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Alice Solves the Puzzle
Alice Solves the Puzzle
from Wikipedia

Alice Solves the Puzzle
Bootleg Pete demanding a crossword-puzzle from Alice.
Directed byWalt Disney
Produced byM.J. Winkler
StarringMargie Gay
Animation byUb Iwerks
Rollin Hamilton
Thurston Harper[1]
Color processBlack and white
Production
company
Distributed byM.J. Winkler Pictures
Release date
  • February 15, 1925 (1925-02-15)
Running time
6:54
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Alice Solves the Puzzle is a 1925 animated short film directed by Walt Disney. It was the 15th film in the Alice Comedies series,[2] and is notable for being the first film to feature Pete, the longest-recurring Disney character. The film is also notable for being one of the first animated films to have been heavily censored.

Plot

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A girl named Alice (Margie Gay) is struggling to complete a difficult crossword-puzzle when her cat Julius tells her they should go to the beach. After a quick swim in the ocean, the pair dry off and Alice continues her puzzle. Just as she begins, Bootleg Pete (a collector of rare crossword-puzzles who discovers that her puzzle is the one that he’s missing) demands the puzzle.

After she refuses his demands, Pete becomes angry, and Alice smacks him in the face, which enrages Pete. She runs for shelter inside a lighthouse, but Pete breaks down the door and chases Alice around the lighthouse. Alice screams for help and Julius comes to her rescue. He reaches the top and a fight breaks out between the two. Julius wins the fight by knocking Pete off of the lighthouse. Alice then discovers the last phrase in her puzzle, "The End".[3]

Legacy

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Pete

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Alice Solves the Puzzle was the first film to feature the antagonist Pete. He would go on to become the longest running character of all the Disney animated creations.[4] In this first installment he is referred to as "Bootleg Pete" because of his use of whiskey (at a time when alcohol was illegal due to prohibition in the US). Because of his peg used for a right leg, he quickly gained the nickname Peg-Leg Pete. The early Pete was portrayed as a bear, which he would stay for most of his early appearances until the advent of Mickey Mouse. Pete subsequently became a large cat.

Censorship

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When Russell Merritt examined a German print of Alice Solves the Puzzle, he was surprised to find an additional scene missing from American prints. In most prints of Pete's first scene, he is shown speeding in a boat being pulled by a pelican. He passes a police-dog, who blows a whistle and chases him. Pete simply turns and laughs. However, Merrit discovered in the German version that Pete is stopped by a customs inspector who examines the boat, then lets him pass. Pete then opens the pelican's mouth and pulls out a bottle of bootleg whiskey.

This scene was cut because the Pennsylvania Censorship Board asked Disney to cut the scene during its first release. Disney then directed Winkler Studios, his distributor, to cut the scene from any further U.S. releases.[5]

The only remnant of the scene in the United States is two frames in which Pete's whiskey bottle is still visible.[3]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
is a 1925 American animated short film directed by Walt Disney, serving as an entry in the Alice Comedies series that blends live-action footage with animation. The film stars child actress Virginia Davis as Alice, who interacts with cartoon characters including her feline companion Julius, amid a seaside escapade involving a crossword puzzle. Released on February 15, 1925, it holds historical significance as the debut appearance of Pete, a bootlegger antagonist initially depicted with a peg leg, who evolved into Disney's longest-running villainous character across numerous productions. In the narrative, and Julius struggle with the puzzle's clues until Pete intervenes by plying Julius with liquor to seize the prize, prompting a chase that showcases early Disney humor and hybrid animation techniques. This short exemplifies the experimental style of the Alice Comedies, produced during Disney's formative years in Hollywood before the studio's rise to prominence with synchronized sound and . While not commercially groundbreaking, its introduction of Pete underscores Disney's early development of recurring characters central to the studio's enduring animated legacy.

Production

Development and Context

"Alice Solves the Puzzle" formed part of the , a series of 56 silent short films produced by from 1924 to 1927, featuring a live-action girl interacting with animated animal characters in a cartoon world. The series originated after Disney relocated from Kansas City to Hollywood in 1923, partnering with distributor , who signed a contract on October 16, 1923, to produce and release these innovative hybrids of live-action and animation. This agreement marked the effective start of the studio, with the shorts designed to exploit the novelty of real footage onto drawn backgrounds, distinguishing them from purely animated competitors like . The specific short was produced at the Disney Brothers Studio in , under Walt Disney's direction and ' primary animation, continuing the series' formula while introducing key elements amid cast transitions. It debuted child actress Margie Gay as Alice, replacing following disputes over salary and contract terms with Davis's family after her appearances in the initial 13 shorts; Gay ultimately starred in 31 episodes, the most of any actress in the series. The production reflected ongoing refinements in synchronization techniques, with live-action scenes filmed first and animations traced over rotoscoped outlines for fluid integration. A significant development in this installment was the introduction of the Pete, designed by Iwerks as a peg-legged, bootlegger-inspired cat character who antagonizes Alice over a rare puzzle—a nod to the puzzle's rising popularity in American culture during the mid-1920s. Pete, initially called Bootleg Pete, emerged as Disney's first enduring villain, crafted to provide recurring conflict and expand the series' narrative depth beyond Julius the Cat's supportive role, laying groundwork for character evolution in subsequent Disney works. This addition aligned with Disney's strategy to build a stable of personalities amid competitive pressures from distributors like Winkler, who sought consistent hits.

Animation Techniques

"Alice Solves the Puzzle," released on February 15, 1925, exemplifies the hybrid live-action and animation techniques developed by Walt Disney for the Alice Comedies series. Live-action footage of child actress Margie Gay portraying Alice was filmed first, typically against a black or plain backdrop to simplify subsequent compositing with animated elements. This approach allowed the real performer to appear embedded within a fully cartoon environment, reversing the more common Out of the Inkwell style where animated figures entered live worlds. Animators, including , Rollin Hamilton, and Thurston Harper, then used black-and-white photo statistics—printouts of the live-action frames—to plan layouts, draw backgrounds, and create frame-by-frame cel animations for characters like and the debut of Bootleg Pete. Rough animation sketches were often derived via key live-action poses, projecting them for tracing to ensure spatial and temporal alignment between the human figure and interactions, such as chases and sequences involving a puzzle and bootleg liquor. Traditional rostrum camera setups facilitated the multiplane-like layering of cels over the live-action plates for final . Compositing relied on optical printing methods available in 1925, printing separate negatives of the live-action and together, leveraging the black backdrop to mask and integrate elements without advanced matting. This labor-intensive process, conducted at the Disney Brothers Studio, prioritized exaggerated —such as elastic deformations and impossible feats—contrasting with the naturalistic live-action to heighten comedic effect, while maintaining through meticulous frame matching.

Cast and Filmmaking

The live-action portrayal of Alice was performed by child actress Margie Gay, who succeeded in the role for this entry in the series. The animated characters, including and the debut of Bootleg Pete (an early iteration of the recurring antagonist Pete), had no voice actors as the short was a produced during the pre-sound era of . Directed by , the production took place at the Disney Brothers Studio in , with overseeing both the live-action filming and integration. Key was handled by , Rollin Hamilton, and Thurston Harper, who contributed to the hand-drawn sequences depicting the cartoon animals' antics. Filmmaking employed the series' characteristic hybrid technique, where live-action footage of Gay was captured against a plain backdrop, then composited with animated elements using optical printing processes available in to create interactions between the human character and cartoon figures. This method allowed for rudimentary but innovative blending, as seen in scenes where animated Pete bootlegs to Julius amid Prohibition-era references, though such content led to later . The short, running approximately seven minutes, was distributed by M.J. Winkler and released on , 1925.

Plot

Alice and her cat Julius spend an afternoon at the beach, where Alice attempts to solve a challenging crossword puzzle but becomes frustrated and stuck on a clue. Julius urges her to abandon the puzzle and join him for a swim in the ocean. Bootleg Pete, depicted as a peg-legged bootlegger and collector of rare crossword puzzles, observes Alice's puzzle from afar and schemes to acquire it. Pete approaches and plies Julius with intoxicating liquor hidden in a bottle, rendering the cat temporarily incapacitated and drunk. With Julius out of commission, Pete tries to seize the puzzle directly from Alice, leading to a chase and confrontation on the beach. Julius eventually sobers up, regains his composure, and assists Alice in resisting Pete's advances through and animated antics, ultimately thwarting the and sending Pete fleeing. The short concludes with successfully completing the puzzle after the ordeal.

Characters

Alice

Alice, the central human character in the 1925 short Alice Solves the Puzzle, is portrayed by child actress Margie Gay in her debut as the role within the series. Appearing as a young girl dressed in period-appropriate swimwear, is depicted relaxing at the seashore with her animated companion Julius, initially focused on solving a difficult puzzle. Her puzzlement over a specific clue—a three-letter word—highlights her determination amid the leisurely beach setting. The plot escalates when Bootleg Pete, an animated and collector of rare puzzles, identifies Alice's as a missing piece from his assortment and schemes to steal it. To facilitate the theft, Pete plies Julius with intoxicating , temporarily incapacitating the cat and leaving Alice to confront the threat. Alice's live-action integration into the animated environment underscores the hybrid technique of the , where she navigates cartoon logic and . Though Julius ultimately recovers and pursues Pete in a chase sequence, Alice's presence drives the narrative as the puzzle's owner and the catalyst for the conflict, embodying the series' theme of a real-world adventuring in a whimsical animated . This portrayal marks a transition in the series, with replacing as , bringing a fresh interpretation to the character's plucky and inquisitive persona.

Julius the Cat

Julius the Cat is Walt Disney's first named animated character, an anthropomorphic feline who served as the primary animated protagonist in the series from 1924 to 1927. Created by Disney and as an imitation of the popular , Julius featured black fur, a white face, and expressive eyes, enabling versatile gags central to the hybrid live-action and format. His design emphasized a cheerful, mischievous personality, often deploying his tail as a multi-tool—functioning as a club, spring, or improvised weapon—to drive comedic action and resolve conflicts. In the , Julius acted as Alice's loyal sidekick and rescuer, appearing in over 50 shorts where he navigated animated worlds filled with hazards, frequently battling antagonists to protect her. His resourcefulness and physical prowess highlighted early animation's focus on inventive humor over dialogue, predating more famous characters like . The character evolved from unnamed cats in Disney's prior Laugh-O-Gram shorts, such as (1922), but gained prominence and naming—officially as Julius in Alice’s Egg Plant (1925)—to meet distributor demands for engaging visual comedy. Within Alice Solves the Puzzle, released on February 15, 1925, Julius plays a pivotal role alongside live-action Alice (portrayed by ), who struggles with a puzzle at the . When Bootleg Pete, the bear-like villain in his screen debut, attempts to seize the puzzle, Julius intervenes decisively, employing his tail as a spring to launch and smack Pete off a tower, thwarting the theft and underscoring his combative ingenuity against recurring foes. This confrontation marks the first on-screen rivalry between Julius and Pete, establishing a dynamic of physical antagonism that influenced later character interactions.

Bootleg Pete

Bootleg Pete serves as the primary antagonist in the 1925 short Alice Solves the Puzzle, marking the screen debut of the character Pete on February 15, 1925. Depicted as a large anthropomorphic cat with a and pirate-like demeanor, he embodies a menacing bootlegger figure reflective of the era. His name directly alludes to the illegal production and smuggling of alcohol, which is incorporated into his characterization through a scene where he conceals whiskey in a bird's to bypass a . In the plot, Bootleg Pete operates as a obsessive collector of rare puzzles, viewing Alice's possession as the missing piece in his assortment. He arrives at the beach via a commandeered , confronts Alice and her companion , and resorts to kidnapping Alice to seize the puzzle. This aggressive pursuit drives the central conflict, with Julius ultimately thwarting Pete's scheme through inventive gags, such as transforming into a giant to rescue Alice. Bootleg Pete's actions highlight early experimentation with villainous archetypes, blending humor with peril in the hybrid live-action and format. As Pete's inaugural incarnation, Bootleg Pete establishes the character's recurring role as a cunning, physically imposing foe across multiple , including subsequent shorts like Alice Gets Stage Struck later in . His design, animated by , features exaggerated bulk, a snarling expression, and rudimentary peg-leg prosthetics that foreshadow evolutions in later depictions, though the 1925 version retains a raw, silent-era simplicity without spoken dialogue. The bootlegging motif, while censored in some releases for moral boards, underscores the era's cultural tensions around alcohol prohibition, positioning Pete as a satirical nod to real-world illicit trade.

Release and Reception

Initial Release

"Alice Solves the Puzzle" premiered theatrically on February 15, 1925, distributed by M.J. Winkler Productions to cinemas in the United States. The short, produced by Disney Brothers Studio under Walt Disney's direction, ran approximately seven minutes and continued the hybrid live-action and animation format of the series, which had debuted theatrically in 1924. As the fifteenth installment, it followed the established distribution model of weekly or bi-weekly releases to independent theaters, targeting family audiences with its comedic scenarios involving a live child actress interacting with characters. Winkler, who had secured exclusive rights to the series in 1923, handled promotion and booking, ensuring broad availability without major studio backing from outlets like Paramount or Universal. No specific premiere venue or attendance figures are documented for this entry, consistent with the modest rollout typical of early independent animation shorts during the silent era.

Contemporary Reviews

Motion Picture News listed "Alice Solves the Puzzle" as a one-reel distributed by M.J. Winkler in its May-June 1925 issue, categorizing it among short subjects emphasizing and novelty. This placement aligned with the broader promotional context for the series, which publications advertised for their mix of live-action sequences and animated gags, appealing to exhibitors seeking varied program fillers. The short's plot, centered on a crossword puzzle contest amid Prohibition-era bootlegging antics, tapped into the contemporaneous fad for s, which gained widespread traction in U.S. newspapers following their modern invention in and explosive popularity by 1924-1925. Exhibitors Herald noted the cultural buzz around puzzles in early 1925, indirectly underscoring the timeliness of Disney's gag-driven narrative, though specific critiques of the film's execution remain sparse in preserved records. Overall, reception mirrored the series' reputation for technical innovation in blending live child actress Margie Gay with drawn characters like Julius the Cat, distinguishing it from rivals such as Pat Sullivan's Felix cartoons; the absence of adverse commentary in trade listings suggests adequate audience draw for a routine short, supporting the series' continuation through 1927.

Legacy and Impact

Pete's Role in Disney History

Pete, also known as Peg-Leg Pete or Black Pete, made his debut in the Walt Disney-produced Alice Comedies short Alice Solves the Puzzle on February 15, 1925, as the antagonist Bootleg Pete. In this film, he is depicted as a surly cat-like bootlegger who plies Julius the Cat with liquor to facilitate stealing Alice's crossword puzzle, embodying a Prohibition-era thug archetype that reflected contemporary cultural tensions. This appearance predates the debut of Mickey Mouse by nearly three years and Oswald the Lucky Rabbit's primary antagonist role, positioning Pete as Disney's earliest recurring villain and the studio's longest continuously active animated character, with appearances spanning over 99 years into modern media as of 2025. Created by and during the experimental phase of the —a hybrid live-action/animation series produced between 1923 and 1927—Pete's design drew from bully tropes, featuring a bulky frame, , and menacing demeanor that contrasted with the more whimsical protagonists. His role in Alice Solves the Puzzle established core traits such as physical intimidation and scheming opportunism, which persisted across 10 Alice shorts, cartoons starting in 1927, and series from 1928 onward, where he evolved into Mickey's arch-rival. Unlike one-off villains in earlier Disney works, Pete's recurrence allowed for character development, including shifts from bear-like to distinctly feline portrayals and voice acting by actors like in the 1930s. Pete's historical significance lies in bridging Disney's pre-Mickey experimental era to its flagship characters, influencing the studio's as a relatable rather than a fantastical monster. He appeared in over 100 shorts and features by the , often as a steamboat captain, rancher, or , and his adaptability ensured survival through shifts in styles, from black-and-white silents to color and CGI revivals in films like Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas (1999). This endurance underscores Disney's early emphasis on reusable , with Pete outlasting many contemporaries due to his generic yet versatile menace, though his bootlegging origins in Alice Solves the Puzzle highlight the era's socio-legal context without moralizing, aligning with the shorts' comedic focus over didacticism.

Influence on Animation

"Alice Solves the Puzzle," released on February 15, 1925, introduced Peg-Leg Pete (also known as Bootleg Pete), Disney's oldest recurring character and a prototype for enduring animated antagonists whose brutish design and opportunistic villainy persisted across decades of shorts, influencing the archetype of the bumbling yet persistent foe in early sound-era cartoons like those featuring Mickey Mouse. Pete's debut as a crossword puzzle collector turned bootlegger antagonist demonstrated early experimentation with culturally topical humor tied to Prohibition-era America, setting a precedent for integrating real-world social commentary into character-driven comedy without relying solely on slapstick. As part of the series, the short advanced hybrid animation techniques by live-action performances—here, Dawn O'Day as Alice—with Ub ' hand-drawn elements, such as and Pete, over static or minimally animated backgrounds; this approach reduced production costs while creating a novel interplay between human realism and cartoon exaggeration, techniques that honed Disney's staff skills and informed the studio's transition to fully animated series like . The method's success in engaging audiences with seamless interaction, as seen in sequences where animated characters manipulate live props like the puzzle, contributed to the broader industry's exploration of mixed-media formats, though Disney refined it toward greater fluidity in subsequent works. The short's stylistic flourishes, including exaggerated animated text for sound effects and action emphasis (e.g., "Ouch!" or "Boom!"), became hallmarks of Disney's visual storytelling, bridging silent-era constraints with proto-dialogue cues that enhanced pacing and humor, influencing the rhythmic integration of visuals and implied narrative beats in emerging talkies. While derivative of Felix the Cat's elastic physics in Iwerks' animation of Julius and Pete, the short's focus on character motivation—Pete's greed driving conflict—prioritized causal personality over pure gags, subtly advancing narrative-driven animation amid competitors' gag-heavy formulas.

Historical Significance of Prohibition Elements

The Prohibition elements in Alice Solves the Puzzle, released on February 15, 1925, center on the antagonist Bootleg Pete, whose name and actions directly evoke the illegal alcohol trade that proliferated under the 18th Amendment, ratified in January 1919 and enforced via the Volstead Act starting January 17, 1920. By 1925, bootlegging had evolved into a multibillion-dollar underground economy, sustaining speakeasies estimated at 30,000 to 100,000 in New York City alone and empowering criminal networks that supplied demand unmet by the nationwide ban, which reduced legal alcohol consumption but displaced it to hazardous homemade distillates often laced with toxins like methanol. Pete's portrayal as a bear piloting a seagull to pursue Alice's crossword puzzle—while his "bootleg" alias nods to smuggling liquor—integrates this era's criminal archetype into animation, reflecting how Prohibition transformed ordinary vice into organized defiance, with federal arrests for alcohol violations surging to over 7,000 annually by the mid-1920s. Uncensored versions of the short included explicit bootlegging sequences, such as Pete providing illicit "hooch" that intoxicates , mirroring real-world incidents where denatured industrial alcohol, rerouted for consumption, caused an estimated 11,700 deaths from poisoning between 1926 and 1933. These depictions led to intervention by the State Board of Censors, which mandated cuts to excise scenes glamorizing or detailing prohibited activities, establishing an early precedent for state oversight of animated content amid broader moral campaigns against media that might undermine temperance ideals. The board's actions, rooted in Progressive-era efforts to shield youth from vice, underscore the causal ripple of into cultural regulation, where even whimsical cartoons faced scrutiny for echoing the ban's societal distortions—fostering black-market ingenuity over outright endorsement. This integration of Prohibition motifs signifies animation's emerging role as a mirror for causal , portraying bootlegging not as abstract but as a direct response to legislative overreach that criminalized a culturally entrenched commodity, previously supporting 250,000 legal jobs in brewing and distilling pre-1920. By embedding such elements, the short captures ' tension between enforced sobriety and rampant evasion, influencing character archetypes like Pete, whose bootlegger origins persisted in his evolution into Disney's longest-running villain, outlasting Mouse's 1928 debut. The censorship and thematic choices thus highlight early Hollywood's navigation of topical realism against institutional pressures, prefiguring stricter codes like Hays Office that curtailed depictions of crime and deviance.

Censorship and Editing

Original Content and Cuts

In the original version of Alice Solves the Puzzle, released on , 1925, the antagonist Bootleg Pete—Disney's earliest iteration of the Pete—employs bootlegged alcohol as a ploy to incapacitate and seize Alice's rare puzzle solution. Pete produces a bottle explicitly labeled "XXX," a common Prohibition-era euphemism for potent illicit liquor, which Julius consumes, resulting in visible intoxication: the cat staggers, slurs movements, and loses coordination, enabling Pete's attempted theft. This sequence underscored the film's satirical nod to bootlegging culture, portraying Pete as a cunning operator using contraband spirits amid the nationwide alcohol ban enforced from 1920 to 1933. The Pennsylvania State Board of Censors, vigilant against depictions that might glamorize or normalize violations, mandated the excision of this scene prior to the short's U.S. theatrical distribution, rendering Alice Solves the Puzzle among the first animated films subjected to official state-level cuts. complied by editing out the alcohol-related footage for domestic prints distributed through , while international versions escaped such alterations due to varying regulatory oversight abroad. The retained foreign content preserved the original's fuller thematic intent, blending live-action with animation to lampoon speakeasy-era excesses through anthropomorphic antics. Subsequent rediscovery of uncut elements occurred when film historian Russell Merritt analyzed a surviving German print, revealing the omitted sequence's details—including the "XXX" labeling and Julius's drunken escapades—absent from American restorations and home video releases. This edit not only sanitized the narrative but also diminished Pete's inaugural characterization as a bootlegger, shifting focus to his puzzle obsession in censored iterations, though the core plot of pursuit and resolution remained intact.

Discovery of Uncensored Versions

Film historian Russell Merritt identified an uncensored sequence in a surviving German print of Alice Solves the Puzzle, revealing content removed from American distributions. The additional footage depicts Bootleg Pete handing Julius a flask of illicit liquor, resulting in the cat's visible intoxication as Pete schemes to seize Alice's crossword puzzle. This Prohibition-era reference was excised following a directive from the Pennsylvania State Board of Censors, which required Disney to trim the scene prior to U.S. theatrical release on February 15, 1925, to avoid objections over depictions of alcohol consumption. Merritt's examination, conducted during research for the 1993 book Walt in Wonderland: The Silent Films of (co-authored with J.B. Kaufman), confirmed that foreign markets escaped such domestic regulatory pressures, preserving the original cut internationally. The discovery underscored the short's status as among the earliest animated subjected to significant editorial alterations for moral and legal compliance, with the German version providing direct evidence of the self-imposed cuts' scope. No precise date for Merritt's archival review has been publicly detailed, but it informed scholarly analyses of early production practices amid 1920s censorship norms.

References

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