Ray Charles Singing “Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah” with Bre’r Rabbit Unearthed

August 13, 2022  ·
  W. D. W. Pro

A video has surfaced featuring one of the greatest African American singers of all time performing a movie Disney now deems irrelevant.

 

The mainstream media has all followed along with former Disney CEO Bob Iger’s narrative that Song of the South is so problematic that it must be hidden. The movie was Walt Disney’s attempt to create a children’s film that could feature a lead African American male actor all the way back in the 1940’s. Think of it as Walt’s Jackie Robinson attempt for children’s movies. But because the movie does not represent the post-slavery south in the very harsh manner which was reality, it has been deemed unworthy of ever being displayed by modern Disney and their cohorts. This has led to one of the last living descendants of the movies’ stars seeking help to save the film for historical record… and thus saving the legacy of the African American stars who worked on the film.

One might wonder how long it will be before Martin Luther King Jr is no longer acceptable. It seems that as time goes on, those who pushed society forward are deemed less and less “relevant” even to the point of being hidden. It was just last year that Disneyland declared the Song of the South and Splash Mountain anthem, Zip-a-dee-doo-dah, an “irrelevant” musical piece. Thus it has been removed from Disney Parks’ soundtracks. That in spite of it being sung by the first African American man to ever win an Oscar and the song itself having won an Oscar.

It may be that in our rush to cleanse the past of that which doesn’t rise to some of our standards, we’re erasing the pioneers who made the world far better.

So it is that a video of musician Ray Charles singing Zip-a-dee-doo-dah has emerged on Twitter. Ray Charles is widely credited as one of the greatest musicians in American history. And as an African American man who pushed the world farther and farther into desegregation, it’s something to see him happily praising and singing the same song that James Baskett sang fifty years before him. If the song wasn’t offensive in the least to people like Ray Charles, what in the world has changed today? Why are we erasing the music and the history of African Americans who made such important strides in our world? It is a very sad loss for African American history.

Of course, not everyone feels that way. Some try to tie the song to minstrel lyrics:

Disney wisely has buried its 1946 live action and animated film — it’s one of the few Disney classics you won’t find on Disney+. Whether author Joel Chandler Harris meant for his Uncle Remus stories to be respectful representations of 19th century Black folklore is irrelevant. Racism fueled their popularity. And even if Disney tried to disassociate Brer Rabbit and friends from “Song of the South,” Splash Mountain’s “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah” theme song cannot escape its racist origin as the lyric of a minstrel song that included a racial slur in its title.

— Robert Niles, Theme Park Insider / OC Register

However, Disney historian, Jim Korkis has gone on the record that the song’s title was invented entirely by Walt himself as he enjoyed nonsense phrases in his company’s songs ala Bibbidi Bobbidi Boo.

In my opinion, if it was good enough for the great Ray Charles, it’s good enough to be around and embraced for generations to come.

 

Anyway, that’s how I feel about the topic. What do you think? Let me know in the comments below. And as always, keep reading That Park Place for all the latest news that should be fun!

Author: W. D. W. Pro
Founder, Publisher, CEO WDW Pro is an opinionated commentator on all things Disney and Entertainment. He runs one of the most-viewed pop culture news channels on YouTube with many millions of views every month. First becoming well-known on WDWMagic.com, the author was brought on to work at Pirates and Princesses. Pro has previously released exclusive details on a variety of rumors and leaks before they were made public. Some exclusives have included breaking info on new Epcot attractions, detailing the light saber experience at the Star Wars hotel, reporting a Harrison Ford injury severity before anyone else, revealing Hugh Jackman was coming to the MCU, Storm would be linked with Wakanda and more. WDW Pro has written articles viewed by millions of readers while maintaining an 87% accuracy rating for revealing "insider" information in 2020. In 2021, the author had a better than 90% accuracy on reported leaks and rumors. Pro joined That Park Place on June 22nd, 2021. The author's accolades include being featured on The Daily Wire, cited by Timcast, numerous references by YouTube personalities, as well as having material tweeted by Dr. Jordan Peterson. WDW Pro is honored, and grateful, while hoping to make the world a better place. In 2023, a third party audit found Pro's accuracy for rumors and scoops to be 92.5%. SOCIAL MEDIA: X: http://x.com/wdwpro1 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@WDW_Pro EMAIL: wdwpro@thatparkplace.com
Join the Conversation
Subscribe
Notify of
7 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Anonymous

I appreciate that you’re trying to make a campaign to save Song Of The South and Splash Mountain, but even if Bob Chapek fired the evil Reimagine Tomorrow and the Story Matters group, I don’t know if Splash Mountain will be saved or not. But since I’m supporting it a little bit, I hope I’m wrong.?

Q*Bert

Equating MLK with Song of the South is one of the most hilarious things I’ve ever seen on the internet.

Walt

That’s because your immature gut reaction and lack of knowledge on how and why this film was developed is completely lacking. You act as though this is a minstrel show. In fact Disney SAW that black actors were being ignored by Hollywood and found a vehicle (Uncle Remus) in line with his animation talents. I am so tired of ignorant woke elitists who know nothing and in fact are fascists condemning the creative work of a group of white and black talent coming together. Your ignorance and totalitarian desires are disgusting and antithetical to what the United States stand for. Please – if the United States is so terribly racist – please leave – so the rest of us can live in peace.

Q*Bert

What an unhinged response. Dude somehow equated a company distancing itself from a movie that has been highly controversial for its entire 76 year history with the absurd idea of “cancelling” the most important civil rights leader in our history. Hyperbole’s all well and good but this is truly off the charts nonsense, and I don’t get the sense he was even going for hyperbole to begin with. And then your hair-trigger rage over stuff I never even said is almost as ridiculous as what WDW Pro wrote.

walt

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11D6AVD3gAI

Louise Armstrong singing it too – what a racist….

Q*Bert

I would love to see where anybody, anywhere, has said that everybody who ever sang “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah” is racist. Until then I’ll just have to assume y’all are arguing with people you’ve made up in your head, as partisans and ideologues so often do.