In her report, published in the journal Reader's Digest, American writer Clare Nowak reviewed a series of stories and unknown aspects of the most famous characters that children love in Disney cartoons.

Mickey Mouse and Mortimer
Walt Disney suggested his wife Liliane as "Mortimer" for the character of Mickey Mouse, but considered it inappropriate for this character, so he continued to think until he invented the phrase Mickey Mouse, becoming the name among the most famous names of cartoon characters in history, the name of Mortimer Mouse He was later fired on Mickey Mouse's enemy, who has been appearing intermittently in short films and magazines since 1936.

Mickey and Minnie .. Christmas One
In 1933, Walt Disney announced that Mickey's birthday was the first of October 1928, since that was the day his first picture appeared. But in 1978, Dave Smith (founder of the Disney archive) changed this date to November 18, 1928, the first showing of the short film "Steamboat Willie." The characters Mickey and Minnie Mouse first appeared before the world in this film, so he dates the birth of both characters.

Stars in the corridor of fame
On November 18, 1978, Mickey Mouse became the first Disney character to get a star, and the first cartoon character to achieve this success at all. Since then, six additional stars have been awarded to Disney characters: Snow White in 1987, Kramt the Frog in 2002, The Donald Duck in 2004, The Winnie the Pooh in 2006, Bill in 2010 and The Mapets in 2012.

Malvasent and wife of Cinderella father
Actress Eleanor Audley performed the voice of Lady Tremaine, Sinderella's evil stepmother, and the evil character of Malvasent in the Sleeping Princess movie. She made a successful TV career and appeared in many successful programs until her death in 1991.

A real princess
This does not necessarily mean that Disney movies show real-life stories, but according to some sources, Princess Pocahontas's character is inspired by reality, and her real name is Amonti. The word Pocahantas was just a label that meant flirtatious character or slut child.

The owners of supernatural powers
Those who memorize the names of Disney film characters and chains can remember two emperors with unnatural powers. Although Disney films revolving around princesses often focus on plotting on a kind of magic, the main characters rarely have magic powers.

The only exceptions are the Rapunzel character, who has the ability to heal and has glowing hair, and Princess Elsa, who enjoys the power of freezing. The rest of the Disney Princesses were their main feature: the beautiful words and attitudes that inspired the world's followers.

Sole has a lot of hair
This monstrous blue character in Monster has more than 2.8 million hair. Movie producers had to move each hair properly, which sometimes took them 12 hours for one scene to show Solly.

Dogs of Dalmatian
This group of spotted dogs has more than six million four hundred thousand spots on their skin in the movie 101 Dalmation. Each puppy has 32 spots. Her mother, Pardita, has 68 spots, and her father Bongo has 72 spots.

Crab Sebastian
At the beginning of the film, the name of this complete crab is Horacio Thelonius Ignacius Cristusius Sebastian; we can understand why this long name is abbreviated.

"Monster" has a lot of animal qualities
The cartoon character Glenn Keane told the press that he invented the main character in the film "The Beauty and the Beast" based on a mixture of wolf stalks, dog tail, bear body, buffalo head, gorilla eyebrows, wild boar face and lion's head hair.

Jackie Chan at Disney
In the Chinese translation of "The Beauty and the Beast," Jackie Chan performed the voice of the beast, and in the Chinese version of Mulan, he acted as Captain Li Shang and sang in both roles.

Donald's voice
Clarence Nash was particularly famous for the performance of Donald Duck's voice for more than 50 years, but he also performed the voices of his relatives - Dewey, Lowe and Daisy Duck in some of the early works - .

Dembo approached the cover of Time Magazine
The fifth animated film of Disney was greeted with a wave of praise by critics and fans alike when it premiered in the summer of 1941. It achieved nearly $ 2.5 million in profits. At the time, Time magazine was planning to honor the film by giving his main character the chance to appear on its cover on December 29, 1941, which was postponed after the December 7 attack on Pearl Harbor, where news was given priority.

The character of "Lady" is a real dog
The "Ledy" character belongs to the Sprinter Spaniel family of Disney filmmaker Joe Grant. After seeing drawings for the dog, Grant asked Walt Disney to hire her in a story, but it ended up canceling the idea until Disney read a story entitled "Happy Dan, The Westing Dog" to review the story using the original drawings of Grant.

Spaghetti scenery
The scene of Spaghetti in "The Noble and the Foolish" did not impress Walt Disney, and it may seem strange, especially since the short scene has become a symbol of pop culture, but the idea of ​​sharing a bowl of spaghetti was not convincing for Walt Disney. Fortunately, the cartoonist's model succeeded in persuading Disney to give him permission to continue working on it.