http://www.spitfirelist.com/f301.html
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FTR-301 Mickey Mauschwitz, the Reactionary Politics of Walt Disney (Two
30-min. segments) (Sources are noted in parentheses.) (Recorded on
5/10/2001.) $8.50

Along with FTR-304, this program comprises a pair of programs that might be
entitled "the politics of illusion." Few American cultural or artistic
figures have come to be associated with wholesome, virtuous images as
filmmaker and animation pioneer Walt Disney. In both cinema and television,
Disney established himself as an American icon, and the merged corporation
he left behind after his death is one of the giants of the media world. The
reality behind Disney's civic and political life is very different from the
benevolent illusions projected onto big and small screens around the world. 

In fact, Disney was one of the primary figures in the Hollywood blacklisting
era and had a long professional association with fascist, anti-Semitic and
organized crime elements. 

1.     This broadcast accesses information from a penetrating and insightful
biography of Disney, which highlights the reactionary, vindictive political
figure behind the benevolent facade he presented to his audiences. (Walt
Disney: Hollywood's Dark Prince; by Marc Eliot; Birch Lane Press; Copyright
1993 [HC]; ISBN 1-55972-174-X.) 

2.     Disney's image as a paragon of wholesome, Christian, "family" values
against the perceived world of immoral, sexual, "Jewish" Hollywood was
established by the success of Mickey Mouse (originally known as "Steamboat
Willie.") 

3.     Eliot chronicles the rise of the Hollywood film industry as a
reaction to the gangsterism of "the Trust," the movie-making consortium
established by seminal filmmaker Thomas Edison. 

4.     "Two of the enduringly popular myths of the history of American film
are that Hollywood gave birth to the movies and that the industry's pioneers
were Jews who had immigrated from Europe. In truth, the American motion
picture industry began on the East Coast as the exclusive dominion of the
urban American turn-of-the century entrepreneurial elite . . . . Among these
companies, the most powerful was the Wizard of Menlo Park, Thomas Alva
Edison, the head of the studio that bore his name. 

5.     "For more than a decade Edison had been the unchallenged premier
maker and distributor of mostly esoteric, non-narrative, silent motion
picture 'studies.' Edison was greatly disturbed by the sudden, sweeping
popularity of the new century's first novelty, street-corner nickelodeons,
amusement parlors that first appeared on New York's Lower East Side. He felt
they cheapened the sophisticated art of film by offering 'peep show' films
and other lurid diversions meant to satisfy the carnal pleasure of the
workingman.

6.     "In 1910, Edison formed the first motion picture alliance, which came
to be known as the 'Trust.' Its purpose was to protect the public (and his
own financial interests) from the kind of immoral trash produced by what he
termed the 'Jewish profiteers,' who not only ran the nickelodeons but made
their own movies to show in them.

7.     "The Trust was publicly dedicated to the preservation of the
industry's moral integrity and privately devoted to protecting Edison's
profitable monopoly. Not only were nickelodeon operators and filmmakers
denied membership in the Trust, but they were prevented from buying raw film
stock and projection equipment, all of which Edison held patents on and
absolutely controlled." (Ibid.; p. 49.) 

8.     Not content with suppressing economic competition with monopolistic
market practices, Edison turned to gangsterism. "Edison, frustrated by his
inability to wipe out his competition, resorted to hiring goon squads. They
smashed the nickelodeon arcades and set block-long fires in the
neighborhoods that housed them. All the while Edison justified his actions
in the name of preserving the nation's morals." (Ibid.; p. 49.)

9.     Ultimately, the strong-arm strategy of Edison & company precipitated
the move by their competitors to California. "The mob tactics of the Trust
caused the independents to put as much distance between themselves and
Edison as possible. One by one they migrated west, until they reached
California. There they found cheap real estate, a perfect climate, and the
natural protection of a three-thousand-mile buffer zone. California gave
them a second chance to make their movies. The films they made redefined the
American motion picture and the industry that produced them. Unlike their
early East Coast counterparts, the heads of Hollywood's studios were less
interested in artistic experimentation than profit. They put on the screen
what sold the most. The public was willing to pay to see films filled with
sex and violence, and Hollywood was more than happy to make them." (Idem.)

10.   The early dynamics of the film industry framed the political and
cultural debate over the "morality" of the movie industry that survives to
this day. The stigma that attached to Hollywood gave rise to close scrutiny
of the industry in Washington. "By the early twenties, all that remained of
Edison's Trust was the issue it had raised regarding the moral content of
motion pictures. The federal government kept a close watch on Hollywood, the
new capital of the film industry, to make sure the movies it produced
remained 'socially acceptable' films.

11.   "They didn't know if their movies were morel or immoral and couldn't
have cared less. To them, films were strictly vehicles of profit, not
instruments of expression. The more money a film made, the better it was. As
such, they ran their businesses like businesses and treated their writers,
directors, actors, and scenery movers as clock-punching employees rather
than artists. Whenever the industry came under attack for being morally
corrupt, none of Hollywood's owners believed the problem had anything to do
with morality.

12.   "Which, of course, was precisely the problem. Among those who
correctly perceived Hollywood as dominated by Jews, to many in government
and the private sector nothing more than heathens, unable to comprehend, let
alone project, the essence of Christian morality. 

13.   "They believed Hollywood's Jewish businessmen had corrupted an art
form for the sake of making money, and by so doing had contributed to the
widening moral corruption of America. They were, in Henry Ford's words, a
perfect example of America's growing problem, its turn-of-the-century influx
of 'the international Jew.'" (Ibid.; pp. 49-50.) (For information about
Henry Ford's anti-Semitism and his role in funding Hitler and the German
Nazi party in the 1920's see Miscellaneous Archive Show M-11.) 

14.   With the onset of the Great Depression, scapegoating of the
"immorality" of Hollywood for America's perceived "moral decay" increased.
". . . the financial collapse of Wall Street brought renewed pressure on the
government from the most powerful interests in the private sector to
regulate the moral content of motion pictures. This latest attack on the
moral vacuity of American movies and the men who made them was led once more
by those looking for a link between the nation's economic downturn and its
moral one. And with each new attack, the nation's Jewish-American studio
heads felt the chill of anti-Semitism cool Hollywood's balmy, and quite
profitable, climate." (Ibid.; pp. 50-51.)

15.   Publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst led the charge against
Hollywood, seeking to sell papers and stifle competition. (For discussion of
the Hearst Press and its open editorial support for fascism, see RFA-1.) "In
1929, needing a 'hot' issue to boost his newspapers' sagging circulations,
William Randolph Hearst ran a series of editorials demanding the revival of
federal censorship to regulate the growing immorality of motion pictures. No
friend of either Jews or the film industry, he considered newsreels, shown
in effect 'free' along with the features, a threat to his newspapers.

16.   "Hearst's campaign received much support in Congress, where the
definition of movie morality had expanded through the years to include not
only sexual provocation but political subversion. In March of 1929, U.S.
Senator Smith Brookhart summed up what he considered the deteriorating
situation in Hollywood as nothing more than a battle for profit at the cost
of sexual and social morality between competing studios, led by 'bunches of
Jews.'" (Ibid. p. 51)

17.   Enter Walt Disney and Mickey Mouse (nee Steamboat Willie), who were
seen as the perfect, "Christian" antidote to the toxin of "amoral"
Hollywood. "What Hollywood desperately needed was a new hero who not only
extolled the right virtues but understood what they were in the first place.
What Hollywood got, as if on cue, was Walt Disney's Steamboat Willie, the
perfect nonsexual, apolitical movie starring a harmless little talking mouse
who courted his sweetheart by singing her a song. Overnight, every major
studio in Hollywood that had for the better part of a decade turned out the
kind of lurid, violent, sexually, suggestive fleshpot films guaranteed to
put money in their banks, was now eager to align itself with not only the
very popular, but now suddenly politically correct, filmmaker." (Idem.) 

18.   Next, the program examines allegations of prewar Nazi activity on
Disney's part. As Eliot explains in his book, Disney was the son of a
Christian evangelist and was very anti-labor in his business dealings. (This
was typical of Hollywood studio chiefs at the time.) These attitudes
combined with resentment of the power of many of the Jewish American studio
heads. Perhaps because of these views, Disney apparently began attending
American Nazi party meetings in the company of Gunther Lessing, Disney's
attorney and chief advisor on labor issues. "During the time Disney helped
organize the independent filmmakers against the industry's mainstream, he
also was accompanying Lessing to American Nazi party meetings and rallies.

19.   "According to [former Disney employee] Arthur Babbitt, 'In the
immediate years before we entered the war, there was a small but fiercely
loyal, I suppose legal, following of the Nazi party. You could buy a copy of
Mein Kampf on any newsstand in Hollywood. Nobody asked me to go to any
meetings, but I did, out of curiosity. They were open meetings, anybody
could attend, and I wanted to see what was going on for myself.

'On more than one occasion I observed Walt Disney and Gunther Lessing there,
along with a lot of other prominent Nazi-afflicted [sic] Hollywood
personalities. Disney was going to meetings all the time. I was invited to
the homes of several prominent actors and musicians, all of whom were
actively working for the American Nazi party. I told a girlfriend of mine
who was an editor at the time with Coronet magazine who encouraged me to
write down what I observed. She had some connections to the FBI and turned
in my reports.'

20.   "If Disney and Lessing were sympathetic to the American Nazi movement,
their interest was most likely motivated by the desire to regain favor with
the once-lucrative, Nazi-occupied countries where Disney films were now
banned. To that end Walt was also committed to the 'America First' movement
and became one of Hollywood's most active prewar isolationists. Under
Lessing's tutelage, Disney discovered how the passions and power of
political activism could be used as weapons for personal gain. And later on,
for revenge." (Ibid.; pp. 120-121.)

21.   In a footnote to the above passage Eliot adds, "In her memoirs, German
filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl claims that after Kristallnacht she approached
every studio in Hollywood looking for work. No studio head would even screen
her movies except Walt Disney. He told her that he admired her work but if
it became known that he was considering her, it would damage his
reputation." (Ibid.; p. 121.)

22.   Well before the end of World War II, Disney was instrumental in
bringing governmental investigators into his anti-Communist activities. 

23.   After initiating a California legislative investigation of Hollywood
labor activist Herb Sorrell (a personal and professional enemy of Disney's),
Disney acted as vice-president of the Motion Picture Association to cause
the House Un-American Activities Committee to upgrade its putative presence
in Hollywood. "Disney was instrumental in pointing the organization [HUAC]
in the direction of its first 'Communist radical crackpot,' Herb Sorrell.
This wasn't the first time Disney had gone after Sorrell. Early in 1942,
after his success with the Cartoonists Guild, Sorrell had founded the
Conference of Studio Unions. . . 

"As far as Disney was concerned, the CSU was all part of the same Communist
conspiracy that had struck his studio and continued to threaten all of
Hollywood. As early as October 1941, barely a month after the studio strike
ended, Disney had contacted Jack Tenney, chairman of the newly formed Joint
Fact-Finding Committee on Un-American Activities of the California
Legislature and urged him to go after the strikers. After turning over all
the photos taken during the walkout, he urged Tenney to launch an
investigation of 'Reds in movies.' Tenney took his cue from Disney and did
just that. The first witness he called was Herb Sorrell.

24.   "Although the Tenney committee was unable to prove a connection
between Sorrell's union activities and the Communist party, the hearings
nevertheless chilled Hollywood's liberal left, who saw the actions of the
Tenney committee as a first dangerous step in the revival of the
government's belief that the entertainment industry was indeed an enclave of
communism." (Ibid.; p.172.) 

25.   As indicated previously, Disney played a pivotal role in helping to
focus the attention of HUAC on the motion picture industry. "One of Disney's
first official duties as vice-president of the MPA was to send a letter to
an arch-conservative U.S. Senator, Robert R. Reynolds (D-North Carolina),
dated March 7, 1944, urging HUAC to intensify its presence in Hollywood.
Walt wanted a fell congressional investigation regarding the infiltration of
communism into the film community, for the 'flagrant manner in which the
motion picture industrialists of Hollywood have been coddling Communists and
totalitarian-minded groups working in the industry for the dissemination of
un-American ideas and beliefs.' In a move reminiscent of the tactics of the
anonymous antistrike Committee of 21, the only official identification that
appeared on the letter was 'A group of your friends.'"

26.  "The immediate result of that letter was the arrival in Hollywood ten
days later, of William Wheeler, a HUAC representative, to begin yet another
investigation of Sorrell, his Conference of Studio Unions, and their
possible link to the Communist party. The studios happily opened their doors
to HUAC, and the committee took the opportunity to expand its investigation
into every branch of the film industry's working-class population that had
sought affiliation with any union or guild during the past decade."

27.   "HUAC, with the full support of the FBI, this time subpoenaed everyone
suspected of having any subversive, or merely suspicious affiliations in
their background. Virtually no one with any evidence of liberal leanings
escaped being summoned before the committee." (Ibid.; p. 173.)

28.   Disney worked with Roy Brewer, who became head of the IATSE (the
mob-dominated International Association of Theatrical and Stage Employees).
In that capacity, Brewer encouraged Disney to maintain a position of
intransigence toward his cartoonists' demands, so that the IATSE could
co-opt their loyalty from the Cartoonists Guild. Eliot describes the close
cooperation between Brewer, Disney and HUAC. 
"Privately, Roy Brewer, who had replaced Willie Bioff as the head of the
Hollywood branch of IATSE, told Disney a new strike would give IATSE the
opportunity to play hero by regaining the cartoonists' lost jobs, and along
with them their loyalty.
"The first night after the layoffs, Disney met with representatives of the
Guild and found them more amenable than he had expected or hoped. Sorrell,
who believed Disney was trying to pull the Guild into another strike, was
determined to reach a settlement. Sorrell settled for the rehiring of only
94 of the laid-off cartoonists and two weeks' severance for the other 215.
The remaining clerical and maintenance workers received nothing. Disney
viewed these concessions as a total victory.

29.   "Without losing a single day of production, Disney had won a
significant reduction of his staff and payroll and severely weakened the
Cartoonists Guild's ability to dictate studio policy. Walt then promised
Brewer complete cooperation in helping to rid the industry permanently of
Sorrell and his fellow insurgents.

30.   "That opportunity came in November 1947, with the commencement of
HUAC's next series of investigations into the entertainment industry. Now
under the chairmanship of J. Parnell Thomas, a notoriously anti-labor
congressman, HUAC received the warm endorsement of IATSE, the American
Legion, and the Catholic Church and the full cooperation of Hollywood's
studios. A group of left-wing writers, which came to be known as the
'Hollywood Ten,' symbolized the relentlessly persecutory actions of Thomas's
investigation. The Ten were deemed 'unfriendly' witnesses after each cited
his right under the First Amendment to refuse to respond to the most famous
question of the era: Are you now, or have you ever been, a member of the
Communist party? All ten were immediately blacklisted, their careers
shattered, and their lives disrupted by jail sentences for contempt.

31.   "HUAC's investigation, the head of the Hollywood branch of IATSE sent
letters to every major industry figure, on-screen talent and off-, warming
that if they didn't now declare their open support for IATSE, they would be
considered enemies of the Hollywood establishment. He warned that failure to
support IATSE would make them subject not only to industry boycott, that is,
inclusion on the blacklist, but investigation by Thomas's HUAC." (Ibid. pp.
188-189)

32.   Eliot writes that, eventually, many Hollywood labor leaders went with
the political tides that were flowing through the country, and that Disney
had begun an active collaboration as an FBI informant. "By May 1947, the
mere receipt of a HUAC subpoena implied Communist affiliation, and
investigation by the FBI's 'compic' (Communist pictures) team of
Hollywood-based informers, in which Walt was by now an active participant.
Among the first to capitulate to the specter of HUAC and Brewer's blacklist
were the leaders of the Screen Actors Guild, onetime liberal Roosevelt
supporter Ronald Reagan and song-and-dance-man George Murphy, who hastily
convinced their membership to reject Sorrell and the CSU in favor of IATSE."
(Ibid.; p. 191.)

33.   Eventually, Reagan and Brewer were to team up again, after Reagan
became President. "According to Dan Moldea, in Dark Victory, pp. 65-69, 332:
'Instead of trying to rid the union of its gangster image and all remnants
of mob control, Brewer was obsessed with eliminating the 'Communist
Influence' within the union and the movie industry in general. 'When Browne
[and Bioff] went to jail,' Brewer insisted, 'that ended any connection with
the mob in IATSE . . . the truth is, [the Communists] had this town in the
palm of their hands, and they were calling the shots.' Brewer was appointed
by President Reagan in 1984 as chairman of the Federal Service Impasse
Panel, which arbitrated disputes between federal agencies and the unions
representing federal workers.'" (Ibid.; p. 188.)

34.   During the course of the HUAC hearings, Disney's personal testimony
lent considerable momentum to the proceedings. "Disney's testimony helped
strengthen Brewer's industry-wide blacklist. The mere whisper of a name was
enough to eliminate someone from consideration for a job. Because no proof
was required, nor any defense short of confession acceptable, the assumption
of guilt until proven innocent replaced the constitutional rights of
everyone accused, and plunged America into one of its darkest political
periods." (Ibid.; p. 196.)

35.  Eliot chronicles the destruction that the blacklist brought to the
professional lives of those affected. One of the most famous film
personalities to fall victim to the anti-Communist witch hunts was Charlie
Chaplin.

36.  "Of those most directly affected by the blacklist, some, like the
Hollywood Ten, served time in federal prison on contempt charges. Others,
including actor John Garfield, died prematurely. Like Sorrell, Garfield
suffered a fatal heart attack while still in his late thirties. Still
others, like veteran actor Philip Loeb, grew despondent and, their
professional lives shattered, committed suicide.

"And still others, like Charlie Chaplin, were literally exiled. Long a thorn
in the side of conservative Hollywood, Chaplin had been immune to the powers
of the industry because he himself was one. After amassing a fortune for his
work in silent films and his participation in forming United Artists, he
began his own studio.

"Throughout the thirties, up to and including The Great Dictator, he made
highly entertaining movies infused with populism. His active campaign for a
second front against the Axis powers during World War II and his pleas for
the curtailment of anticommunist propaganda angered Disney, who had once so
idolized Chaplin.

"Chaplin's actions also angered HUAC. After three postponements of his
subpoenaed testimony he sent HUAC a telegram in which he stated that 'I am
not a Communist; neither have I ever joined a political party or
organization in my life.' Although HUAC was apparently satisfied by his
response and wrote back that his appearance was no longer necessary, the
matter was far from closed. Chaplin, who was British, had never applied for
U.S. citizenship. In 1952, at the height of the blacklist era, while Chaplin
was on a six-month tout of England and Europe, the Immigration and
Naturalization Service barred his return to the United States under a code
denying an alien entry on grounds of morals or Communist affiliation.
Chaplin vowed never to set foot in America again and blocked stateside
showings of most of his feature films.

37.  "Thus ended the Hollywood career of perhaps the greatest single talent
the world of film had ever produced. Although Walt declined to comment
publicly on the matter of Chaplin's exile, in private he told one of his
'Nine Old Men' studio loyalists that the country was better off without 'the
little Commie.'" (Ibid.; pp. 196-197.)

38.  Eventually, Disney was promoted by the FBI to the position of Special
Agent in Charge contact, which enhanced his political power against his
professional associates. The bureau's was seeking an insider to provide them
with information about the nascent television industry, and felt that Disney
(a trusted operative in the past) would fill the bill. 

39.  "Next to that report was a letter he had received from J. Edgar Hoover,
the contents of which meant as much to him as the financial report. In his
letter Hoover informed Walt he had been officially promoted to the position
of Special Agent in Charge contact.

40.  "Here is the confidential 1954 FBI inter-office memo that describes the
promotion: 'Mr. Walt Disney is the Vice-President in charge of production
and the founder of Walt Disney Productions, Inc., 2400 West Alameda Street,
Burbank, California. Mr. Disney is extremely prominent in the motion picture
industry and his company is the foremost organization in the production of
cartoons.' Mr. Disney has recently established a business association with
the American Broadcasting Company . . . for the production of a series of
television show, which for the most part are scheduled to be filmed at
Disneyland, a multimillion dollar amusement park being established under Mr.
Disney's direction in the vicinity of Anaheim, California. Mr. Disney has
volunteered representatives of this office complete access to the facilities
of Disneyland for use in connection with official matters and for
recreational purposes. . . .

'Because of Mr. Disney's position as the foremost producer of cartoon films
in the motion picture industry and his prominence and wide acquaintanceship
in film production matters, it is believed that he can be of valuable
assistance to this office and therefore it is my recommendation that he be
approved as a Special Agent in Charge (SAC) contact.'

41.  "Being made an official SAC contact pleased Walt greatly, because it
meant that in addition to continuing to supply his data to the bureau, other
informants could now supply reports to him. It was Hoover's Christmas
present to Walt, the timing of which was no accident. Hoover, as he implied
in his directive, wanted to capitalize on Disney's involvement with network
television. The FBI had thus far been unable to penetrate the middle echelon
of the new medium's power loop. What the Bureau wanted was someone it could
trust on the inside. As far as J. Edgar Hoover was concerned, the man most
qualified for that assignment was the Bureau's proven Hollywood veteran, the
man everyone, including the head of the FBI, called 'Uncle Walt.'" (Ibid.;
pp. 224-225.)

42.  Eventually, Disney himself came under suspicion, ironically enough, as
the result of his having attended a memorial service on whose guests he
reported to the FBI. "That same year, 1956, Disney's relationship with the
FBI took an unexpected turn. It was a bizarre episode that demonstrated the
spreading infection of political paranoia. The FBI had begun to question the
allegiance, patriotism, and loyalty of one of its own, most revered, and
presumably immune operatives.

'The trouble began early in the year, in January, when Disney sent producer
Jerry Sims to Washington to finalize plans with the Bureau for a two-minute
'Mickey Mouse Club' newsreel of a group of children touring the Bureau's
D.C. headquarters. Sims submitted a preliminary script to an FBI agent
identified as Kemper, who dutifully passed it on to Lou Nichols, the
Bureau's head of public relations. Nichols reviewed the material and
initially approved the venture. However a week later he apparently changed
his mind when he returned Kemper's report with a message scrawled in ink
across the bottom that read "i don't think we should." Kemper then called
Sims and told him the bureau would be unable to assist on the project.

"When Walt received news of the FBI's turndown he phoned Hoover to find out
why. Hoover told Disney he would personally look into the situation and ask
his close friend Clyde Tolson, the Bureau's assistant director and second to
command, to investigate the matter. Tolson ordered a complete review of what
had now become in FBI headquarters as the 'Disney Situation,' after which he
reaffirmed Nichols's decision not to cooperate with Disney." (Ibid.;
pp.238-239.)

43.  "The unsigned memo was probably requested by Hoover. Incredibly, some
mid-level bureaucrat, unaware of Disney's status within the FBI, had turned
up what he believed was information that linked Walt Disney to subversive
Communist organizations and activities in the early forties. Even more
astonishing, of the two 'incidents' cited, the first, the 'Council for
Pan-American Democracy' had been attended by Disney as an undercover spy for
the FBI, either by his own initiative or at the Bureau's directive, after
which he supplied a detailed report to his Los Angeles SAC. As for the
'tribute' to Art Young, Disney had never made a secret of his admiration for
the renowned artist's work, and upon Young's untimely death in an automobile
accident, Walt attended a public memorial, made a small donation to a
memorial fund for Young's family, and filed a complete report about who else
attended the tribute to his SAC. Somehow, the FBI had construed from these
two incidents that Walt's political loyalties were questionable. They did so
in spite of his official SAC status and long history of informing, his
anticommunist activities, his government contracts, his involvement with the
Hollywood Alliance, his friendly testimony before HUAC (which he had been
instrumental In bringing to Hollywood), and his active support of the
blacklist." 

44.  "When Hoover finally read the memo, he was aghast and immediately
approved the 'Mickey Mouse Club' segment." (Ibid.; p. 241.) (See also; RFA
#'s 2, 37.) (Recorded on 5/10/2001.) 

 




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