Celebrating the 68th anniversary of Disney’s Song of the South
By Guest Columnist Jim Korkis, Disney Historian

Song of the South Poster
Song of the South Poster

Disney’s controversial feature film, Song of the South, premiered at the majestic Fox Theater (at the time the South’s largest theater seating over 5,000 people) in Atlanta, Georgia at 8:30 pm EST on November 12, 1946. It was the largest premiere in the South since Gone With the Wind in 1939.

The film takes place after the Civil War, during the period known as Reconstruction. A young boy named Johnny and his parents (who are having some relationship issues) go to the plantation owned by the boy’s grandmother.

Song of the South Animation Drawing
Song of the South Animation Drawing

Johnny has a difficult time adjusting to the new location and his parents’ estrangement but thanks to the stories told by Uncle Remus about characters like Brer Rabbit, the boy learns to make friends and finds his “laughing place”.

There is a happy ending combining live action and animation where the characters sing the Oscar winning song “Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah” (a word coined by Walt himself who was a huge fan of the original Uncle Remus stories by author Joel Chandler Harris).

Song of the South is considered the Disney Company’s first live-action feature since roughly two-thirds of the film was live-action and the marketing promoted the film as live-action. However, today, the film is lauded for its three animated sequences illustrating the stories told by the fictional storyteller, Uncle Remus (portrayed by the incredible James Bassett who won an honorary Academy Award for his acting) and its innovative use of combining animation and live-action.

Ollie Johnston, one of the fabled Nine Old Men of Disney animation who worked on the film, told me: “It was one of the most exciting pictures I ever worked on. Each fable was full of action, and with those three great characters (Brer Rabbit, Brer Fox and Brer Bear) you had quite a wonderful triangle there. We were able to take more liberties with the animals.”

Br'er Rabbit
Br’er Rabbit

Eric Larson, another of the Nine Old Men, told me: “We were so happy to be working on this film after so many years of making those dull government films (during World War II). Also, it was so different from our previous animated feature, Bambi (1942). Here we could give the animals human traits and then exaggerate all the movements whereas with Bambi, everything had to be animated true to life and very exact.”

Thirty-six animators took roughly two years to do the approximately half hour of animation under the supervision of Disney Legend Wilfred Jackson who began his animation career doing a few seconds of animation for the iconic short Steamboat Willie (1928).

“I’ll tell you why it was a wonderful experience for me,” Jackson later said. “Walt was again very closely, personally involved with what we were doing. He had the cream of the animation crew on it.”

Bill Peet Song of the South Storyboard
Bill Peet Song of the South Storyboard
Bill Peet Song of the South Storyboard
Bill Peet Song of the South Storyboard

The storyboarding for the sequences was done by Disney storyman Bill Peet who later went on to a career as a children’s book author. Concept artwork had been done by the amazing Mary Blair.

In 1946, TIME magazine reviewed the film and concluded “Song of the South could have used a much heavier helping of cartooning. Technically, the blending of two movie mediums is pure Disney wizardry. Ideologically, the picture is certain to land its maker in hot water”.

That review turned out to be correct. Immediately, the film was misunderstood to be taking place during the period of slavery and featuring all the then common clichés in Hollywood movies about the Old South including Shirley Temple films like The Little Colonel (1935). Black characters appeared to be always deferential to white characters and happy to work on a plantation and sing all day in their shabby clothes.

Br'er Fox
Br’er Fox

With the rise of the Civil Rights movement in the late 1960s, the film became a highly visible target of Hollywood’s depiction of black characters and after its re-release in 1986 to celebrate the film’s 40th anniversary, the Disney Company voluntarily pulled it from ever being shown in the United States again.

Over the last almost three decades, the film has been in constant re-release in the United Kingdom, Europe, South America, and Asia. These showings did not prompt race riots or negative comments.

Song of the South Storyboard
Song of the South Storyboard

Only people living in the United States have been denied the opportunity to see the film again even though one of the most popular attractions at Disney theme parks, Splash Mountain, was based on the animated characters in the film.

“I was familiar with the Uncle Remus tales since boyhood,” stated Walt in 1946. “From the time I began making animated features, I have had them definitely in my production plans. It is their timeless and living appeal, their magnificent pictorial quality, their rich and tolerant humor, their homely philosophy and cheerfulness which made the Remus legends the top choice for our first production with flesh-and-blood players.”

Mary Blair Song of the South Concept Art
Mary Blair Song of the South Concept Art

In two years, the film will be celebrating its 70th anniversary. Disney CEO Robert Iger has re-confirmed that the film will not be re-released nor will there be any celebration surrounding this milestone in Disney history.

Jim Korkis is an internationally respected Disney and animation historian as well as an author of several books. To learn more about Song of the South, pick up a copy of his Theme Park Press book, Who’s Afraid of the Song of the South? on www.amazon.com. To learn more about animation, pick up a copy of his recent TPP book, Animation Anecdotes: The Hidden History of Classic American Animation.

Buy Jim Korkis Book Who’s Afraid of the Song of the South? And Other Forbidden Disney Stories

Previous post

Happy International Animation Day 2014

Next post

Inside the Thief and the Cobbler Documentary, Persistence of Vision

The Author

Jim Korkis

Jim Korkis

5 Comments

  1. Sean Herbs (#LuckyDuck and #ExtendLuckyDuck)
    November 13, 2014 at 2:42 am — Reply

    This film was restricted on VHS and DVD in the US, because That Raisist (Ding.) And African American culture.
    I think that Disney is gonna remaster this film by Reliance Mediaworks.

  2. November 13, 2014 at 3:09 pm — Reply

    Great article guys! Very nice artwork in this production 🙂

  3. November 14, 2014 at 4:20 am — Reply

    Great write-up. really cool art work too. I personally like that storyboard panel by Bill Peet. Thanks again for posting these articles!

  4. […] Traditional Animation – Celebrating the 68th Anniversary of Song of the South […]

  5. Kaarina
    May 18, 2015 at 12:35 am — Reply

    I remember as a child going to the drive in movie theater with my parents to watch this. As a parent(my 17yr old son) will never see this movie. I only wish someday maybe it will be re-released so that the younger generations are able to watch it. I would someday like to see it again as well(possibly on dvd). It’s a wonderful movie. The only way now you can see a clip of the tile song is on Disney’s “Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah” song vhs tape.

Leave a Reply to Lee Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.