The July 17, 1929 issue of Variety carried a notice about a laugh-filled new short film in which “skeletons hoof and frolic,” the peak of whose hilarity “is reached when one skeleton plays the spine of another in xylophone fashion, using a pair of thigh bones as hammers.” The final lines of this strong recommendation add that “all takes place in a graveyard. Don’t bring your children.” The review amusingly reflects shifts in public taste over the past near-century — unless the sight of skeletons playing each other like xylophones is more comically enduring than I imagine — but those final words add a note of breathtaking irony, for the short under review is The Skeleton Dance, produced and directed by Walt Disney.
Despite the power of Disney’s name, this particular film is better understood as the work of Ub Iwerks, who animated most of it by himself in about six weeks. He and Disney had been working together since at least the early nineteen-twenties, when they launched the short-lived Laugh-O-Gram Studio in Kansas City.
It was Iwerks, in fact, who refined a rough sketch by Disney into the figure we now know as Mickey Mouse — but whom audiences in the twenties first came to know as Steamboat Willie, whose eponymous cartoon debut entered the public domain last year. The Skeleton Dance, the first of Disney’s “Silly Symphonies,” was similarly liberated from copyright on this year’s Public Domain Day, along with a variety of other 1929 Disney shorts (many of them featuring Mickey Mouse).
The great technical innovation on display isn’t synchronized sound itself, which had been used even before Steamboat Willie, but the relationship between the images and the sound. According to animation historian Charles Solomon, “having to underscore the action in the first Mickey Mouse picture,” composer Carl Stalling “suggested that the reverse could be done: adding animated action to a musical score,” perhaps featuring skeletons, trees, and suchlike moving around in rhythm. There we have the genesis of this cartoon danse macabre, which was a leap forward in the ever-closer union of animation and music as well as a revelation to its audiences, who wouldn’t have experienced anything quite like it before. Even today, the most natural response to a sufficiently miraculous-seeming technological development is, perhaps, laughter.
The Skeleton Dance was voted the 18th best cartoon of all time by 1,000 animation professionals in a 1994 book called The 50 Greatest Cartoons. Find a copy here.
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Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His projects include the Substack newsletter Books on Cities and the book The Stateless City: a Walk through 21st-Century Los Angeles. Follow him on the social network formerly known as Twitter at @colinmarshall.