
Betty boop original outfit archive#
The UCLA Film and Television Archive restored 11 Fleischer cartoons for Betty Boop Confidential, a critically acclaimed feature-length cartoon retrospective.ġ3. Betty Boop was the sole character not depicted in color in the 1988 production of Who Framed Roger Rabbit.ġ2.

Betty Boop's cartoons featured great musical stars such as Maurice Chevalier, Rudy Vallée, Ethel Merman, Louis Armstrong, and Cab Calloway.ġ1. Today there are 250 companies manufacturing Betty Boop licensed products in the United States and nearly as many abroad.ġ0. In 1989, CBS aired Betty Boop's Hollywood Mystery, a second animated musical spectacular.ĩ. This is false information, Betty's garter-belt was never removed, it was hidden by the longer dresses she wore.Ĩ. According to King Features, the famed garter vanished in 1933, but public demand brought it back. Betty Boop was chastised for being overly seductive in the 1930s.ħ. Betty Boop was best recognized for her cartoons, but she also appeared in two comic strips, a radio show, and two network animated musical specials.Ħ. Betty Boop has appeared in over 100 cartoons.ĥ. According to King Features, Betty Boop originally appeared in human form in the cartoon short Any Rags?, although her first legit appearance according to the "Betty Boop Wikia Fandom" as a human girl was actually in Mask-A-Raid.Ĥ. Betty Boop's initial cartoon debut was as a dog with long floppy ears and great legs.ģ. Betty Boop made her first cartoon appearance as a satire of Helen Kane, Clara Bow and flapper girls of the Roaring Twenties in the 1930 short Dizzy Dishes.Ģ. Betty's cartoons, which were frequently set in Depression-era New York City, took adult moviegoers to weird worlds where the characters were pursued by frightening creatures but where everything turned out all right in the end. Fleischer Studios' animators gave her the common touch.


Betty Boop is still popular throughout the world.
