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  1. Girl - The Princess in Puss in Boots and title character of the Cinderella Laugh-O-Gram are both the same girl.

  2. He started by persuading Frank Newman, Kansas City’s leading exhibitor, to include short snippets of animation in the series of weekly newsreels Newman produced for his chain of three theaters. Tactfully called “Newman Laugh-O-grams,” Disney’s footage was meant to mix advertising with topical humor.

  3. Aug 17, 2009 · A couple of years later, when Walt Disney was struggling with his first Studio, Laugh-O-gram Films, he remembered the girl’s long blonde Mary Pickford-style ringlets and charming smile from a local ad, and placed a call to her parents to see if she would star in Alice’s Wonderland.

  4. The Laugh-O-Gram Studio (also called Laugh-O-Gram Studios) was an animation studio located on the second floor of the McConahay Building at 1127 East 31st in Kansas City, Missouri, that operated from June 28, 1921, to October 16, 1923.

  5. The girl was a local four-year-old charmer named Virginia Davis, and the studio was none other than Laugh-O-gram’s own office. The resulting film is an appropriate valedictory to Walt’s filmmaking adventures in Kansas City.

  6. Laugh-O-grams (yes, with a small “g”) were a series of seven black-and-white animated short cartoons that Walt Disney produced for theatrical release with a crew of young, inexperienced...

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  8. Dec 20, 2023 · Walt Disney’s journey in animation began in 1920 while he was working as a commercial artist in Kansas City. After hours, he and a few friends created their first animations, Laugh-O-grams. Disney convinced Frank Newman, a leading movie theater owner in Kansas City, to show these short animations.

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