AZZenny
Registered User
Reifenstahl's visit was not long after Kristallnacht. Disney is widely quoted as telling her he admired her work but it would hurt his image and reputation to be seen professionally associating with her. Not entirely naive or ignorant, perhaps.
It is also well-documented that in the original 1933 Three Little Pigs animation, the big bad wolf appeared as a 'classic' yiddish-Jewish peddler complete with big schnozz and sidecurls and a strong 'Jewish' accent. Walt approved this, then after public pressure changed the wolf's appearance to that of a Fuller Brush man, but not the accent; that was later changed as well. Mickey Mouse in another cartoon used a lighter emblazoned with a swastika.
Again, the idea that Walt was naive or an innocent is baloney. I hope you all realize that just because sexism, racism, and anti-semitism were so common that it was 'normal' in the 30's and 40's and 50's (and 60's-70's-80's-90's-00's and 10's) may help explain why someone like Disney held those views, it certainly doesn't mean he wasn't a racist, sexist, bigot. He WAS - and he had a lot of ignorant company.
It is also well-documented that in the original 1933 Three Little Pigs animation, the big bad wolf appeared as a 'classic' yiddish-Jewish peddler complete with big schnozz and sidecurls and a strong 'Jewish' accent. Walt approved this, then after public pressure changed the wolf's appearance to that of a Fuller Brush man, but not the accent; that was later changed as well. Mickey Mouse in another cartoon used a lighter emblazoned with a swastika.
Again, the idea that Walt was naive or an innocent is baloney. I hope you all realize that just because sexism, racism, and anti-semitism were so common that it was 'normal' in the 30's and 40's and 50's (and 60's-70's-80's-90's-00's and 10's) may help explain why someone like Disney held those views, it certainly doesn't mean he wasn't a racist, sexist, bigot. He WAS - and he had a lot of ignorant company.