Cool Drawings for Kids Minnie and Mickey

Disney cartoon graphic symbol

Minnie Mouse
Minnie Mouse Duckipedia.png
First appearance Steamboat Willie (1928)
Created by
  • Walt Disney
  • Ub Iwerks
Designed by
  • Walt Disney
  • Ub Iwerks
Voiced by
  • Walt Disney (1928–1929)
  • Marjorie Ralston (1929)
  • Marcellite Garner (1930–1939, 1942)
  • Thelma Boardman (1941–1942)
  • Ruth Clifford (1944–1952)
  • Janet Waldo (1974)[i]
  • Russi Taylor (1986–2019)[2]
  • Kaitlyn Robrock (2020–present)[3]
In-universe information
Species Mouse
Gender Female
Family unit Minnie Mouse family unit
Meaning other Mickey Mouse
Pet cat Figaro

Minnie Mouse is a cartoon character created past The Walt Disney Company. As the longtime sweetheart of Mickey Mouse, she is an anthropomorphic mouse with white gloves, a bow, polka-dotted dress, white bloomers, and depression-heeled shoes occasionally with ribbons on them. The Mickey Mouse comic strip story "The Gleam" (published Jan 19 – May 2, 1942) by Merrill De Maris and Floyd Gottfredson start gave her full name as Minerva Mouse, although this is seldom used.

Minnie is classy, calm, sassy, well-mannered, cheerful, and feminine. She is filled with dear and affection, polite to all her friends, and knows her manners. In 2022 her red polka dot clothes was temporarily replaced past a pantsuit in blueish with black polka dots and matching bow, designed past Stella McCartney.[four] [5]

The comic strip story "Mr. Slicker and the Egg Robbers" (published September 22 – December 26, 1930) introduced her father Marcus Mouse and her unnamed mother, both farmers. The same story featured photographs of Minnie'southward uncle Milton Mouse with his family and her grandparents Marvel Mouse and Matilda Mouse. Her best-known relatives, however, remain her uncle Mortimer Mouse (Mortimer was most the proper noun of Mickey) and her twin nieces, Millie and Melody Mouse, though most often a unmarried niece, Melody, appears. In many appearances, Minnie is presented equally the girlfriend of Mickey Mouse, and is all-time friends with Daisy Duck,[6] and a friend to Clarabelle Cow.

In honor of her 90th anniversary, Minnie Mouse got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. On January 22, 2018, she joined the ranks of other animated celebrities by receiving her own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[vii] She was the sixth Disney character to receive this honour. Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Winnie the Pooh, Tinker Bong, and Snow White have already received this distinction.

History [edit]

Origins of the character [edit]

Minnie was initially created to be the love interest of Mickey Mouse; concept art for Mickey showed a female mouse aslope him.

Minnie was designed in the manner of a flapper girl. Her main outfit consisted of a short flapper girl dress that often revealed her distinctive patched knickers. In the 1929 cartoon The Karnival Kid, information technology was also revealed that she wears black stockings which were also fashionable amongst flapper girls. Her shoes are probably her most distinctive article of clothing. For comedic effect, she wears oversized high heeled pumps that are too big for her anxiety. Her heels ofttimes slip out of her shoes, and she even loses her shoes completely in The Gallopin' Gaucho. When she walked or danced, the clip clop of her big pumps was commonly heard clearly and often went with the rhythm of the music that was played in the background. Forth with Mickey, she was redesigned in 1940. Her lid was replaced with a large bow, and bows were added to her shoes as well. Her eyes were also given more detail. Throughout the 1940s and 1950s, her look and personality became more conservative. Minnie almost e'er wears red or pink, only in her early appearances, she could be seen wearing a combination of blue, black or dark-green (when not depicted in blackness and white).

Minnie'southward early personality is cute, playful, lovable vocalist, musical and flirtatious. She often portrays an entertainer like a dancer or a musician whose affection Mickey is trying to win. Office of the comedy of these early shorts is the varying degree of success Mickey has in wooing Minnie. Different later cartoons afterwards the redesign, Minnie often becomes a damsel in distress whom Mickey tries to rescue. She is besides discipline to a lot of slapstick and prophylactic hose animation gags. Over the course of the 1930s, Minnie'due south and Mickey'due south relationship solidified and they eventually became a steady couple.

Minnie was offset seen in a test screening of the cartoon short Aeroplane Crazy.[viii] Minnie is invited to join Mickey in the first flying of his aircraft. She accepts the invitation but not his request for a kiss in mid-flight. Mickey somewhen forces Minnie into a kiss but this only results in her parachuting out of the plane. This first film depicted Minnie every bit somewhat resistant to the demanding affection of her potential boyfriend and capable of escaping his grasp.

Their debut, however, featured the couple already familiar to each other. The next motion-picture show featuring them was The Gallopin' Gaucho.[9] The motion-picture show was the second of their series to be produced, but the third to exist released, and was released on December 30, 1928. We detect Minnie employed at the Cantina Argentina, a bar and restaurant established in the Pampas of Argentina. She performs the Tango for Mickey the gaucho and Black Pete the outlaw. Both flirt with her but the latter intends to housebreak her while the former obliges in saving the Damsel in Distress from the villain. All three characters acted as strangers kickoff beingness introduced to each other.

But it was their third cartoon that established the definitive early look and personality of both Mickey and Minnie, as well as Pete. Steamboat Willie,[ten] was the 3rd short of the series to be produced simply released first on November xviii, 1928. Pete was featured equally the Captain of the steamboat, Mickey as a crew of one and Minnie as their single passenger. The two anthropomorphic mice first star in a sound picture show and spend most of its duration playing music to the melody of "Turkey in the Straw".

Minnie'south Yoo-Hoo [edit]

Her next advent was arguably more significant. Mickey'south Follies (June 26, 1929),[eleven] featured the first operation of the song "Minnie'due south Yoo-Hoo". "The guy they phone call petty Mickey Mouse" for the first time addresses an audience to explain that he has "got a sweetie" who is "neither fat nor skinny" and proudly proclaims that "she's my little Minnie Mouse". Mickey and so proceeds to explain his reaction to Minnie's call. The song firmly establishes Mickey and Minnie as a couple and expresses the importance Minnie holds for her male partner.

Damsel in distress [edit]

Her concluding appearance for the year was in Wild Waves,[12] carried by a moving ridge into the ocean. She panics and seems to showtime drowning. Mickey uses a row gunkhole to rescue her and return her to the shore but Minnie is still visibly shaken from the experience. Mickey starts singing the tune of "Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep", a maritime ballad, in an apparent effort to cheer her upwardly. Minnie cheers up and the short ends. This is the second time Minnie is placed in danger and so saved by her new boyfriend. It wouldn't be the concluding.

In fact, this was the example with her adjacent appearance in The Cactus Kid (May 10, 1930).[thirteen] As the title implies the curt was intended every bit a Western picture parody, but it is considered to be more or less a remake of The Gallopin' Gaucho set up in Mexico instead of Argentina. Minnie was over again cast as the local tavern dancer who is abducted by Peg-Leg Pedro (Black Pete in his first appearance with a peg-leg). Mickey again comes to the rescue. The short is considered meaning for being the last curt featuring Mickey and Minnie to exist animated past Ub Iwerks.

The Shindig (July xi, 1930)[14] featured Minnie joining Mickey, Horace, and Clarabelle in a befouled trip the light fantastic. Among them, Clarabelle seems to be the actual star of the brusque. Managing director Burt Gillett turned in some other enjoyable entry in the series, proved that production could get on without Iwerks. This was arguably the first time Minnie was upstaged by a female co-star.

In The Fire Fighters (June 20, 1930), Minnie is trapped in a hotel during a fire.[xiii] She spends the elapsing of the short in mortal peril but is rescued past firefighters nether Chief Mickey Mouse. Horace Horsecollar is among the firefighters. An unnamed cow in the background is possibly Clarabelle making a cameo. The music of the short was, appropriately, the tune of "At that place'll Exist a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight".

The side by side entry in the series is considered curious: The Gorilla Mystery (Oct ane, 1930).[fifteen] The short starts with Beppo the Gorilla escaping from a zoo. Mickey learns of it and panics. He phones Minnie to warn her virtually the unsafe gorilla wandering virtually. Minnie is unconcerned and plays tunes on her piano for Mickey to hear over the phone and know she is not agape. Her tunes are interrupted by her scream and Mickey rushes to her house to save her. Meanwhile, Beppo has wrapped up Minnie in rope and holds her hostage. Mickey confronts the gorilla and once again rescues the dryad in distress.

Introduction of a pet [edit]

In The Picnic (1930), Minnie introduces her boyfriend to her new pet dog, Rover. This is actually Pluto making his showtime appearance equally an individual character. Two unnamed bloodhound guard dogs strikingly like to him had previously appeared in The Chain Gang (August 18, 1930)[sixteen] which featured Mickey incarcerated in prison house without Minnie at his side. Otherwise the brusque features a typical picnic excursion harassed by woods animals and brought to a premature end by a sudden pelting.

The final appearance of Minnie during the year was Pioneer Days (November 20, 1930).[xiii] : 63 The short featured Minnie and her mate as pioneer settlers heading to the American Old Due west driving a covered wagon in a carriage train. They are unsurprisingly attacked by Native Americans on their way, a stock plot of Western movies at the time. While their fellows are either subjected to scalping or running for their lives, Minnie is captured by the attackers. Mickey attempts to rescue her only to be captured himself. In a reversal of their usual roles, Minnie escapes her captors and rescues her mate. They so dress as soldiers of the United States Regular army. Their mere appearance proves sufficient to have the entire tribe running for the hills. The Mouse couple stands triumphant at the finish. The short has been criticized for its unflattering depiction of Native Americans as rather bestial predators. The finale has been edited out in recent viewings for depicting the "braves" submitting to cowardice.

In several shorts, comics and Telly shows, Minnie owns a black and white kitten named Figaro, who had originated in the Disney animated feature Pinocchio.

Waning years [edit]

During the 2nd half of the thirties, Minnie didn't appear equally frequently in Mickey cartoons. This was mainly due to the growth in popularity of Mickey'southward new sidekicks, Goofy, Donald Duck, and Pluto, whose appearances in Mickey cartoons had more than or less replaced Minnie'southward role. Minnie's appearances in Mickey cartoons thus became less numerous, only she did have a few major roles in some Pluto and Figaro cartoons during the 1940s. Minnie made a sort of comeback in the 1980s when she was re-introduced in Mickey's Christmas Carol and then got her own starring function in Totally Minnie.[17]

Gimmicky appearances [edit]

  • She starred in a 1988 musical television special on NBC called Totally Minnie and it was the first film to feature Minnie in a lead role. She also appeared in a line of merchandise called Minnie 'n Me in the 1990s. On September eighteen, 1990, the CD Minnie 'north Me: Songs But For Girls was released.
  • Minnie's return to animation came in Mickey's Christmas Carol (October 20, 1983).[18] She was bandage equally Mrs. Cratchit. As with most Disney characters, she was given a small cameo in Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) simply doesn't accept whatever lines in the latter movie, despite her phonation extra being listed in the finish credits.
  • Minnie Mouse makes an advent in every episode of Mickey Mouse Clubhouse.
  • Minnie runs a neighborhood in Disney'due south Toontown Online called Minnie's Melodyland. This is a powerful area with access to Toontown Central, The Brrrgh, and Donald's Dreamland.
  • Minnie is available to sign autographs and take pictures throughout the day in diverse locations at the unlike Disney Resort Theme Parks around the world. She also appears in all of the daily parades that take place at the Disney resorts.
  • In the 2013 Mickey Mouse telly series, Minnie was restored to her classic 1930s look with the flowered bowler lid and flapper daughter outfit. Minnie as well gained more character quirks and, similar the older cartoons, was subject to more slapstick and rubber hose cartoon gags.
  • On June 22, 2017, it was announced that Minnie, alongside "Weird Al" Yankovic, Zoe Saldana, and Lin-Manuel Miranda, would be receiving her own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2018.[nineteen]
  • In December 2019, both Minnie and Mickey served equally special co-hosts of Wheel of Fortune for two weeks during Disney'south Hush-hush Santa Giveaway while Vanna White served as the main host during Pat Sajak's absenteeism.[20]

Boob tube [edit]

Minnie and Mickey in a graffiti in Vic, Catalonia

In Mickey Mouse Works, she finally appeared in her own segments. Occasionally, she starred in Maestro Minnie [21] shorts, in which she conducts an orchestra of living instruments that she usually has to tame.

In Business firm of Mouse, Minnie is in charge of running the nightclub, while Mickey primarily serves as the host. In one episode of House of Mouse, "Clarabelle's Big Secret", Minnie reveals that she has gone to the movies with Mortimer Mouse, although it is not a date.

She appears in ii children's shows on Disney Inferior: the full-length educational Mickey Mouse Clubhouse and the spin-off series of shorts Minnie'due south Bow-Toons, where she runs a "bow-tique" selling bows like the ones she and Daisy wear. In flavor 2 of Bow-Toons, she displays loftier physical strength and balance at to the lowest degree twice, able to rest her entire bodyweight in a ane-finger handstand.[22] [23]

In the 2013 Mickey Mouse goggle box series, she exhibits the ability to survive her head coming off and doing a 360 caste flip and re-attaching itself, which can happen when she feels surprised.[24] In 2017, as part of the launch of Mickey and the Roadster Racers, Minnie's Happy Helpers adventures appear in the second half of every new episode.

Minnie equally a queen and princess [edit]

Kingdom Hearts series [edit]

Minnie appears in the Kingdom Hearts game series as the queen of Disney Castle, with Mickey serving equally the king and her married man. She, at the proposition of a letter left by the missing King, sends Donald Duck and Goofy on their mission to find Mickey and the Keyblade Master, Sora. During Kingdom Hearts 2, when Pete'south tampering of the past causes the Heartless to appear in Disney Castle, Minnie is forced to fall dorsum to the library until Sora and visitor go far. While Donald and Goofy head to get the other residents to safety, Sora serves as the Queen's bodyguard to get her to the Cornerstone of Light. During this time, Minnie shows powers as a sorceress of white magic, casting a holy light on the Heartless that attack. In the prequel Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep, she oversees the annually held Dream Festival in Disney Town, where Pete causes mischief until she banishes him to another dimension equally penalization. She appears in Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance in a role mirroring that in the moving-picture show Mickey, Donald, Goofy: The 3 Musketeers, where she is referred to as Princess Minnie and rules a world called the Country of the Musketeers. By this, information technology is inferred that she, non Mickey, is the rightful ruler of Disney Castle, which is why he leaves her in accuse. She makes a cursory appearance in Kingdom Hearts 3, welcoming Mickey, Donald and Goofy back to Disney Castle.

Mickey, Donald, Goofy: The Three Musketeers [edit]

In the 2004 direct-to-video moving-picture show Mickey, Donald, Goofy: The Three Musketeers, Minnie plays the office of the princess of France, who continually daydreams about her true dearest, Mickey. She is also the simply monarch getting in the way of the plans of Pete, who cannot take over the kingdom if he cannot get rid of her. For this item flick, Minnie is fatigued with hair bangs, which do not appear in any later cartoons.

Wizards of Mickey [edit]

In the fantasy comic series Wizards of Mickey, Minnie is the sorceress princess of the kingdom of Dolmen whose people have been turned to stone, leading her to seek a magical Crystal to restore them. In her quest, she partners with her friends Daisy and Clarabelle every bit team Diamond Moon and eventually meets up with Mickey, the Supreme Sorcerer of Dolmen, and his group.

Voice [edit]

Minnie was first voiced by Walt Disney, who was besides the original vocalization of Mickey Mouse.[25] Marjorie Ralston, a Disney inker who joined the animation team as Disney'due south thirteenth employee, voiced her in the 1929 short Wild Waves, merely did not further pursue the part out of shyness. Then, from 1930 until 1939, Minnie was voiced by Marcellite Garner. Then from 1941 to 1942, and on the radio program, The Mickey Mouse Theater of the Air, she was voiced by Thelma Boardman. Following this, from 1944 to 1952 Ruth Clifford provided the character's voice. Janet Waldo voiced Minnie in the 1974 Disneyland record album, An Adaptation of Dickens' Christmas Carol, Performed by The Walt Disney Players.[one] Minnie would become without any spoken dialogue until 1986, when Russi Taylor inherited the function, which she performed until her expiry in 2019 (her husband, Wayne Allwine, voiced Mickey from 1977 until his expiry in 2009); Taylor's voice is used in diverse Idiot box serial and theme parks via archival and posthumous dialogue. Kaitlyn Robrock officially took over as the new voice of Minnie, beginning with the Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures episode "Mickey'southward Roommate/Minnie's Bow-tel!".[26]

Robrock continues voicing Minnie in The Wonderful Globe of Mickey Mouse on Disney+ and onward.[3]

Appearances in cartoon shorts [edit]

  • Plane Crazy (1928)
  • Steamboat Willie (1928)
  • The Gallopin' Gaucho (1928)
  • The Barn Trip the light fantastic toe (1929)
  • When the Cat's Away (1929)
  • The Plowboy (1929)
  • The Karnival Kid (1929)
  • Mickey's Follies (1929)
  • Mickey'southward Choo-Choo (1929)
  • Wild Waves (1929)
  • The Cactus Child (1930)
  • The Fire Fighters (1930)
  • The Shindig (1930)
  • The Gorilla Mystery (1930)
  • The Picnic (1930)
  • Pioneer Days (1930)
  • The Birthday Party (1931)
  • Traffic Troubles (1931)
  • The Delivery Boy (1931)
  • Mickey Steps Out (1931)
  • Bluish Rhythm (1931)
  • The Undiscriminating Broadcast (1931)
  • The Embankment Party (1931)
  • Mickey Cuts Upward (1931)
  • Mickey's Orphans (1931)
  • The Grocery Male child (1932)
  • Undiscriminating Olympics (1932)
  • Mickey's Revue (1932)
  • Musical Farmer (1932)
  • Mickey in Arabia (1932)
  • Mickey'due south Nightmare (1932)
  • The Whoopee Party (1932)
  • Touchdown Mickey (1932)
  • The Wayward Canary (1932)
  • The Klondike Kid (1932)
  • Building a Building (1933)
  • Mickey's Pal Pluto (1933)
  • Mickey's Mellerdrammer (1933)
  • Ye Olden Days (1933)
  • The Mail Pilot (1933)
  • Mickey's Mechanical Man (1933)
  • Mickey'due south Gala Premier (1933)
  • Puppy Dearest (1933)
  • The Steeplechase (1933)
  • The Pet Shop (1933)
  • Shanghaied (1934)
  • Camping ground Out (1934)
  • Mickey'southward Steamroller (1934)
  • Two-Gun Mickey (1934)
  • On Ice (1935)
  • Mickey's Rival (1936)
  • Hawaiian Vacation (1937)
  • Boat Builders (1938)
  • Dauntless Little Tailor (1938)
  • The Flim-flam Hunt (1938, cameo)
  • Mickey'south Surprise Political party (1939, in a commercial short)
  • The Little Whirlwind (1941)
  • The Corking Nineties (1941)
  • The Art of Skiing (1941, in a Goofy short)
  • Mickey'southward Birthday Party (1942)
  • Out of the Frying Pan into the Firing Line (1942, in a Pluto curt)
  • Outset Aiders (1944, in a Pluto short)
  • Bath Mean solar day (1946, in a Figaro short)
  • Figaro and Frankie (1947, in a Figaro curt)
  • Mickey'south Delayed Date (1947)
  • Pluto's Sweater (1949, in a Pluto short)
  • Pluto and the Gopher (1950, in a Pluto short)
  • Crazy Over Daisy (1950, cameo in a Donald Duck brusque)
  • Pluto's Christmas Tree (1952)
  • Mickey'south Christmas Ballad (1983, non-speaking appearance) & (speaking appearance)
  • Delinquent Brain (1995)
  • Get a Horse! (2013)

Television receiver appearances [edit]

  • Walt Disney anthology telly series (1954–2008)
    • Totally Minnie (1988)
    • Mickey's 60th Birthday (1988)
  • The Mickey Mouse Social club (1955–1959; 1977–1979; 1989–1994)
  • Mickey Mouse Works (1999–2000)
  • House of Mouse (2001–2003)
  • Mickey Mouse Clubhouse (2006–2016)
    • Minnie's Bow-Toons (2011–2016)
  • Mickey Mouse (2013–2019)
  • Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures (2017–2021)
  • Mickey's 90th Spectacular (2018)
  • The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse (2020–present)
  • Mickey Mouse Funhouse (2021–present)
  • Mickey'due south Tale of Two Witches (2021)
  • Mickey and Minnie Wish Upon a Christmas (2021)

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b ""Mickey's Christmas Ballad" -". cartoonresearch.com.
  2. ^ "Russi Taylor, Longtime Voice of Minnie Mouse, dead at 75". New York Daily News . Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  3. ^ a b "The Wonderful Earth of Mickey Mouse Fact Sail" (PDF). Disney+ Printing . Retrieved October 17, 2020.
  4. ^ Mercado, Mia (January 27, 2022). "Minnie Mouse Is Getting Girlboss-ified". The Cut . Retrieved Feb 6, 2022.
  5. ^ "Disney: Minnie Mouse to bandy her wearing apparel for a trouser adjust". BBC News. January 28, 2022.
  6. ^ Minnie Visits Daisy Archived 2008-02-24 at the Wayback Machine. The Encyclopedia of Disney Animated Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on March 17, 2008.
  7. ^ "Minnie Mouse honored with Hollywood Walk of Fame star". ABC News . Retrieved Jan 22, 2018.
  8. ^ "1928: Plane Crazy". Disney Shorts. Archived from the original on March 1, 2012. Retrieved Apr 8, 2012.
  9. ^ Gallopin' Gaucho Archived 2008-02-18 at the Wayback Motorcar. The Encyclopedia of Disney Blithe Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on March 17, 2008.
  10. ^ Steamboat Willie Archived 2008-03-27 at the Wayback Machine. The Encyclopedia of Disney Animated Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Automobile Retrieved on March 17, 2008.
  11. ^ Mickey's Follies Archived 2011-01-14 at the Wayback Machine. The Encyclopedia of Disney Animated Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on March 17, 2008.
  12. ^ Wild Waves Archived 2008-07-04 at the Wayback Automobile. The Encyclopedia of Disney Animated Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on March 17, 2008.
  13. ^ a b c Kaufman, J.B.; Gerstein, David (2018). Walt Disney's Mickey Mouse: The Ultimate History. Cologne: Taschen. ISBN978-3-8365-5284-4.
  14. ^ The Shindig Archived 2008-03-17 at the Wayback Motorcar. The Encyclopedia of Disney Blithe Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Car. Retrieved on March 17, 2008.
  15. ^ The Gorilla Mystery Archived 2008-04-26 at the Wayback Auto. The Encyclopedia of Disney Animated Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Car. Retrieved on March 17, 2008.
  16. ^ The Chain Gang Archived 2008-04-x at the Wayback Machine. The Encyclopedia of Disney Blithe Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Auto. Retrieved on March 17, 2008.
  17. ^ Solomon, Charles (March 25, 1988). "Television Reviews 'Disney'south Totally Minnie': Alive Action, Animation". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved February x, 2011.
  18. ^ Mickey'south Christmas Carol Archived 2008-04-xxx at the Wayback Car. The Encyclopedia of Disney Animated Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on May 8, 2008.
  19. ^ Vulpo, Mike (June 22, 2017). "Hollywood Walk of Fame'south Class of 2018 Revealed: Steve Irwin and More Set to Receive Stars". E! Online . Retrieved June 22, 2017.
  20. ^ Bucksbaum, Sydney (December 10, 2019). "Vanna White hosts Cycle of Fortune for first time while Pat Sajak recovers from emergency surgery". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved December 28, 2019.
  21. ^ Maestro Minnie Archived 2011-02-07 at the Wayback Motorcar. The Encyclopedia of Disney Animated Shorts Archived 2008-03-23 at the Wayback Auto. Retrieved on March 17, 2008.
  22. ^ "Piano Movers and Shakers". Minnie's Bow-Toons. Season 2. Episode 1 (11 overall). November 12, 2012.
  23. ^ "A Good Sign". Minnie'due south Bow-Toons. Season two. Episode 2 (12 overall). November xix, 2012.
  24. ^ "Movie Fourth dimension". Mickey Mouse. Season 3. Episode 4 (41 overall). September eleven, 2015.
  25. ^ Desk, Cox Media Group National Content. "Mickey Mouse turns 87 years old". Dayton Daily News.
  26. ^ Behave, Caitie (July nineteen, 2020). "Kaitlyn Robrock Voicing Minnie Mouse in 'Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures'". DapsMagic.com.

External links [edit]

  • Minnie Mouse at Inducks
  • Minnie Mouse on IMDb

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minnie_Mouse

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