2012 Soundtrack List
Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Lady and the Tramp
Plot
The Christmas morning in 1909, Jim Dear Darling gives his wife a cocker spaniel puppy named Lady. Lady enjoys a happy life with a partner and a couple of neighborhood dogs, a Scotch terrier and a beagle named jockey confidence. Meanwhile, in the city by rail, a dog Silver Street, known as the tramp, living life moment by moment, asking whether the remains of an Italian restaurant or the protection of his fellow deviates Peg (A Pekingese) and Bull (a bulldog) from the local kennel.
Later, Lady sadness after Jim Dear and Darling start trying to turn coldly. Jock and true to his visit and determine that the change in behavior is due to Darling expecting. While Jock and trust to explain what a baby, wiretapping Tramp comes into the conversation and offer your own opinions. Jock and confidence to take an immediate dislike to the loss and order out of the yard.
In course, the arrival Baby and Darling and Jim Dear Madam introduce the baby. Soon after, Jim Dear and Darling decides to go on a trip together, leaving her aunt to care for the baby Sara and home. When Lady clashes with Aunt Sara two Siamese cats, Si and Am, she takes Lady to a pet store to get a muzzle. A Lady escapes terror, but is pursued by dogs on the street. Vagabond get to the point and save the Virgin. The two then visit a zoo, where he tricks a beaver Tramp in the elimination of the mouth the canyon. That night, the tramp Lady shows how to live "," Footloose and neck free, culminating in an Italian dinner by candlelight.
The famous scene spaggethi dinner.
As Tramp escorts lady home back Lady is captured by the dog-catcher. In the pound, admire dogs licensed Virgin, as is his way out of the pound. Soon the dogs wandering reveal many brides and how they are unlikely to resolve downward. Finally, the Virgin is collected by Aunt Sarah who chains Lady to a doghouse in the backyard. Jock and visit trusted to comfort her, but when the wanderer comes to apologizing, thunder starts to rumble as Lady confronts him with fury, after which the Tramp sadly leaves.
Moments later, when it starts raining, Lady is a rat trying to sneak into the yard. While the rat is afraid of the Virgin, which is able to escape it and enter the house. Lady barks frantically, but Aunt Sarah tells him to shut up. The wanderer hears and returns to help. Tramp comes into the house and finds a rat in the nursery. Lady breaks free and runs to the nursery to find the rat in the baby's crib. Vagabond is launched on the rat, but the striking of the cradle in the process, waking the baby. Tramp kills rats, but when Aunt Sarah goes to the baby help, go to two dogs and thinks they are responsible. She pushes a closet Tramp and Lady in the basement, then calls the pound to take away the tramp.
Jim Dear and Darling return, leaving the kennel. Madam release, which leads to the dead rat, which justified the Tramp. Jock and Trusty, with everything you hear, go after the cart for dogcatcher. Serious Jock is convinced long ago lost their sense of smell, but the old hound is capable of finding the car. Bark at the horses that rear up and topple the cart on a telephone pole. Dear Jim arrive by car with the Virgin, and the lady is happily reunited with the tramp. Unfortunately, the faithful are injured in the fighting.
That Christmas, the tramp, now a part of the family of the lady, has its own collar and license. Lady and the Tramp have their own family, a litter four puppies. Jock comes to see the family together with Reliability, which has a broken leg.
Cast
Peggy Lee and Darling, If I am, Peg
Lady Barbara Luddy as
Larry Roberts and The Tramp
Bill Thompson as Jock, Joe, Bulldog, Dachsie, Police
Bill Baucom as trusty
Stan Freberg as beavers
Verna Felton as Aunt Sarah
Alan Reed and Boris
Thurl Ravenscroft as Al the alligator
Tony George Givot
Dallas McKennon as Toughy, Peter, Professor the Hyena
Dear Jim Lee Millar, dogcatcher
The Choir Mellom like a dog
Production
Characters' development
The Tramp
In versions Early writing, the tramp was first called Homer, then Rags and Bozo. However, in the finished film, the Tramp never called himself a name, although most of the canine cast of the film refer to it as "vagabond." The tramp has other names that are given to him by weekly visits families of food, like Mike and Fritzi. However, he does not belong to one family, so his name is not confirmed, but most of comics and actually own sequel assume that is also called vagabond by Jim Dear and Darling.
Aunt Sarah
The character eventually Aunt Sarah became the movie was watered down compared to previous treatments. In the film, she is a well-meaning busybody aunt (Revealed to be the sister of the mother of Darling in the novelization Greene) who love their cats. Previous projects had Aunt Sarah is more of an intrusion and stereotypical domineering mother-in-law. Her singing ability is apparently nonexistent. While she is antagonistic to Lady and the Tramp at first, she sends a box of cookies Dog for Christmas to compensate for having so badly misunderstood.
If & AM
Earlier versions of the story, written in 1943 during the war, had the two cats are like a pair of losses, suggesting the yellow peril. They were originally named Nip Tuck. In novelization Ward Greene, who tearfully express his remorse over causing imminent execution of the tramp by hiding the body of the rat as a joke, and then try to repair the damage, while in the film not participate in the climactic scene.
Jim Dear and Darling
In pre-production, was known as Jim Dear and Darling Jim Brown was named Elizabeth. These were removed to highlight the point of view of the Virgin. At a very early version, published a story in an anthology of 1944 children from Disney, the Virgin referred to as "Mister" and "ma'am." To keep the perspective of a dog, Jim Darling and faces are rarely shown. The background artists made models of the interiors of the house of Jim Dear and Darling, and photos and film taken at a low level as a reference perspective to maintain a vision of a dog.
sequence of the opening film, which unfolds Darling a hat box on Christmas morning and is within the Virgin, is based on a real incident in the life of Walt Disney when he presented his wife with a puppy Lily Chow as a gift in a box of hats.
Beaver
The beaver in this film is similar to the character of Gopher on Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree, to the speech: a whistle when it is the "S" sound. This voice was created by Stan Freberg, who has extensive experience in commercial recordings and comedy. The Lady and the Tramp of the Platinum Edition DVD that shows how the effect was made, and that a time whistle was used because it was difficult to maintain the effect.
Rat
The rat, a character something comical in some early sketches, became much more alarming because of the need to increase dramatic tension.
History
In 1937 legendary Disney story man Joe Grant went to Walt Disney with some sketches he had made his springer spaniel named Lady and some of their regular antics. Disney enjoyed the sketches and told Grant to put them together in a storyboard. When Grant returned to his table, Disney was not happy and the story was shelved.
In 1943 Cosmopolitan Walt read a short story written by Ward Greene, called Happy Dan, The Whistling Dog. " He was interested in the story and bought the rights to it.
In 1949, Grant had left the studio, but the men were continually pulling Disney story of Grant's original drawings and history of the shelf to reorganize. Finally a solid story began to take shape in 1953, based on scripts and the story of Grant Green. Greene later wrote a novelization of the film which was released two years before the movie itself, at the urging of Walt Disney, so that audiences would be familiar with history. Grant will not receive credit for any history of working in the film, an issue that the animation director Eric Goldberg hopes to rectify in the vignette of the Virgin and behind the Platinum Edition cams wanderer explained the role of Grant.
Cinemascope
Besides information: Cinemascope
This was the first film Disney animated filmed in Cinemascope. Presented in a 2.55:1 aspect ratio is, so far, the greatest movie that Disney has ever produced. Sleeping Beauty was also produced by an original 2.55:1 aspect ratio, but was never featured in theaters this way the film is, however, are presented in their original 2.55:1 aspect DVD and Blu-ray Disc Platinum Edition release.
This new innovation in CinemaScope presented some additional problems for the animators: the expansion of web space makes it difficult for a single character to dominate the screen, and the groups should be distributed to keep the display appears weak. It has become necessary from constant to convergent might seem too busy or upset. design artists essentially had to reinvent his technique. The animators had to remember that they could move characters through a fund instead of going back behind them. The animators overcame these obstacles during the action scenes, such as the hobo killing the rat. However, some missed the character development, as there was more realistic but less close-ups, so a smaller share with the public.
More problems arose as the release date approached. Although Cinemascope was becoming an increasing interest of moviegoers, not all theaters had the capacity at the time. Knowing this, Walt issued two versions of the film to be created: one in widescreen format, and another in the aspect ratio original. This involved the collection artists design the restructuring of key scenes when the characters were in the area outside the screen.
Script reviews
This section needs additional references for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. material references may be challenged and removed. (August 2009)
The finished film is slightly different from what was originally planned. Although both the original script and the final product to share most of the same elements, it would still be reviewed and renewed. Originally, the Virgin would have a single next-door neighbor, a canine Ralph Bellamy-type named Hubert. Hubert was later replaced by Jock and trust. A deleted scene that was created was one that, while the Lady of fear baby's arrival, she has a parade, "Shoes" nightmare (similar to "Dumbo Pink Elephants on Parade" nightmare) when a baby booty is divided into two, then four, and continues to multiply. Dream shoes then fade into real shoes, your carrier to say that the baby is born. [Citation needed]
Another cut scene was after the faithful says: "Everyone knows, the best friend is his dog" human. This is a Tramp describing a world where the roles of dogs and humans are connected, dogs are the masters and vice versa.
Before being only "The Tramp", the character went through a series of suggested names as Homer, Rags and Bozo. It was thought in the 1950s that the term "bum" would not be acceptable, but since Walt Disney approved the election, are considered safe by virtue of its acceptance. On the panels of the early history that appears in the DVD Backstage Disney had listed description "a stray dog" by "Homer" or one of the names mentioned earlier.
Spaghetti sequence
The spaghetti scene in which Lady and the Tramp eating opposite ends of a single strand of spaghetti to the meeting in the middle, is often parodied a scene, even in the movie itself accordingly, Lady and the Tramp II: The Adventure of rogue.
Release
At that time, the film had a higher figure than any other Disney animated feature since Snow White. An episode of Disneyland called A dogs story aired before the release of the film. The film was reissued to theaters in 1962, 1971, 1980 and 1986, and on VHS and laserdisc in 1987 (the was in the Disney classic video series) and 1998 (this was in the series of Walt Disney Video Masterpiece Collection). A limited edition series was released on Disney DVD November 23, 1999. It was remastered and restored to DVD on February 28, 2006, as the seventh of the Platinum Edition series. One million copies of the Platinum Edition were sold on February 28, 2006 Platinum Edition DVD went on moratorium on January 31, 2007, together with the 2006 DVD reissue Lady and the Tramp II: The Adventure Rogue.
This film started a comic called rogue division, named after one of Lady and the Tramp of puppies. It was written by Ward Greene and published first on October 31, 1955 to 1988. Rogue also stars in a direct to video sequel in 2001 entitled The Lady and the Tramp II: The Adventure of rogue. Walt Disney Comics Digest issue # 54 has a new adventure of The Lady and the Tramp copyright dated 1955.
Reception
Despite being a huge success at the box office, film was initially criticized by many critics: an indication that the dogs had "the size of hippos", another that "the work of artists is below par. "Yet the film has come to be regarded as a classic.
Lady and the Tramp was named number 95 of "100 Stories Greatest Love of All Time "by the American Film Institute in A Hundred Years … A hundred special passions.
Soundtrack
#
Title
Length
1.
"Main Title (Bella Notte) / The wag of the tail of a dog"
2.
"Peace on Earth (Silent Night)"
3.
"It has a ribbon / Lady on the bed / In the morning after"
4.
"Sunday / The Rat / Morning Paper"
5.
"A New Blue Collar / Jock talks and Seriousness Lady / Es Jim Dear"
6.
"What a day! / Breakfast in Tony's "
7.
"Warning / Breakout / Snob Hill / A Wee boy"
8.
Countdown to B-Day "
9.
"Baby's First Morning / What is a baby / La La Lu"
10.
"Going Away / Aunt Sarah "
11.
"The Siamese Cat Song / What's going on down there"
12.
"La Boca / wrong side of the track "
13.
"You poor children / is not my dog"
14.
"Through the Zoo / A Shooter Register
15.
"Footloose and Collar-Free / A Night At The Restaurant / Night Bella"
16.
"It is the morning / Chickens Always Chase / Trapped "
17.
"Home Sweet Home"
18.
"The Pound"
19.
"What a dog / has a bum"
20.
"In the Doghouse / The Return of the Rat / falsely accused / We've Got to stop Sacrifice cart / Seriousness of "
21.
"Watch the Birdie / Visit
22.
"Finale (Peace on Earth)"
Peggy Lee
The legendary singer Peggy Lee wrote the songs with Sonny Burke, and helped with the score as well. In the film he sings: "He is a "vagabond", La La Lu "," The Siamese Cat Song, and "What is a baby?". She helped promote the film in Disney TV series, explaining his work with the score and singing some of the numbers of the film. These appearances are available as part of the lady and the tramp of the Platinum Edition DVD.
In 1991, Peggy Lee sued the Walt Disney Company for breach of contract, arguing that it still retains the rights to transcripts, including those to videotape. She received $ 2.3 million, but not without a long legal battle with the studio that was finally resolved in 1991.
References
Abc ^ Finch, Christopher (2004). "Chapter 8: The disruption and innovation." The Art of Walt Disney. pp. 234 244.
^ Abcdefg "Lady and the Tramp History." Disney Archives. http://disney.go.com/vault/archives/movies/ladytramp/ladytramp.html.
^ Lady and the Tramp Platinum DVD Edition: Film dialogue. "
Abcd ^ Lady and the Tramp Platinum Edition DVD. Disc 2: "Backstage Disney."
^ (DVD) Walt: The Man behind the myth: Pre-production of The Lady and the Tramp. 2001.
^ ab "Joe Grant." Disney Legends. http://legends.disney.go.com/legends/detail?key=Joe+Grant.
^ Abcde Eric Goldberg. Lady and the Tramp Platinum Edition DVD, Disc 2: "Behind the Scenes: development history."
Abcd ^ Thomas, Bob (1997). "Chapter 7: The post-war films." Art of Disney Animation: From Mickey Mouse to Hercules. Pp 103 104.
^ Lady and the Tramp Platinum Edition DVD, Disc 2: "Behind the Scenes."
^ Newcomb, Horace (2000). Television: the critical eye. Oxford University Press. p. 27. ISBN 0-19-511927-4.
^ Newcomb (2001), p. 27.
^ "Platinum Edition". http://www.ultimatedisney.com/ladyandthetramp-platinumedition-pressrelease.html.
^ "Information of DVD sales." http://www.videobusiness.com/article/CA6312352.html.
^ "Lady and the Tramp II information." http://dvd.ign.com/articles/736/736573p1.html.
^ "DDBP IVR labeled # 2 (Donald Duck Party's Beach # 2)." Walt Disney Comics Digest (54).
^ "Walt and Education: Part I". http://disney.go.com/disneyatoz/familymuseum/exhibits/articles/ladyandthetramp/index.html.
^ "100 Years … 100 List of the 100 winning movies passions "(PDF). AFI. Http://connect.afi.com/site/DocServer/passions100.pdf?docID=248l.
^ "Lee Peggy aspects of the film. "Peggy Lee's Official Website. Http: / / www.peggylee.com / solos / films.html.
^ "Peggy Lee article." http://www.peggylee.com/library/910219.html.
^ "BBC News". June 26, 2002. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/music/2066858.stm. Retrieved on January 5, 2010.
External Links
Lady and the Tramp at the Internet Movie Database
Lady and the Tramp at Rotten Tomatoes
Lady and the Tramp Box Office Mojo
Lady and the Tramp Files Disney
EV
Films directed by Clyde Geronimi
1940
Make Mine Music (1946) Melody Time (1948) The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949)
1950
Cinderella (1950) Alice in Wonderland (1951) Peter Pan (1953) Lady and the Tramp (1955) Sleeping Beauty (1959)
1960
One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961)
EV
Films directed by Hamilton Luske
1940
Pinocchio (1940) The reluctant dragon (1941) Making Music Mine (1946) Fun and Fancy Free (1947) Melody Time (1948) so dear to my heart (1948)
1950
Cinderella (1950) Alice in Wonderland (1951) Peter Pan (1953) Lady and the Tramp (1955)
1960
One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961)
EV
Films directed by Wilfred Jackson
1940
Song of the South (1946) Melody Time (1948)
1950
Cinderella (1950) Alice in Wonderland (1951) Peter Pan (1953) Lady and the Tramp (1955)
EV
Disney theatrical animated features
Walt Disney
Animation Studios
movies
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) Pinocchio (1940) Fantasy (1940) Dumbo (1941) Bambi (1942) Saludos Amigos (1942) The Three Caballeros (1944) Make Mine Music (1946) Fun and Fancy Free (1947) Time Melody (1948) The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949) Cinderella (1950) Alice in Wonderland (1951) Peter Pan (1953) Lady and the Tramp (1955) The Sleeping Beauty (1959) One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961) The Sword in the Stone (1963) The Jungle Book (1967) The Aristocats (1970) Robin Hood (1973) The Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977) The Rescuers (1977) The Fox and the Hound (1981) The Black Cauldron (1985) The Great Mouse Detective (1986) Oliver & Company (1988) The Little Mermaid (1989) Rescuers Down Under (1990) Beauty and the Beast (1991) Aladdin (1992) The Lion King (1994) Pocahontas (1995) The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) Hercules (1997) Mulan (1998) Tarzan (1999) Fantasia 2000 (1999) Dinosaur (2000) The Emperor's New Groove (2000) Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001) Lilo & Stitch (2002) Planet Treasure (2002) Brother Bear (2003) Home on the Range (2004) Chicken Little (2005) Meet the Robinsons (2007) Bolt (2008) The Princess and the Frog (2009) Tangled (2010) King of the Elves (2012)
Walt Disney Pictures
animated films
The Reluctant Dragon (1941) Victory through Air Force (1943) Song of the South (1946) so dear to my heart (1949) Mary Poppins (1964) and Witch Brooms (1971) Pete's Dragon (1977) Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) Enchanted (2007)
DisneyToon Studios
movies
DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp (1990) A Goofy Movie (1995) Doug first film (1999) The Tigger Movie (2000), Recreation (2001) Return to Never Land (2002) The Jungle Book 2 (2003) Piglet Big Movie (2003) Teacher's Pet (2004) Pooh's Heffalump Movie (2005) Bambi II (2006)
Other
The Brave Little Toaster (1987) The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) James and the Giant Peach (1996) Valiant (2005) The Wild (2006) Roadside Romeo (2008) A Christmas Carol (2009) Alice in Wonderland (2010)
Categories: English-language films | 1950 romantic comedy films | 1955 | Disney animated films features canon | animated films Disney | Movies about animals | Films about dogs | Films with anthropomorphic characters | 1900 films | American films | Films shot in CinemaScope | Romantic filmsHidden music categories: Wikipedia pages semi-protected | Articles needing additional references from August 2009 | All articles need references | All articles lacking sources | Articles lacking reliable references from May 2009 About the Author
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