Oswald the Lucky Rabbit filmography
The following is a complete list of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit's appearances in cartoons, films, video games, etc.
Filmography
Oswald the Lucky Rabbit/Oswald Rabbit series
This list contains cartoons part of Universal Pictures' Oswald the Lucky Rabbit/Oswald Rabbit theatrical cartoon series. Winkler Pictures and Walt Disney produced the first 27 cartoons (1927–1928), an additional 25 cartoons were produced by Winkler after Disney's departure (1928–1929), and the rest were produced by Walter Lantz.
1927
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Trolley Troubles | September 5, 1927[1] | First Oswald cartoon released. Animated by Ub Iwerks and the entire Disney Oswald staff. Directed by Walt Disney.[2] The cartoon was reissued in 1931 by Walter Lantz with synchronized sound. Public domain. |
2 | Oh Teacher | September 19, 1927[3] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Cartoon reissued by in Walter Lantz with synchronized sound. A few sequences went missing and others were reordered when the cartoon was reissued. Animated by Ub Iwerks and the entire Disney Oswald staff. Public domain. |
3 | The Mechanical Cow | October 3, 1927[4] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Cartoon reissued in 1932 by Walter Lantz with synchronized sound. Animated by Ub Iwerks and the entire Disney Oswald staff. Public domain. |
4 | Great Guns! | October 17, 1927[5] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Cartoon reissued in 1932 by Walter Lantz with synchronized sound. Animated by Ub Iwerks and the entire Disney Oswald staff. Public domain. |
5 | All Wet | October 31, 1927[6] | Directed by Ub Iwerks.[2] Cartoon reissued in 1932 by Walter Lantz with synchronized sound. Animated by Iwerks and the entire Disney Oswald staff. Earliest Oswald cartoon still under copyright. |
6 | The Ocean Hop | November 14, 1927[7] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] A few sequences went missing when the cartoon was reissued in 1932. Animated by Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton. The last Disney Oswald cartoon that was reissued by Walter Lantz with synchronized sound. Public domain. |
7 | The Banker's Daughter | November 28, 1927[8] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Lost cartoon. The first appearance of Ortensia. A production script, five story-sketch pages and two animation drawings are the only known materials to exist.[2] Animated by Ub Iwerks and Friz Freleng. Public domain. |
8 | Empty Socks | December 11, 1927[9] | Directed by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks.[2] Lost until 2015, when it was found in Norway.[10][11][12][2] Animated by Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton. Public domain. |
9 | Rickety Gin | December 26, 1927[13] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Lost cartoon. A production script and six story-sketch pages are the only known materials to exist.[2] Animated by Ub Iwerks and Friz Freleng. Public domain. |
1928
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
10 | Harem Scarem | January 9, 1928[14] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Lost cartoon. A production script, one background drawing and numerous animation drawings are the only known materials to exist.[2] Animation drawings from a small part of this film were compiled by Disney into a video clip in 2012. Animated by Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton. |
11 | Neck 'n' Neck | January 23, 1928[15] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Rediscovered in Japan in 2018 as part of a 16mm film titled Mickey Manga: Speedy (ミッキー漫画 スピーデー Mikkī Manga: Supīdē), though only as a two-minute cutdown of the original five-minute cartoon.[16][17] Animated by Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton. |
12 | The Ol' Swimmin' Hole | February 6, 1928[18] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Rediscovered in Belgium in 2016 by Dave Bossert; with a few sequences missing.[2][19] Animated by Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton. Public domain. |
13 | Africa Before Dark | February 20, 1928[20] | Directed by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks.[2] Rediscovered in Austria in 2013 with a few sequences missing.[2] Animated by Ub Iwerks. Available with the Signature Edition of Bambi in 2017. |
14 | Rival Romeos | March 5, 1928[21] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Animated by Ub Iwerks. |
15 | Bright Lights | March 19, 1928[22] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Animated by Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton. |
16 | Sagebrush Sadie | April 1, 1928[23] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Lost cartoon. Many animation drawings and 8 story-sketch pages are the only known materials to exist.[2] The animation drawings (Which consist of two scenes.) of this film were compiled by Disney into a brief fragment video clip as a bonus feature on the 2007 Oswald The Luck Rabbit Disney Treasures DVD. Animated by Ub Iwerks, Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton. |
17 | Ride 'Em Plowboy | April 15, 1928[24] | Directed by Walt Disney[2] Lost cartoon. Two background drawings and 5 story-sketch pages are the only known materials to exist.[25][2] Animated by Ub Iwerks, Hugh Harman, Rollin Hamilton, and Friz Freleng. |
18 | Ozzie of the Mounted | April 30, 1928[26] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Survives almost complete, though a few sequences are still missing. Animated by Ub Iwerks, Hugh Harman, Rollin Hamilton, Ben Clopton, and Les Clark. |
19 | Hungry Hoboes | May 14, 1928[27] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Available on the 2016 release of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. A once missing cartoon, it was rediscovered in a vault in England in November 2011. |
20 | Oh, What a Knight | May 28, 1928[28] | Directed by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks.[2] Remade as a Mickey Mouse 1933 short Ye Olden Days. |
21 | Poor Papa | June 11, 1928[29] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] First Oswald cartoon produced (in 1927), initially rejected but released a year later.[30] Animated by Ub Iwerks and the entire Disney Oswald staff. Disney was unable to access a print of Poor Papa in time for the 2007 DVD,[31] but today owns a 16mm print of the short, and released it on the "Signature Edition" Blu-Ray of Pinocchio in 2017. |
22 | The Fox Chase | June 25, 1928[32] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Animated by Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton. |
23 | Tall Timber | July 9, 1928[33] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Animated by Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton |
24 | Sleigh Bells | July 23, 1928[34] | Rediscovered in the British Film Institute's National Archives and restored.[35] |
25 | High Up | August 6, 1928[36] | Rediscovered by David Gerstein.[37] Erroneously thought to be a Winkler short before rediscovery proved otherwise.[38] Directed by Hugh Harman and Rollin Hamilton. |
26 | Hot Dogs | August 20, 1928[39] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Lost cartoon. The copyright synopsis, 2 backgrounds and 4 story-sketch pages of the cartoon are the only known materials to exist.[40][2] |
27 | The Sky Scrapper[2] | September 3, 1928[41] | Directed by Walt Disney.[2] Also referred to as Sky Scrappers. In 2014, an original 1928 print was found in the United Kingdom with Winkler-era titles.[2] Remade as a Mickey Mouse 1933 short, Building a Building. Last Disney Oswald cartoon. |
28 | Mississippi Mud | September 17, 1928[42] | First Winkler Oswald cartoon. Lost cartoon. |
29 | Panicky Pancakes | October 1, 1928[43] | Lost cartoon. Directed by Hugh Harman and Ben Clopton. |
30 | Fiery Fireman | October 15, 1928[44] | Directed by Friz Freleng and Rudolf Ising. |
31 | Rocks and Socks | November 12, 1928[45] | Lost cartoon. |
32 | South Pole Flight | November 26, 1928[45] | Lost cartoon Directed by Hugh Harman and Ben Clopton. |
33 | Bull-Oney | November 28, 1928[45] | Directed by Walter Lantz and Tom Palmer |
34 | A Horse Tale | December 10, 1928[46] | Lost cartoon. Directed by Rollin Hamilton and Tom Palmer |
35 | Farmyard Follies | December 24, 1928[46] | Survives as a fragmentary nitrate print at UCLA Film & Television Archive. Directed by Walter Lantz and Rollin Hamilton. |
1929
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
36 | Homeless Homer | January 7, 1929[46] | Directed by Rudolph Ising and Friz Freleng |
37 | Yanky Clippers | January 21, 1929[47] | Directed by Walter Lantz and Tom Palmer. |
38 | Hen Fruit | February 4, 1929[48] | Lost cartoon. The first sound Oswald cartoon. |
39 | Sick Cylinders | February 18, 1929[49] | Exists only as a silent print. Directed by Hugh Harman and Ben Clopton |
40 | Hold 'Em Ozzie | March 4, 1929[50] | Rediscovered in 2016, however, it exists only as a silent print. Directed by Rollin Hamilton[51] |
41 | The Suicide Sheik | March 18, 1929[50] | Formerly lost cartoon. In July 2019, a film reel was discovered by Ray Langstone. Directed by Hugh Harman |
42 | Alpine Antics | April 1, 1929[52] | Exists only as a silent print. Directed by Tom Palmer. |
43 | The Lumberjack | April 15, 1929[52] | According to UCLA Library Catalog a shortened silent home movie version is known to exist. Directed by Ben Clopton. |
44 | The Fishing Fool | April 29, 1929[50] | Lost cartoon. |
45 | Stage Stunts | May 13, 1929[53] | Lost cartoon. |
46 | Stripes and Stars | May 27, 1929[53] | Lost cartoon. |
47 | The Wicked West | June 10, 1929[53] | Survival status uncertain, evidence shows the short was possibly reissued by Walter Lantz in 1931,[54] but it is currently unknown if Universal has a copy or if the reissue was included in the Guild/Firelight television package. Directed by Friz Freleng |
48 | Nuts and Jolts | June 24, 1929[53] | Rediscovered in 2016. Exists only as a silent print. Directed by Hugh Harman[51] |
49 | Ice Man's Luck | July 8, 1929[53] | Lost cartoon. |
50 | Jungle Jingles | July 22, 1929[53] | Exists only as a silent print. Directed by Ben Clopton. Reissued in the early 1930s with music only. |
51 | Weary Willies | July 22, 1929[53] | Exists only as a silent print. Directed by Friz Freleng. |
52 | Saucy Sausages | August 19, 1929[53] | Lost cartoon. Last Winkler Oswald cartoon. |
53 | Race Riot | September 2, 1929[53] | The first Oswald short produced by Walter Lantz. |
54 | Oil's Well | September 16, 1929[53] | One of the two customized Universal logos at the end. |
55 | Permanent Wave | September 29, 1929[53] | One of the two customized Universal logos at the end. |
56 | Cold Turkey | October 15, 1929[53] | Lost cartoon. Oswald speaks for the first time. Many speculate that Oswald was voiced by Bill Nolan. |
57 | Pussy Willie | October 28, 1929[53] | Lost cartoon. |
58 | Amateur Nite | November 11, 1929[53] | Survives as a silent print. |
59 | Hurdy Gurdy | November 24, 1929[55] | |
60 | Snow Use | November 25, 1929[53] | |
61 | Nutty Notes | December 9, 1929[53] | A few scenes of the cartoon (unknown where found) has been discovered. |
62 | Ozzie of the Circus | December 23, 1929[56] | Lost cartoon. |
1930
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
63 | Kounty Fair | January 6, 1930[57] | Exists only as a silent print. |
64 | Chilly Con Carmen | February 3, 1930[57] | Last appearance of Oswald's whistle laughing sound during opening titles. |
65 | Kisses and Kurses | February 17, 1930[57] | Lost cartoon. |
66 | Broadway Folly | March 3, 1930[57] | Thought to be lost until a print was discovered in 2010. |
67 | Bowery Bimbos | March 17, 1930[57] | Only a few screenshots and the complete audio both survive. |
68 | Tramping Tramps | March 31, 1930[57] | |
69 | The Hash Shop | April 14, 1930[57] | |
70 | The Prison Panic | April 28, 1930[57] | |
71 | Hot for Hollywood | May 19, 1930[58] | Vitaphone disc of the soundtrack was found in 2005. |
72 | Hell's Heels | June 2, 1930[58] | |
73 | My Pal Paul | June 16, 1930[59] | Produced to promote the 1930 Universal feature film King of Jazz. Paul Whiteman is caricatured. |
74 | Not So Quiet | July 7, 1930[59] | |
75 | Spooks | July 21, 1930[58] | |
76 | Henpecked | August 11, 1930[58] | |
77 | Cold Feet | August 18, 1930[58] | A drawing made by the animators attributed to this short shows Oswald playing a radiator like an accordion. This idea never made it to the final cartoon. |
78 | Snappy Salesman | August 18, 1930[58] | Possibly a withheld 1929 entry. |
79 | The Singing Sap | September 15, 1930[58] | The first cartoon on which Tex Avery was credited as an animator (as Fred Avery).[60] |
80 | The Detective | September 22, 1930[58] | |
81 | The Fowl Ball | October 13, 1930[58] | |
82 | The Navy | November 3, 1930[58] | Oswald wears shoes for the first time. |
83 | Mexico | November 17, 1930[58] | |
84 | Africa | December 1, 1930[58] | |
85 | Alaska | December 15, 1930[58] | Exists with a few splices. |
86 | Mars | December 29, 1930[58] |
1931
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
87 | China | January 12, 1931[58] | |
88 | College | January 28, 1931[61] | |
89 | Shipwreck | February 9, 1931[58] | Oswald wears gloves for the first time. |
90 | The Farmer | March 23, 1931[58] | |
91 | The Fireman | April 8, 1931[58] | |
92 | Sunny South | April 20, 1931[62] | |
93 | Country School | May 5, 1931[61] | |
94 | The Bandmaster | May 18, 1931[62] | In the public domain. |
95 | Northwoods | June 29, 1931[62] | |
96 | The Stone Age | July 13, 1931[62] | |
97 | Radio Rhythm | July 27, 1931[62] | |
98 | Kentucky Belles | September 7, 1931[61] | |
99 | Hot Feet | September 14, 1931[62] | |
100 | The Hunter | October 12, 1931[62] | Oswald wears a shirt for the first time. |
101 | Wonderland | October 26, 1931[61] | |
102 | The Hare Mail | November 30, 1931[62] | |
103 | The Fisherman | December 7, 1931[62] | |
104 | The Clown | December 21, 1931[62] |
1932
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
105 | Grandma's Pet | January 18, 1932[63] | |
106 | Mechanical Man | February 15, 1932[63] | In the public domain. |
107 | Wins Out | March 14, 1932[63] | |
108 | Beau and Arrows | March 28, 1932[63] | |
109 | Making Good | April 11, 1932[63] | In the public domain. |
110 | Let's Eat | April 25, 1932[63] | |
111 | The Winged Horse | May 9, 1932[63] | |
112 | Cat Nipped | May 23, 1932[63] | |
113 | A Wet Knight | June 20, 1932[63] | |
114 | Jungle Jumble | July 4, 1932[63] | |
115 | Day Nurse | July 18, 1932[63] | |
116 | The Busy Barber | September 12, 1932[64] | A remake of the silent 1929 Oswald cartoon Yanky Clippers. |
117 | Carnival Capers | October 10, 1932[64] | |
118 | Wild and Woolly | November 21, 1932[64] | |
119 | Teacher's Pests | December 19, 1932[64] |
1933
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
120 | The Plumber | January 30, 1933[65] | In the public domain, the boy beagle was voiced by multiple actors. |
121 | The Shriek | February 27, 1933[65] | The cartoon is a parody of The Sheik, a 1921 Paramount film. |
122 | Going to Blazes | April 10, 1933[65] | |
123 | Beau Best | May 22, 1933[65] | |
124 | Ham and Eggs | June 19, 1933[65] | Exists with a few bad splices at the titles. |
125 | Confidence | July 31, 1933[65] | President Franklin D. Roosevelt is caricatured. Oswald is voiced by multiple actors. |
126 | Five and Dime | September 18, 1933[65] | Celebrities caricatured in this short include Charlie Chaplin, Laurel and Hardy, and Jimmy Durante. |
127 | The Zoo | November 6, 1933[66] | Exists with distorted audio. |
128 | The Merry Old Soul | November 27, 1933[66] | Among those that appear in the film are the band leader Paul Whiteman, "singer" Roscoe Ates, Mae West, Harold Lloyd, and Zasu Pitts. |
129 | Parking Space | December 18, 1933[66] |
1934
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
130 | Chicken Reel | January 1, 1934[67] | |
131 | The Candy House | January 15, 1934[67] | |
132 | The County Fair | February 5, 1934[67] | |
133 | The Toy Shoppe | February 19, 1934[67] | In 1984, Fred Ladd and Entercolor Technologies Corp. colorized this cartoon as a test for Universal. The studio rejected this and all future plans for colorizing black and white Lantz cartoons.[68] |
134 | Kings Up | March 12, 1934[67] | |
135 | Wolf! Wolf! | April 2, 1934[67] | |
136 | The Ginger Bread Boy | April 16, 1934[67] | The story within the cartoon is based on "The Gingerbread Man," a fairy tale published in 1875. |
137 | Goldielocks and the Three Bears | May 14, 1934[67] | |
138 | Annie Moved Away | May 28, 1934[67] | |
139 | Wax Works | June 15, 1934[67] | |
140 | William Tell | July 9, 1934[67] | |
141 | Chris Columbus, Jr. | July 23, 1934[67] | |
142 | The Dizzy Dwarf | August 6, 1934[69] | |
143 | Ye Happy Pilgrims | September 3, 1934[69] | |
144 | Sky Larks | October 22, 1934[69] | |
145 | Spring in the Park | November 12, 1934[69] |
1935
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
146 | Robinson Crusoe Isle | January 7, 1935[70] | |
147 | The Hillbilly | February 1, 1935[70] | |
148 | Two Little Lambs | March 11, 1935[70] | |
149 | Do a Good Deed | March 25, 1935[70] | |
150 | Elmer the Great Dane | April 29, 1935[70] | The first appearance of Oswald's first dog, Elmer the Great Dane. |
151 | Town Hall Follies | June 17, 1935[70] | The storyline was reworked by Avery ten years later in MGM's Wild and Woolfy (this time set in the Wild West) featuring Droopy. |
152 | At Your Service | July 22, 1935[70] | |
153 | Bronco Buster | August 19, 1935[70] | |
154 | Amateur Broadcast | September 23, 1935[70] | |
155 | The Quail Hunt | October 28, 1935[71] | In the public domain. |
156 | Monkey Wretches | November 18, 1935[71] | The final appearance of Oswald in his original design. The first appearance of Meany, Miny, and Moe; their popularity led to their development into a series of their own for Universal. |
157 | Case of the Lost Sheep | December 2, 1935[71] | The first cartoon to feature the white Oswald, a concept by Manuel Moreno. Despite retaining the name, this later version of Oswald looks like a completely different character. |
158 | Doctor Oswald | December 23, 1935[71] | From this point onward, the character is referred to as "Oswald Rabbit" instead of "Oswald the Lucky Rabbit" in the title cards. |
1936
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
159 | Soft Ball Game | January 27, 1936[72] | |
160 | Alaska Sweepstakes | February 17, 1936[72] | |
161 | Slumberland Express | March 9, 1936[72] | |
162 | Beauty Shoppe | March 30, 1936[72] | |
163 | The Barnyard Five | April 20, 1936[72] | |
164 | Fun House | May 4, 1936[72] | |
165 | Farming Fools | May 25, 1936[72] | |
166 | Battle Royal | June 22, 1936[72] | |
167 | Music Hath Charms | September 7, 1936[73] | |
168 | Kiddie Revue | September 21, 1936[73] | |
169 | Beach Combers | October 5, 1936[73] | In the public domain. |
170 | Night Life of the Bugs | October 9, 1936[73] | The title parodies that of the 1935 Universal feature film Night Life of the Gods. |
171 | Puppet Show | November 2, 1936[73] | |
172 | The Unpopular Mechanic | November 6, 1936[73] | |
173 | Gopher Trouble | November 30, 1936[73] |
1937
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
174 | Everybody Sing | February 22, 1937[73] | The first Oswald cartoon to feature the more streamlined, slimmer variation of Manuel Moreno's Oswald. |
175 | Duck Hunt | March 8, 1937[73] | |
176 | The Birthday Party | March 29, 1937[73] | This cartoon celebrates the 10th anniversary of Oswald. |
177 | Trailer Thrills | May 3, 1937[73] | |
178 | The Wily Weasel | June 7, 1937[73] | |
179 | The Playful Pup | July 12, 1937[73] | |
180 | Lovesick | October 4, 1937[74] | |
181 | Keeper of the Lions | October 18, 1937[74] | |
182 | The Mechanical Handy Man | November 8, 1937[74] | |
183 | Football Fever | November 15, 1937[74] | |
184 | The Mysterious Jug | November 29, 1937[74] | |
185 | The Dumb Cluck | December 20, 1937[74] |
1938
# | Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
186 | The Lamp Lighter | January 10, 1938[75] | Alternate title: The Lamplighter. |
187 | Man Hunt | February 7, 1938[75] | Alternate title: The Manhunt. |
188 | Yokel Boy Makes Good | February 21, 1938[75] | The first appearance of Snuffy Skunk. The final appearance of The Dumb Cluck. |
189 | Trade Mice | February 28, 1938[75] | Copyrighted as The Trade Mice. |
190 | Feed the Kitty | March 14, 1938[75] | Alex Lovy's directorial debut. |
Other films and shorts
Film | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|
King of Jazz | April 19, 1930[76] | Feature film produced by Universal Pictures. First color appearance of Oswald, although only as a brief cameo. |
Toyland Premiere | December 10, 1934[69] | Part of the Cartune Classics series. Caricatures include Johnny Weissmuller, Lupe Vélez, Shirley Temple, Laurel and Hardy, Frankenstein, Eddie Cantor...in blackface, and Bing Crosby. |
Springtime Serenade | May 27, 1935[70] | Part of the Cartune Classics series. Lyrics by Walter Lantz. |
Happy Scouts | June 20, 1938[75] | Produced by Universal Pictures. The last cartoon with Oswald shot in black and white. |
Snuffy's Party | August 7, 1939[77] | Produced by Universal Pictures. Oswald makes a cameo at the beginning of the cartoon. |
The Egg Cracker Suite | March 22, 1943[78] | Produced by Walter Lantz Productions and Universal Pictures. Part of the Swing Symphony series. This title is a play on The Nutcracker Suite, composed by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. This was one of the few Oswald cartoons produced in color. Emery Hawkins' first onscreen credit at Walter Lantz Productions, and the only Lantz short directed by Ben Hardaway and Hawkins. |
Well Oiled | June 30, 1947[79] | Woody Woodpecker cartoon. Oswald makes a cameo. |
The Woody Woodpecker Polka | October 29, 1951[80] | Woody Woodpecker cartoon. |
Team Play | 1952 | Commercial for Auto-Lite. |
Get a Horse! | June 11, 2013 | Mickey Mouse cartoon. First appearance by Oswald in a Disney cartoon following The Walt Disney Company's acquisition in 2006. |
Oswald Holiday Greeting Card | December 1, 2013 | Web short. |
Big Hero 6 | October 23, 2014 | Disney film based on a Marvel comic. Oswald's second cameo in a film, but the first film he appeared in that was made by Disney. |
Zootopia | February 13, 2016 | Disney film. |
Video games
Video Game | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
Férias Frustradas do Pica-Pau | 1995 | Woody Woodpecker video game. Oswald's first video game appearance. |
Epic Mickey | 2010 | Disney video game. First appearance by Oswald in a Disney video game. |
Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two | 2012 | Disney video game. |
Disney Infinity | 2013 | Disney video game. Oswald appears with other Disney characters. |
Television
Episode | Year | Show | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Stayin' Cool | 2013 | Mickey Mouse | Disney animated series. Oswald's first cameo. |
Entombed | 2016 | Mickey Mouse | Disney animated series. Oswald appears as a hieroglyphic in a cameo in the title card. Second television appearance. |
Canned | 2017 | Mickey Mouse | Disney animated series. Oswald appears in a cameo during the episode. Oswald's third cameo in television. |
Year of the Dog | 2018 | Mickey Mouse | Disney animated series. Oswald appears as a marketing billboard for a soda product as "Oswald the Lucky Soda". This marks Oswald's fourth cameo in television. |
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- "Dave Bossert on Instagram: Here is a frame from the climax of HIGH UP. It is the 27th Walt Disney Oswald short that was rediscovered by my friend David Gerstein. There is more information on it in my Oswald book. BTW, if you've got a copy of the Oswald book and like, please consider doing a quick review on Amazon".
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Bibliography
- Bossert, David (2017). Oswald the Lucky Rabbit: The Search for the Lost Cartoons (1st ed.). Disney Editions. ISBN 978-148478037-4.
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