Rotten Library > Culture > Mickey Mouse Club
Mickey Mouse Club![]() The hosts were bright-eyed Jimmy Dodd and dirty-old-man Roy Williams, nicknamed Moose, a former animator whom Disney himself had tapped for the show. Roy was the one who thought that Mickey Mouse should tip his ears in greeting to Minnie Mouse, spawning one of the most recognizable pieces of Disney shwag, those embroidered mouse-ear beanies. Jimmy and Roy were only three years apart in age, but the boy from Cincinnati couldn't be less like his Bukowski-esque counterpart. Roy really stands out in old photos of the cast: fat, balding, with a toothy aw-gawrsh grin, peeking over heads in the back row of a group shot, or standing off to the side as the kids squirmed in the spotlight. Backstage, Roy kept an eye on the girls and graced the boys with a few ribald anecdotes now and then. When no-one was looking, he'd take a quick pull from his flask, then tell one of the kids to stash it for him. After the show went into syndication in 1959, a handful of the old cast members parlayed their childhood success into forgettable careers, including famed Multiple Sclerosis sufferer Annette Funicello and Gallery model Doreen Tracy (pictured below). The show resurfaced in 1977 as The New Mickey Mouse Club with much the same format as before, festooned with a mélange of multicultural Mouseketeers to dither the previously all-white cast. In spite of these hand-outs to a newly-miscegenated middle America, ratings floundered, and after two seasons the show was scrapped.
What Nickelodeon did for basic cable signups, The Disney Channel did for premium programming: that is, it gave kids an honest, grassroots alternative to the high-brow panderings of PBS' Sesame Street and daytime network soaps. The channel originally began by mining old Disney movies and cartoons for programming; when name-recognition alone failed to net the desired mob of subscribers, Disney turned to its old television ventures for ideas. The New New Mickey Mouse Club, now called simply MMC, was just another of these swings in the dark. Once again, America's youth proved it still wasn't ready for the time-honored variety show format, despite its hip, urban streamlinings. The show went off the air, seemingly for good, in 1994, having survived just long enough for future overnight sensation Britney Spears to turn 11 and join the cast for a couple years. (Britney had auditioned once before when she was 8, but was turned down on account of her age). Recent ex-Mouseketeer success stories like Spears, Christina Aguilera, and the cast of N'Sync have had lesser luminaries in MMC's third-run pantheon all biting their pillows wondering who will be next to "jump the shark". Largely a motley crew of back-up dancers, Broadway extras, and make-up artists, it's hard to tell from the headshots and résumés alone which ones have it. If they've learned anything from previous generations of child stars however, one hopes that they will skip the embarassing meth overdose and bo-tox fiasco and go straight into politics.
Ex-Mouseketeers
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