressed as various animals. Their names are Slightly (fox costume), Cubby (bear costume), Nibs (rabbit costume), Tootles (skunk costume) and the Twins (raccoon costumes)
- The Crocodile: Crocodile that swallowed an alarm clock and is after the remains of Hook; Pan had cut off Hook's hand and threw it to the Crocodile who enjoyed the little appetizer so much, he's been following him ever since
- The Indian Chief: Father of Princess Tiger Lily
- Princess Tiger Lily: Indian princess, daughter of the Chief
- The Mermaids: Friends of Peter Pan, to whom he tells his stories of his battles against the pirates
Songs
Songs in film
The songs in Peter Pan were composed by Sammy Fain, Sammy Cahn, Frank Churchill, Winston Hibler and Ted Sears. Oliver Wallace composed the incidental music score.
- "The Second Star To the Right" - The Jud Conlon Chorus
- "You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly!" - The Jud Conlon Chorus
- "A Pirate's Life" - Mr. Smee; The Pirates
- "Following the Leader" - John and Michael Darling; The Lost Boys
- "What Makes the Red Man Red" - The Indian Tribe
- "Your Mother and Mine" - Wendy Darling
- "The Elegant Captain Hook" - Captain Hook; Mr. Smee; The Pirates
- "You Can Fly! You Can Fly! You Can Fly! (Reprise)" - The Jud Conlon Chorus
Songs written for film but not used
- "Never Smile At a Crocodile" - Unknown
- "The Boatswain's Song" - Captain Hook; The Pirates
Titles in different languages
- Bulgarian: Питър Пан
- Croatian: Petar Pan
- Czech: Peter Pan
- Danish: Peter Pan
- Dutch: Peter Pan
- Finnish: Peter Pan
- French: Les Aventures de Peter Pan (later Peter Pan)
- German: Peter Pans Heitere Abenteuer (later Peter Pan)
- Icelandic: Pétur Pan
- Italian: Le Avventure di Peter Pan
- Japanese: ピーターパン (Pītā Pan)
- Korean (South Korea): 피터팬
- Mandarin Chinese: 小飛俠
- Norwegian: Peter Pan
- Polish: Piotrus Pan
- Portuguese: As Aventuras de Peter Pan (Portugal); Peter Pan (Brazil)
- Russian: Питер Пэн
- Serbian: Petar Pan
- Spanish: Peter Pan
- Swedish: Peter Pan (re-released as Peter Pan och sjörövarna)
- Thai: ปีเตอร์แพน
- Turkish: Peter Pan
Trivia
- This was the final Disney film in which all nine members of the Nine Old Men worked together as directing animators.
- The phrase "second to the right and straight on till morning" was changed into "second star to the right..." for the Disney version. Also, since this movie came out, non-Disney versions have used the term "Never Never Land" as opposed to "Neverland".
- Although original author Barrie is credited, this is the only major film version of "Peter Pan" which does not use any of his original dialogue, although one of Barrie's original lines is paraphrased when Hook first tells Smee why the crocodile is always following him. Even the live-action musical versions, as well as the 1924 silent film version, use Barrie's original dialogue.
- Though the film was extremely successful, Walt himself was dissatisfied with the finished product. He felt that the character of Peter Pan was cold and unlikable.
- Captain Hook's name in different languages include the following: Capitane Crochet (French), Käpt'n Hook (German), Capitán Garfio (Spanish), Capitan Uncino (Italian), Kapitein Haak (Dutch) and Kapten Krok (Swedish).
- The crocodile in Goliath II (released in 1960) looks exactly like the crocodile in this film.
- The film inspired at least three things: Peter Pan's Flight, the dark ride found at many of the Disney parks worldwide; a sequel some fifty years after the original film, Return To Neverland; and two areas of the Kingdom Hearts series: namely, Neverland as a playable world in the first Kingdom Hearts game and Peter Pan as a Summon in Kingdom Hearts II.