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12 Secrets About Disney Characters That Will Blow Your Mind

Disney is arguably the pinnacle of our childhoods. Many people grew up watching Disney movies and these movies are actually appropriate for all ages. To Disney fans, they thought of the movie character as their heroes, and even cried when they cried too. So, it might cause a lot of beautiful memories when people rewatch the movie. Secrets About Disney Characters in this post will shock you.
Year by year, Disney’s characters are still young and beautiful as they were in the past. Because they have power in Disney’s world, which made the movie so wonderful and mysterious. And when it comes to mystery, they actually have also some secrets that even die-hard fans haven’t fought out yet. That’s right! Those cartoons hid many secrets and today we compiled some facts about this amazing world that not many know. Let’s scroll down and enjoy the Secrets of Disney Characters. 

#1 A mouse on the Walk of Fame

Secrets About Disney CharactersSource: © Fantasia / Walt Disney Animation Studios© Witchblue / Wikimwdia Commons© (CC0 1.0)

The world’s most popular mouse made its breakout on-screen and became one of the most memorable symbols ever. Back in 1978, he celebrated his 50th birthday by joining the Walk of Fame. Mickey Mouse turned into the first animated character to enter the glorious landmark with more than 2,700 stars in Hollywood.

#2 A mouse with a big name

Secrets About Disney CharactersSource: © New York Weenie / Disney Television Animation© mickeymouse / Instagram

Originally, the iconic animated mouse had another name, Mortimer Mouse. But it was precisely Walt Disney’s wife, Lillian Bounds, who made him agree with the name Mickey Mouse. The full name of the lovely rodent is Michael Theodore Mouse, while Mortimer became a secondary character who fell in love with Minnie.

#3 Minnie Mouse’s real name

Secrets About Disney CharactersSource: © Steamboat Willie / Walt Disney Productions© minniemouse / Instagram

No one can deny that Mickey Mouse has a lovely girlfriend, Minnie Mouse, who is also one of Disney’s most beloved characters. She first appeared in Disney movies in 1928 with her beautiful dresses and hats that won over people’s hearts. After that, her polka dot costumes made her a fashion reference.And maybe you missed this fact, Minnie’s full name is Minerve Mouse. This was revealed in the 1942 comic strip The Gleam.

#4 Two queens, one crown

Secrets About Disney CharactersSource: © Atlantis: The Lost Empire / Walt Disney Animation Studios© Frozen / Walt Disney Animation Studios

In Disney’s stories, there is only one princess who is crowned queen on screen: Elsa from Frozen. Certainly, in Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Princess Kida also becomes queen, but her coronation is not shown. Kida is the first princess to become queen, and Elsa is the first to be crowned on screen.

#5 Singing with the enemy

Source: © Pinocchio / Walt Disney Animation Studios© Frozen / Walt Disney Animation Studios

Another Disney symbol, Pinocchio, premiered in 1940 and you may not have noticed that it was the first time the main character sings with the villain in the film. It cause a reference to the song Hi-Diddle-Dee-Dee-Dee.
The second time is when Anna sings with Hans Love Is An Open Door, making Anna also the first princess to sing with a bad guy.

#6 The little mouse that learned to speak

Source: © The Karnival Kid / Walt Disney Productions© Mickey Mouse Clubhouse / Disney Television Animation

Many people don’t know that Mickey Mouse’s first words on-screen were “hot dogs!” in 1929. Prior to that, nobody had heard him speak and it happened in the short film The Karnival Kid.

#7 An Oscar that’s worth seven

Source: © Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs / Walt Disney Animation Studios© Christopher Michel / Wikimedia Commons© (CC BY 2.0)

In 1937, there was a box-office hit and it was Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs. Two years later, Walt Disney earned an honorary Oscar for that film. Still, while the statuette had just the standard size, seven “little Oscars” came with it on a staggered base. And it became one of the most unique awards ever given by the Academy.

#8 A very long feature film

Source: © The Nightmare Before Christmas / Touchstone Pictures and co-producers

The film crew of 100 people actually spent 3 years finishing the movie The Nightmare Before Christmas. To obtain one second of film, sequences of 12 stop-motion movements had to be created. We can say 720 photographs had to be taken in 1 minute and 43,200 in 1 hour. It's hard to imagine how sad a mistake would be.

#9 A character that runs in the blood

Source: © Moana / Hurwitz Creative and co-producers© Diabolik / Wikimedia Commons© (CC BY-SA 4.0)

In case you don’t know, Dwayne John voiced Maui in the 2016 movie Moana. And the thing is Rock’s grandfather, who was also a wrestler, served as an inspiration for the character. That’s why the actor wrote on his social media: “A little Disney secret, my character Maui was inspired, in part, by my late grandfather, High Chief Peter Maivia of Samoa. #thankful.”

#10 A king with a lion’s name

Source: © The Lion King / Walt Disney Pictures and co-producers

The names of so many characters all come from the real names of different animals in the world. The Lion King’s name, for instance, comes from the African Swahili language, in which Simba means lion; Nala, gift or beloved; Pumba, fool; Rafiki, friend; and Shenzi, wild.

#11 A distinctive look

Source: © Sleeping Beauty / Walt Disney Animation Studios

We are not sure if, when the fairy godmothers seemed to leave the gifts to Aurora, she actually had this peculiarity in her eyes or if she received it after such a deep sleep. We can be sure that Sleeping Beauty is the only Disney princess with purple eyes.

#12 A short and surreal fate

Source: © Destino / Walt Disney Feature Animation

Salvador Dalí and Walt Disney who are known as 2 great architects of 20th-century fantasy, started a journey in surrealism and animation in 1946. As we all know, the result was to be a short film that just made it to 15 seconds and was then dropped.But Disney’s vice-president, Edward Disney, handled the work and introduced Destino in 2003. A short film of 6 minutes and a bunch of art that had to wait more than half a century to air.
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