Pink Elephants on Parade

"Pink Elephants on Parade" is a song and scene from the 1941 Disney animated feature film Dumbo in which Dumbo and Timothy Q. Mouse, having accidentally become intoxicated (through drinking water spiked with champagne), see pink elephants sing, dance, and play marching band instruments during a hallucination sequence.

"Pink Elephants on Parade"
Song
Released1941 (1941)
Songwriter(s)Oliver Wallace
Ned Washington

The song was written by Oliver Wallace and Ned Washington[1] and sung by Thurl Ravenscroft and The Sportsmen. The segment was directed by Norman Ferguson, laid out by Ken O'Connor and animated by Hicks Lokey, Frank Thomas, Karl Van Leuven, and Howard Swift.[2]

After the sequence, Dumbo and Timothy wake up, hungover, in a tree. It is at this point that they realize that Dumbo can fly.

Covers

  • The song was covered by Sun Ra. A recording of this arrangement is available on Stay Awake, a tribute album of Disney tunes played by various artists, and produced by Hal Willner. The song was also covered by Circus Contraption and Lee Press-on and the Nails.
  • Daladubz samples the song in his dubstep song entitled "Pink Elephants VIP".
  • This song was re-recorded by Chicago-based electronic/industrial rock band V is for Villains.
  • Bob's Burgers episode "Art Crawl" parodies the parade segment, as well as the Tiny Toon Adventures episode "Test Stress".
  • In The Big Snooze, Elmer Fudd's nightmare includes a parody of the sequence with "Ziwwions and twiwwions of wabbits" marching on top of Fudd while Bugs Bunny is at an adding machine, literally multiplying them.
  • Disney's House of Mouse pays homage to the song in the episode "Mickey and Minnie's Big Vacation".
  • South Park season 21 episode 7, titled "Doubling Down", features a brief segment in which the character Eric Cartman, while in a hallucinatory fit of rage, visualizes a group of pink Kyles marching out of a broken heart.
  • The song is featured in the Disney live-action remake, directed by Tim Burton.[3] The Pink Elephants themselves appear as human-made bubble sculptures which also come to life.
  • The song was covered and transcribed for guitar by Candyboy, famous italian guitarist. [4]

Influence

See also

References

  1. The American Film Institute (1971). The American Film Institute catalog of motion pictures produced in the United States, Volume 1 University of California Press. pp. 663. ISBN 978-0-520-21521-4
  2. Langer, Mark, Film History, Vol. 4, No. 4 (1990). Regionalism in Disney Animation: Pink Elephants and Dumbo , pp. 305-321
  3. "Dumbo Press Kit" (PDF). March 11, 2019. Retrieved March 11, 2019.
  4. "Candyboy notizie e musica".
  5. Hischak, Thomas S.; Robinson, Mark A. (29 July 2009). The Disney Song Encyclopedia. Scarecrow Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-8108-6938-7.
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