
The Skeleton Dance

Betty Boop's Bamboo Isle

Betty Boop for President

Chess-Nuts

Minnie the Moocher

Betty Boop's Big Boss

Betty Boop's Crazy Inventions

Betty Boop's Ker-Choo

I Heard

Morning, Noon and Night

Mother Goose Land

Parade of the Wooden Soldiers

Snow-White

The Mad Doctor

The Old Man Of the Mountain

Betty Boop's Rise to Fame

Betty in Blunderland

Poor Cinderella

She Wronged Him Right

A Language All My Own

Baby Be Good

Betty Boop and Grampy

Betty Boop with Henry

Judge for a Day

Swat The Fly

A Song a Day

Be Human

Betty Boop and Little Jimmy

Betty Boop And The Little King

Happy You and Merry Me

More Pep

Not Now

Training Pigeons

House Cleaning Blues

The Impractical Joker

Whoops! I'm a Cowboy

Be Up to Date

Buzzy Boop

Gold Rush Daze

Musical Mountaineers

The Scared Crows

Blow Me Down

Gulliver's Travels

Fox Pop

The Arctic Giant

Fright to the Finish

The Hole
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The Skeleton Dance
(1929) The clock strikes midnight, the bats fly from the belfry, a dog howls at the full moon, and two black cats fight in the cemetery: a perfect time for four skeletons to come out and dance a bit. Director: Walt Disney. (Animation, Family, Short) -
Betty Boop's Bamboo Isle
(1932) Bimbo visits a south sea isle, where he meets a dusky maiden who does a hot hula and looks a lot like Betty. The Royal Samoans, Billy Murray: Bimbo (voice), Satini Pualoa: Royal Samoan, Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Betty Boop for President
(1932) Betty's campaign tries to appeal to everyone. Real candidates are parodied, but campaign promises are a bit bizarre. Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Chess-Nuts
(1932) Betty Boop is the black queen and Bimbo the white king in a surrealistic chess game. Billy Murray: Bimbo (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Minnie the Moocher
(1932) Betty Boop and Bimbo run away from home, but that night they are scared by a chorus of ghosts singing the title song. Cab Calloway and His Orchestra, Billy Murray: Bimbo (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Betty Boop's Big Boss
(1933) Betty takes a secretarial job where the boss sexually harasses her, but she's not going to take it. Kate Wright: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Betty Boop's Crazy Inventions
(1933) Betty Boop (voice of Mae Questel) and her friends Koko the Clown and Bimbo (voice of Billy Murray) have been hired to demonstrate a series of crazy gadgets at the Big Invention Show. Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Betty Boop's Ker-Choo
(1933) Betty, Koko, and Bimbo drive at the auto races; Betty has a cold, and her sneezes help her win. Bonnie Poe: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
I Heard
(1933) Workers from the Never Mine wash up before eating lunch at Betty Boop's Tavern, where Betty sings and dances while they dine. The cartoon features music by and a special guest appearance from jazz musician Don Redman and his Orchestra. Mae Questel: Bety Boop (voice). -
Morning, Noon and Night
(1933) To the tune of David Rubinoff and his orchestra, Betty Boop and feathered friends try to save a baby bird from the booze-swilling Tom Kats Club. David Rubinoff, Bonnie Poe: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Mother Goose Land
(1933) In response to Betty Boop's wish, Mother Goose materializes from a book cover and gives her a tour. William Pennell: Singing Cow/Spider (voice), Bonnie Poe: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Parade of the Wooden Soldiers
(1933) An action figure of Betty Boop drops in on a small toy shop. David Rubinoff: Himself, Bonnie Poe: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Snow-White
(1933) After Betty Boop is declared the fairest in the land by the Queen's magic mirror, the Queen orders her beheaded. Cab Calloway sings "St. James Infirmary Blues". Cab Calloway: Koko the Clown (voice), Billy Murray: Bimbo (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop / Evil Queen (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
The Mad Doctor
(1933) A dark and stormy night. Pluto (the voice of Pinto Colvig) is spirited away to the spooky mansion of an evil genius for a mad transplant scheme to put his head on the body of a chicken. Mickey (the voice of Walt Disney) gives chase, but finds himself threatened by the house and its denizens. Director: David Hand. -
The Old Man Of the Mountain
(1933) Betty Boop goes to see the fearsome Old Man of the Mountain for herself. He sings the title song and a duet with Betty. Cab Calloway: Himself and Old Man (voice), Bonnie Poe: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Betty Boop's Rise to Fame
(1934) A reporter interviews Max Fleischer about his creation, and Betty illustrates with excerpts from three prior cartoons. Cab Calloway: Old Man (voice), Dave Fleischer: Reporter, Max Fleischer: Himself, Bonnie Poe: Betty Boop (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Betty in Blunderland
(1934) Betty falls asleep doing a jigsaw puzzle and finds herself through the looking glass into a modern, urban wonderland. Bonnie Poe: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Poor Cinderella
(1934) Betty Boop goes to the ball thanks to her Fairy Godmother. Jack Mercer: Various (voice), Bonnie Poe: Betty Boop / Fairy Godmother / Ugly Stepsisters (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
She Wronged Him Right
(1934) Betty Boop appears on stage as the heroine of a melodrama, complete with stage scenery and a mustache twirling villain. Bonnie Poe: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
A Language All My Own
(1935) Betty Boop takes her stage act on the road, and plays in Japan to great acclaim. Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Baby Be Good
(1935) Betty Boop tells naughty Little Jimmy a corrective fairy tale (with herself as fairy). Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Betty Boop and Grampy
(1935) Grampy throws a party and invites Betty and the gang. Mae Questel, Director: Dave Fleischer -
Betty Boop with Henry
(1935) Henry, comic strip character, gets a job at Betty Boop's pet store. Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Judge for a Day
(1935) Betty Boop, annoyed by 'public pests' like backslappers, gum parkers, and mud splashers, imagines what she'd do to them if she were a judge. Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Swat The Fly
(1935) While Betty Boop tries to cook, a fly drives her and Pudgy the Pup to distraction. Mae Questel: Betty Boop, Director: Dave Fleischer. -
A Song a Day
(1936) At Betty Boop's Animal Hospital, various species have appropriate ailments. Morale becomes a problem; Professor Grampy to the rescue! Jack Mercer: Grampy (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Be Human
(1936) Betty Boop is incensed at her farmer neighbor's cruelty to his animals. But the inventive Grampy knows how to teach him a lesson. Mae Questel (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Betty Boop and Little Jimmy
(1936) Betty tries a regime of exercise, but her weight loss gets out of hand. She sings "Keep Your Girlish Figure". Mae Questel: Betty Boop/ Little Jimmy (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Betty Boop And The Little King
(1936) The Little King, comic strip character, meets Betty Boop. Mae Questel (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Happy You and Merry Me
(1936) A kitten wanders in to Betty Boop's house and becomes sick after eating a box of candy. Jack Mercer: Myron the Kitten / Myron's Mama / Druggist (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop / Pudgy (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
More Pep
(1936) In a return to the 'Out of the Inkwell' format, Betty Boop invents a 'pep' formula to speed up lazy Pudgy, but it escapes into the 'real world' with rapid results. Max Fleischer: Uncle Max (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop / Pudgy (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Not Now
(1936) A caterwauling cat annoys Betty Boop and Pudgy; the latter tries cat-chasing, but bites off more than he can chew. Jack Mercer: Cat (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop / Pudgy (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Training Pigeons
(1936) Betty and Pudgy are on the roof of their tenement building, trying to get her pet pigeons back in their cage. Mae Questel, Director: Dave Fleischer. -
House Cleaning Blues
(1937) Grampy wants to take Betty Boop out for a ride in his roadster. But Betty had a wild party the night before, and now she has to clean up. Jack Mercer: Grampy (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
The Impractical Joker
(1937) After enduring several practical jokes at the hands of Irving, Betty looks to Grampy for help. Pinto Colvig: Irving (voice), Jack Mercer: Grampy (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Whoops! I'm a Cowboy
(1937) Betty Boop's runt of a suitor thinks he'll have better luck if he takes cowboy lessons at a dude ranch. Mae Questel (Betty Boop), Jack Mercer (Wiffle Piffle), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Be Up to Date
(1938) When Betty Boop's Traveling Department Store comes to Hillbillyville, the mountain folks find old uses for the new gadgets. Jack Mercer: Various Hillbillies (voice), Mae Questel: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Buzzy Boop
(1938) Betty Boop's young cousin, Buzzy, takes the train to visit Betty. Kate Wright, Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Gold Rush Daze
(1939) A man stops for gas on his way to dig for gold. The man at the station tells him what it was like back in 1849 in San Francisco. Mel Blanc, Directors: Cal Dalton and Ben Hardaway. -
Musical Mountaineers
(1939) Betty Boop runs out of gas in Feud County, and wins over the initially hostile hillbillies with her dancing. Margie Hines: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
The Scared Crows
(1939) Betty Boop and Pudgy, doing the spring planting, are plagued by crows. Margie Hines: Betty Boop (voice), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Blow Me Down
(1934) Popeye (William Costello) sails to Mexico, where Olive (Bonnie Poe) is a dancer and Bluto (William Pennell) is a bandit. William Costello, William Pennell, Bonnie Poe, Directors: Dave Fleischer, Willard Bowsky (uncredited). (colorized version) -
Gulliver's Travels
(1939) Gulliver washes ashore on Lilliput and attempts to prevent war between that tiny kingdom and its equally minuscule rival, Blefuscu, as well as smooth the way for the romance between the Princess and Prince of the opposing lands. Jessica Dragonette (singing voice of Princess Glory), Lanny Ross (singing voice of Prince David), Director: Dave Fleischer. -
Fox Pop
(1942) Hearing that silver foxes are all the rage in high society, a fox paints himself silver and gets himself trapped, finding out too late that it's only his fur anyone is interested in. Mel Blanc, Robert C. Bruce, Tedd Pierce, Director: Charles M. Jones. -
The Arctic Giant
(1942) Superman versus a thawed out Tyrannosaurus. Joan Alexander: Lois Lane (voice), Jackson Beck: Narrator (voice), Bud Collyer: Clark Kent / Superman (voice), Julian Noa: Perry White (voice), Directors: Dave Fleischer. -
Fright to the Finish
(1954) Olive is reading ghost stories to the boys. Popeye scoffs; Bluto decides to take advantage of this by staging various pranks. Jackson Beck: Bluto (voice), Jack Mercer: Popeye (voice), Mae Questel: Olive Oyl (voice), Director: Seymour Kneitel. -
The Hole
(1962) Two men (the voices of Dizzy Gillespie and George Mathews) discuss the nature of accidents and the possibility of nuclear war. Dizzy Gillespie, George Mathews, Director: John Hubley. (Animation, Short)