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Episode #10 was originally supposed to have Mickey's Man Friday from 1935. The reason was because the two episodes had cartoons that the executives at Disney Channel would not pass for unedited airings.
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Two episodes from Season 1 were initially skipped, and did not make their TV debut until reruns. Similarly, a version of The Nifty Nineties (1941) was prepared with the opening titles restored, but the show was cancelled before it could be included in any episodes. The 1933 short Puppy Love, which did not open with the standard Mickey Mouse theme music, but had a rendition of When You're In Love, had its original soundtrack restored for the program.
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The original opening involved the letters which spell out the title of the short are blown away with the gust of wind after the original Celebrity title card faded out to pitch black. The black and white short Haunted House (1929) was kept from being shown in earlier seasons because it required extra attention to recreate the opening as close to the original as possible. In season 1, an original copy of Mickey Mouse's The Band Concert (1935) with its original titles was shown for the first time on TV. The only color cartoons to have their original titles recreated were those shown in the last episode of Season 3, and all episodes of Season 4. While selecting the color entries that would air, the only ones that were initially selected were those that were in the Disney vaults with their original titles. Sometimes the third cartoon would be a color cartoon from 1935 to 1953 starring Mickey, Donald, Goofy or Pluto, but on many occasions an entire episode would entirely be made of black-and-white cartoons. For all episodes, the first two shorts were from this era. The show focused mostly on the 1928 to 1935 Mickey Mouse shorts that were originally filmed in black-and-white. For The Mickey Mouse Show, efforts were made to present these films as close to their original theatrical form as possible: some of the cartoons shown were copies that actually had their original theatrical titles intact, while others needed to have their original titles simulated through the process of digital video editing. As a result, Disney decided to replace the original Celebrity Pictures, Columbia, United Artists, and RKO theatrical title cards with their own. This is due to the films having their original titles replaced when reissued to theatres. Some even replaced the original titles on color cartoons with title cards from the early-to-mid 50's.
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Prior to the premiere of The Mickey Mouse Show, most television airings of theatrical Mickey Mouse cartoons bore burlap reissue titles from the late 40's for television use on ABC.