ANIMATION ANECDOTES
August 12, 2022 posted by Jim Korkis

Part of a Balanced Breakfast

Suspended Animation #384

Did Walt Disney eat breakfast? We know he loved Denver omelettes and fried potatoes at Biff’s diner near the Disney Studio but did Walt ever gobble down cereal before driving his daughters to school?

Disney’s connection with cereal products goes back to 1934 when merchandising genius, Kay Kamen, signed a deal with General Foods. Incredibly, Kamen got General Foods to agree to pay a million and a half dollars to put Mickey Mouse and his friends on the back of its Post Toasties boxes for one year. To put that price in perspective, in today’s dollars it would be over $30 million.

Even more remarkable, this deal was during the Great Depression when people could barely afford food, let alone toys for their children. However, for twelve cents, a person could purchase a box of Post Toasties (“made of corn grits sugar and salt”) that could supply a reasonably affordable breakfast plus Disney character cut-outs on the back and side of the box that kids could play with after they had finished the cereal. It was hoped that children would urge their parents to buy this particular cereal in order to have the “toys.”

The boxes were an immediate success so that within a year, other film and radio stars from Shirley Temple to Popeye to Tom Mix found themselves on cereal boxes.

The Post Toasties boxes changed the marketing of children’s cereal forever with future cereal boxes presenting drawings, a game or something like the cut-outs rather than having children simply mail in box tops and change to Battle Creek, Michigan for a premium.

Post Toasties cereal was sold in Disney-character boxes until 1941. There were close to 100 different boxes including some devoted to Ferdinand the Bull, the Three Little Pigs, and even Disney’s animated feature, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

An interesting side note is that Mickey didn’t appear on the front of the box until 1935. Also, in 1938, Post (General Foods) released the first Disney cereal premium on its Huskies (its version of Wheaties) brand. Children could send away for a cereal bowl with Snow White’s portrait. It would be almost a decade before the next Disney cereal premium.

The General Foods deal was immensely profitable for the Disney Studios. Kamen eventually negotiated that Disney would receive a five percent royalty on each box of cereal printed with Disney characters regardless of actual sales of the cereal. The result was millions of dollars for the struggling Disney Studios.

However, as popular as Mickey Mouse was, the star of Disney merchandise was Donald Duck, who appeared on countless products including Donald Duck 3 Minute Oats (a Quaker Oats rival) from the National Oats Company. It was produced from 1943-1945 and guaranteed that in only three minutes the consumer could cook a healthy breakfast.

Apparently, the cereal was produced in two or three different sizes and while Donald was prominently featured on the front of the round container, Mickey, Pluto and Goofy were only allowed to appear on the back.

I have been told there was also a Donald Duck Corn Flakes cereal in the late 1940s. Why people would choose a cereal simply because of Donald Duck’s picture on the box remains a constant puzzlement but Donald was such a sought-after spokesman that he sold everything from orange juice to rice to bread to more over the years because he was so popular.

In 1947, both Cheerios and Wheaties from General Mills offered four sets of original Disney comic books. Set Y included the famous Carl Barks’s story: Donald Duck’s Atomic Bomb.

The bright yellow Cheerios boxes each showcased one of the following Disney animated superstars: Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Pluto and… B’rer Rabbit, who was being promoted in connection with the original release of Song of the South.

This promotion was so popular that General Mills repeated it in 1950 with its Cheerios and Wheaties cereal where another four sets of original Disney comics could be ordered. In 1954, General Mills released a set of eight 3-D Disney comic books as a mail-in premium.

Advertising promoted that you could get “eight comic books for only 15 cents and one Wheaties boxtop. All new stories. Not sold in stores.”

Even though each individual comic book was about one-third the size of a regular comic book, it was still a great deal, especially since Quaker Oats at the same time was only offering Gabby Hayes comics. Gabby Hayes may have been a popular Western cowboy sidekick but his adventures couldn’t compare with the Disney characters.

Of course, who could forget the “Fun Masks” of Disney characters on the back of boxes of Wheaties in 1950? There was a set of eight cutout fun masks (Mickey, Donald, Pinocchio, Dumbo, Lucifer the cat, Cinderella, Bambi and Br’er Rabbit). Cinderella and Lucifer were selected to help promote the release of Cinderella that year.

“Just think of the fun you’ll have with these bright colored masks of famous Walt Disney characters. Surprise your friends. Give Walt Disney shows. Wear ’em at parties. They’re right on the Wheaties boxes… ready to cut out and wear. Get all eight masks and have a barrel of fun!”

Kellogg’s had a brief flirtation with Disney cereal premiums in the 1950s, including a very odd Donald Duck ring (Donald’s head swiveled and his eyes glowed like something out of The Exorcist) on Pep (their version of Wheaties).

“It’s Moveable. It’s Mysterious! Donald Duck acts ALIVE on your finger!” claimed the advertising that sounds scary today but enticed many a youngster in the ’50s.

Kellogg’s was also responsible for a set of twelve thin plastic statuettes of Lady, Tramp, Trusty, Toughy, Boris, Jock, Pedro, Dachsie, Bull, Peg, Si and Am to tie in with the animated feature release in 1955.

“Use for party decoration. For a knick-knack shelf. Sew them on your beanie or sweater. Trade them with your friends. Start with the one inside. Collect all twelve! Authentic Walt Disney creations! 3-Dimensional! Sturdy plastic.”

Once the Disney Studios entered into television with its own show in 1954, there was an edict not to get involved with food products in order to avoid conflicts between potential sponsors. Walt didn’t want a company not to advertise on his television show because a competitor was showcasing Disney characters on its product.

This was not always an easy rule to enforce because of existing contracts from Donald Duck Orange Juice to Tinker Bell shilling for Peter Pan Peanut Butter (from Derby Foods, one of the first sponsors of the Disneyland television program). So there were always exceptions where money and promotion were involved.

General Mills finished a run of its licensing with Disney with six “wiggle pictures” (lenticular) that moved from one image to another when you moved them. Mickey, Bongo the bear, Dumbo, Donald, Pluto and… Hippy Hippo?

Disney’s cereal history is so rich that I couldn’t mention everything like the 10-inch vinyl inflatable Mickey Mouse from Quaker Oats “Muffets” cereal in 1948 or the 1959 General Mills Cocoa Puffs boxes with the “Mickey Mouse Cartoon Theater.” Maybe I’ll revisit the topic again in the future but right now I have an urge for a bowl of cereal.

10 Comments

  • One of my earliest memories is of going down the cereal aisle in the supermarket and seeing row after row of Hanna-Barbera characters on the shelves. So it’s interesting to read about Disney’s pioneering efforts in the field of cereal promotions a generation earlier. I wonder if my parents ever played with those Post Toasties cut-outs when they were little.

    About 25 or 30 years ago I recall seeing the stars of Disney Renaissance features on boxes of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes: Ariel, Simba, Aladdin and Jasmine, Belle and the Beast, and so on. It struck me as odd that such beautiful films were being used to promote such a bland breakfast cereal, but maybe that was the point.

    That reminds me. Some time ago I was browsing in an imported candy shop when I noticed boxes of… Little Mermaid cereal, from General Mills! The mermaid pictured on the box had purple hair, so it clearly wasn’t a Disney tie-in. The cereal itself appears to be a sugary confection consisting of orange stars and green fish tails. I was tempted to buy it, but at $15 a box it was an easy temptation to resist.

  • I sure do miss Post Toasties, they were much better than Kellogg’s corn flakes.

    • Even better than Wheaties?

      • Yup. Never was a fan of Wheaties.

  • “…going down the cereal aisle in the supermarket and seeing row after row of Hanna-Barbera characters on the shelves.”

    ** sigh ** Ah, the stuff that dreams are made of.

    Allow me to plug our colleague Tim Hollis’ superb book, “Part of a Complete Breakfast: Cereal Characters of the Baby Boom Era,” a sparkling gem in every animation library.

    https://smile.amazon.com/Part-Complete-Breakfast-Cereal-Characters/dp/081304149X/ref=sr_1_1?crid=6Z9UYWTO4SJI&keywords=Tim+hollis+complete+breakfast&qid=1660326064&sprefix=tim+hollis+complete+breakfast%2Caps%2C125&sr=8-1

  • Old enough to remember …
    — LIFE cereal containing little punchout puppets of “Bambi” characters in the 60s. The back of the box became a theater.
    — Nabisco cereals (if I recollect correctly) had little plastic chimneys that either Mary Poppins or Bert would pop out of. They were like the Crackerjack prizes of the time: One color plastic, snap-together.
    — Those toys/puppets/cookie jars that came filled with cereal. Never tried, but remember the commercial. First of all, what was the pitch after you collected all two? Second, what was up with costuming Mickey as a clown and Donald as an astronaut?
    — Donald Duck Orange Juice. Very faintly recall snapping plastic things onto the empty cans to make a toy train. A premium?
    — A late entry was Great Honey Crunchers, with Winnie the Pooh as spokesbear. Insert your own fiber joke.

    I was gifted with a Mickey Mouse toaster many years ago. A digital chip plays the Mickey Mouse Club March but it fails to imprint Mickey’s face on the toast as advertised.

    • ” Those toys/puppets/cookie jars that came filled with cereal. Never tried, but remember the commercial. First of all, what was the pitch after you collected all two? Second, what was up with costuming Mickey as a clown and Donald as an astronaut?”

      Actually, there were four characters. Winnie the Pooh and Kanga (with little Roo painted on the container) were also available to promote the release of “Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree” (1966).

  • Jerry

    Do you have to pay Stu Shostak a licence fee for the clapping at the end of the Cheerios Kid and Donald ad?

  • A couple of years ago I was a looking for Raisin Bran and saw Kung Fu Panda Coco Puffs and How To Train Your Dragon Fruity Puffs on the cereal aisle. These were made by Mom Brands. I bought them instead of the Raisin Bran just for the artwork. The cereal itself was nothing to brag about – but I’m not one to waste food. I had to admit I felt like a kid again – just for a little while.

  • You got to wonder how many commercials featured Donald Duck and the Cheerios Kids as here is at least one other https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Be6OhUCLsSw&ab_channel=wahwahwahwahwahwah

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