1946 Promotional Program for Song of the South
Today marks the 63rd anniversary of the release of Song of the South.
Weirdly enough, Disney first chose to market the film as an “Old South Romance.” Here’s the cover from its 1946 program:
Bizarre, right? It’s less Who Framed Roger Rabbit? and much more Gone with the Wind.
The program — 16 pages in all — gets a lot more relevant once you get past the cover. I’ve included it in its entirety below. You’re welcome.
I dig this illustration that’s on the inside of the cover. With this one exception, I’ve tried not to crop much out (as much as our almost-large-enough scanner allowed).
Remember, you can click on the pictures to zoom in and read the (quite lucid and informative, though sometimes not so factually accurate) text. Enjoy!
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1 Comment to 1946 Promotional Program for Song of the South
[...] lately. Over at The Wren’s Nest blog, museum director Lain Shakespeare posted the program for Disney’s “Song of the South,” which premiered 63 years ago this week. (Here are more photos from that premiere.) The 63rd [...]