Bedknobs and Broomsticks
Bedknobs and Broomsticks is a 1971 American live-action/animated musical fantasy film produced by Walt Disney Productions and directed by Robert Stevenson.[1] The story follows Eglantine Price, an apprentice witch portrayed by Angela Lansbury, who takes in three children evacuated from London during World War II and embarks with them on magical travels via an enchanted bed, ultimately seeking a spell to repel Nazi invaders from the British coast.[1] Adapted from Mary Norton's children's novels The Magic Bed-Knob; or, How to Become a Witch in Ten Easy Lessons (1943) and Bonfires and Broomsticks (1947), the screenplay by Bill Walsh and Don DaGradi expands the source material with original songs by the Sherman Brothers and sequences blending live-action with animation, including visits to fantastical realms like an undersea kingdom and an island of talking animals.[2] Released on December 13, 1971, the film earned critical praise for its technical achievements, particularly in visual effects, securing the Academy Award for Best Special Visual Effects while receiving nominations for Best Original Song, Best Original Score, Best Art Direction, and Best Costume Design.[3] Often compared to Disney's earlier success Mary Poppins due to shared creative personnel, Bedknobs and Broomsticks exemplifies the studio's post-Walt era efforts to sustain family-oriented fantasy amid wartime themes, grossing over $21 million domestically upon initial release despite a protracted production involving location shooting in England and extensive post-production animation.[3]Plot Summary
Synopsis
In August 1940, amid the London Blitz, three orphaned siblings—Charlie (aged 11), Carrie (10), and Paul (5) Rawlins—are evacuated to the rural village of Pepperinge Eye, England, and billeted with the reclusive spinster Eglantine Price, who is secretly studying witchcraft through a correspondence course to contribute to the British war effort against Nazi Germany.[4] Miss Price, portrayed as an eccentric but determined amateur witch, confides in the children about her magical pursuits and enchants a bedknob from their lodging's brass bed, enabling the bed to travel instantaneously to any location via a spell requiring the incantation of a destination's name.[4] Seeking the incomplete spell for "Substitutiary Locomotion"—which animates inanimate objects—the group travels to London, where they locate Professor Emelius Browne, a charismatic but fraudulent magician who had recruited Miss Price into witchcraft under false pretenses and possesses the first half of the required spellbook, Spells of Astoroth.[4] Pursued by a German spy interested in their magic, they journey via the enchanted bed to the fictional African island of Naboombu, an animated realm inhabited by anthropomorphic animals, including a lion king who awards them the Star of Astoroth medallion containing the spell's missing text after a chaotic soccer match.[4] Returning to Pepperinge Eye, the spell is tested on local artifacts, but when Nazi paratroopers invade the village under cover of night, Miss Price activates the full incantation on suits of armor, household items, and museum exhibits in the nearby Alderman's mansion, creating an army of animated defenders that routs the invaders and secures the spell's official pardon for emergency wartime use.[4] Browne enlists in the military, while the children retain the bedknob for potential future escapades.[4]Cast and Characters
Live-Action Roles
Angela Lansbury portrayed Miss Eglantine Price, an eccentric apprentice witch residing in the village of Pepperinge Eye who corresponds with a magic school and seeks to aid Britain's war effort against Nazi invaders through spellcraft.[5] David Tomlinson played Emelius Browne, a charismatic but fraudulent magician and headmaster of the correspondence course from which Price learns, who becomes an unlikely ally in her magical endeavors.[4] The orphaned Rawlins siblings—Charlie (Ian Weighill), the skeptical eldest; Carrie (Cindy O'Callaghan), the optimistic middle child; and Paul (Roy Snart), the youngest with a penchant for toys—arrive as evacuees from London and are billeted with Price, drawing her into adventures involving enchanted travel.[6] Roddy McDowall appeared as Reverend Rowan Jelk, the local vicar who provides comic relief and interacts with the protagonists amid wartime suspicions of witchcraft.[7] Sam Jaffe depicted the Bookman, a grizzled antiquarian who assists in locating a crucial spellbook containing the "Substitutiary Locomotion" incantation.[5] Supporting roles included John Ericson as Colonel Heller, a German commandant leading an invasion force, and Bruce Forsyth as the tour guide during the Portobello Road sequence.[8]| Actor | Role | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Angela Lansbury | Miss Eglantine Price | Apprentice witch determined to use magic against wartime threats.[5] |
| David Tomlinson | Emelius Browne | Fraudulent magician and correspondence course instructor.[4] |
| Ian Weighill | Charlie Rawlins | Eldest evacuated child, initially distrustful of adults.[6] |
| Cindy O'Callaghan | Carrie Rawlins | Middle sibling, adaptable and resourceful.[6] |
| Roy Snart | Paul Rawlins | Youngest child, innocent and toy-obsessed.[6] |
| Roddy McDowall | Reverend Rowan Jelk | Village clergyman suspicious of unconventional activities.[7] |
| Sam Jaffe | Bookman | Elderly scholar aiding in magical research.[5] |
Animated and Voice Roles
The film's animated sequences, particularly the adventure on the Isle of Naboombu, featured anthropomorphic animal characters voiced by a small ensemble of actors, emphasizing the whimsical and royal hierarchy of the island's inhabitants. These voices brought to life talking beasts capable of speech, soccer, and courtly intrigue, contrasting with the live-action portions.[9] King Leonidas, the anthropomorphic lion serving as the pompous ruler of Naboombu, was voiced by Lennie Weinrib, whose booming delivery underscored the character's regal yet irritable demeanor during the soccer match and spell quest.[9] The Secretary Bird, acting as the king's bureaucratic aide, received its prim, efficient tones from veteran Disney voice artist Dallas McKennon (also credited as Dal McKennon), known for roles in numerous animated features.[9] Additional animated denizens included the Fisherman Bear, portrayed with gruff humor by McKennon in a dual role, handling fishing and crowd scenes amid the island's chaos.[9] David Tomlinson, who played live-action lead Emelius Browne, also provided the voice for Secundus, a supporting animal figure in Naboombu interactions, blending his character's con-artist flair into the animation.[9] These performances, recorded in 1970-1971, supported the film's hybrid effects without dominating the narrative, as the animated voices primarily facilitated plot advancement in the spell-substitution sequence.[9]Production
Development from Books
The film Bedknobs and Broomsticks draws from two novels by English author Mary Norton: The Magic Bed-Knob; or, How to Become a Witch in Ten Easy Lessons, first published in 1943, and its sequel Bonfires and Broomsticks, published in 1947.[10][11] These works, centered on three children evacuated during World War II who encounter an amateur witch named Miss Price, were merged into a single volume titled Bed-Knob and Broomstick in 1957.[12] Walt Disney Productions secured the film rights to Norton's material soon after the initial book's release, with acquisition occurring by August 1945.[13] Development accelerated in the early 1960s amid delays in obtaining rights to P.L. Travers's Mary Poppins, prompting Disney to pivot to Norton's lesser-known but thematically similar tales of English wartime magic and whimsy.[14] The screenplay by Bill Walsh and Don DaGradi fused elements from both novels but introduced substantial deviations to suit a family musical format, including new characters like a anthropomorphic rabbit guide, elaborate song sequences (e.g., "Portobello Road" and "The Beautiful Briny"), and hybrid live-action/animation segments absent from the books.[15] Norton's plots emphasize domestic escapades, such as procuring a bedknob from a London charlatan for travel to an island of cannibals and resolving a local witch-hunt via broomstick chases; the film reimagines the island as a vibrant animal society inspired by evolutionary theory and culminates in Miss Price deploying magic against Nazi paratroopers invading the English coast—a wartime defense motif extrapolated beyond the source material's focus on personal discovery and mild mischief.[16][2] These alterations prioritized visual spectacle and patriotic resonance over the novels' quieter, more introspective tone, reflecting Disney's post-Mary Poppins strategy of blending live-action with animation for broader appeal.[17]Casting Decisions
Angela Lansbury was cast as the apprentice witch Eglantine Price after Julie Andrews, the studio's initial choice, declined the role; Andrews later reconsidered but found Lansbury already selected.[18] Other actresses considered included Leslie Caron and Lynn Redgrave, though Lansbury's selection was praised for capturing the character's reclusive eccentricity and determination more fittingly than a more polished performer might have.[18][19] David Tomlinson portrayed the con artist Emelius Browne, a role that diverged from his previous Disney characters like the upright Mr. Banks in Mary Poppins (1964), allowing him to explore a more roguish persona; Tomlinson, a frequent Disney collaborator, expressed enthusiasm for this contrast.[20] The child leads—Ian Weighill as Charlie Rawlins, Cindy O'Callaghan as Carrie Rawlins, and Roy Snart as Paul Rawlins—were non-professional actors selected through auditions overseen by Disney scouts, prioritizing natural performances over experience to evoke wartime evacuees' authenticity; Weighill, for instance, had prior minor exposure as an extra in David Copperfield (1969) but ceased acting post-production.[21][22] Supporting roles featured established performers like Roddy McDowall as the skeptical vicar Mr. Jelk and Tessie O'Shea as the boisterous Mrs. Hobday, chosen to balance the film's whimsical tone with grounded character interactions, though specific selection rationales beyond availability and prior credits remain undocumented in production records.[6]Filming Process
Principal photography for Bedknobs and Broomsticks commenced in early March 1970 at the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California, and concluded on June 10, 1970.[23] The majority of the film, including interior sets depicting the English village of Pepperinge Eye, London sequences such as Portobello Road, and the seaside home, was shot on soundstages to recreate the British setting amid World War II.[24] [22] Location shooting occurred in England for authenticity in exterior scenes, including Corfe Castle in Dorset standing in for the film's fictional castle and coastal views along the Seven Sisters cliffs in Sussex.[24] [25] Additional California exteriors, such as those simulating the Dorset coast with invading forces, were filmed near Ventura to supplement the UK footage.[26] The production mirrored the intermittent schedule of Mary Poppins, with frequent delays attributed to coordination of live-action elements that would later integrate with animation and special effects.[4] Working with child actors Roy MacArthur, Cindy O'Callaghan, and Ian Weighill required structured daily routines, including on-set schooling to comply with labor regulations, while lead Angela Lansbury performed extensive practical magic sequences involving props like the enchanted bedknob.[23] Director Robert Stevenson's oversight ensured continuity across the hybrid format, though the Burbank-based production occasionally strained efforts to capture period-specific British accents and wartime atmosphere without extensive travel.[22]Animation Techniques and Effects
The production of Bedknobs and Broomsticks integrated live-action footage with animation through the sodium vapor process, a matte compositing technique developed by Ub Iwerks at Disney Studios. This method employed a specialized yellow sodium-vapor screen illuminated by sodium lamps, captured via a three-strip Technicolor camera that isolated foreground elements from the uniform background wavelength, enabling seamless layering of multiple live-action passes and animated cels without the edge artifacts common in blue-screen processes.[27] The technique facilitated key sequences such as the flying bedknob traversals, where actors including Angela Lansbury and the child performers were filmed against the sodium screen and later composited into fantastical environments.[27] Animation sequences, directed by Ward Kimball, were concentrated on the Isle of Naboombu, featuring anthropomorphic animals in musical and athletic antics. Directing animator Milt Kahl designed the principal characters, emphasizing naturalistic acting, weight distribution in clothing, and species-specific movements—such as an elephant goalkeeper wielding its trunk or a cheetah's paws igniting from speed during the soccer match refereed by live-action actor David Tomlinson.[28] Enlarged character drawings by Kahl guided live-action performers during rehearsals to match animated timing and poses, ensuring visual continuity upon compositing via the sodium process.[28] The film's visual effects team, led by Eustace Lycett, applied the technique to the "substitutiary locomotion" spell, animating suits of armor and household objects to march; this combined sodium matting with practical wirework, puppetry, and costumed actors for wide establishing shots.[27] These innovations contributed to the film's Academy Award for Best Visual Effects at the 44th ceremony on April 10, 1972, awarded to Alan Maley, Eustace Lycett, and Danny Lee for their work in optical printing and matte artistry that blended disparate elements into a cohesive hybrid narrative.[29] The sodium vapor approach, refined from its debut in Mary Poppins (1964), represented Disney's pinnacle in pre-digital live-action/animation fusion, though it demanded precise lighting and limited flexibility compared to modern chroma keying.[27]Music and Songs
Composition and Original Score
The songs and incidental music for Bedknobs and Broomsticks were composed by Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman, known collectively as the Sherman Brothers, who specialized in crafting narrative-driven scores for Disney musicals following their Academy Award-winning work on Mary Poppins (1964).[30][31] Their contributions included thematic motifs that underscored the film's blend of wartime realism and fantastical elements, such as the march-like "The Old Home Guard" overture, which evoked British Home Guard drills during World War II.[32] Irwin Kostal, an experienced Disney collaborator, served as music supervisor, conductor, arranger, and orchestrator, adapting the Shermans' compositions into a full orchestral score that integrated live-action and animated sequences.[33][6] Kostal's arrangements amplified the score's whimsical yet tense atmosphere, employing brass and percussion for militaristic cues in scenes like the island of Naboombu and strings for magical flights, while ensuring seamless transitions between song reprises and underscoring.[34] His efforts earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Scoring: Adaptation and Original Song Score in 1972, recognizing the synthesis of original material with adapted elements.[33] The composition process occurred amid production challenges post-Walt Disney's death in 1966, with the Shermans refining themes through 1970 and 1971 to align with script revisions, including expanding motifs for animated segments like the soccer match.[35] This iterative approach maintained causal ties between music and plot progression, prioritizing empirical synchronization over stylistic flourishes, though some early concepts were curtailed due to budget constraints.[36]Key Songs and Sequences
"The Old Home Guard" serves as the film's opening musical number, performed by a chorus representing the British Home Guard during World War II, establishing the wartime setting in 1940 England with lyrics emphasizing civilian defense efforts.[32] It reappears in reprise during the climactic battle sequence against Nazi invaders, underscoring themes of resilience.[37] "The Age of Not Believing", a solo by Angela Lansbury as Eglantine Price, reflects the character's internal struggle with magic's reality amid skepticism, composed by the Sherman Brothers with a melancholic melody that highlights her apprentice witch's doubts.[32] This introspective piece, lasting approximately 3 minutes and 18 seconds in the soundtrack version, transitions into her determination to master spells for the war effort.[38] "Portobello Road" is an elaborate production number depicting a bustling London market, featuring diverse street performers, vendors, and dancers in a choreographed sequence that blends live-action with vibrant costumes and sets to evoke 1940s multiculturalism.[39] Sung by ensemble cast including David Tomlinson as Emelius Browne, it advances the plot as the children search for a magical bedknob, lasting over 7 minutes and showcasing the film's hybrid musical style.[40] "The Beautiful Briny" combines live-action with animation in an underwater fantasy sequence, where characters explore a mythical sea world with mermaids and marine life, performed by Tomlinson, Lansbury, and child actors Roy Smart, Cindy O'Callaghan, and Ian Weighill.[32] The song's whimsical lyrics and orchestration by Irwin Kostal facilitate the quest for a spell substitution, emphasizing escapism from wartime hardships.[41] "Substitutiary Locomotion", introduced as a spell incantation rather than a traditional song, drives the film's central magical sequence where inanimate objects are animated, leading to chaos and the journey to the animated island of Naboombu.[39] Performed amid practical effects and animation, it culminates in a sports game with animal athletes, blending humor and spectacle in the 1971 release's innovative effects.[38]Soundtrack Releases and Covers
The original motion picture soundtrack album for Bedknobs and Broomsticks was released on vinyl LP by Disneyland Records (STER-1326) in 1971, shortly before the film's premiere, compiling key songs and score segments composed by Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman under the musical direction of Irwin Kostal.[42] The album featured 10 tracks, including "Overture/The Old Home Guard" by the Home Guardsmen, "The Age of Not Believing" sung by Angela Lansbury, and "Portobello Road" with David Tomlinson and ensemble vocals, running approximately 31 minutes in stereo format. Some tracks, such as "With a Flair" and "A Step in the Right Direction," originated from scenes deleted from the final film cut but were retained on the recording.[34] An expanded compact disc edition, also titled Bedknobs and Broomsticks: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, was issued by Walt Disney Records (60784-7) on August 13, 2002, extending to 14 tracks and 38 minutes with restored and additional audio elements from the film's score. This version preserved the original performances while offering improved fidelity and broader availability through digital platforms like Apple Music, where it lists the same core selections alongside instrumental cues.[32] Cover versions of the film's songs appeared contemporaneously on licensed albums, reflecting the score's immediate cultural reach. The ensemble Living Voices released Music From Walt Disney Productions' "Bedknobs and Broomsticks" on RCA Victor in September 1971, adapting nine tracks including "The Beautiful Briny," "Portobello Road," and "Substitutiary Locomotion" in choral arrangements with orchestral backing.[43][44] British actress Beryl Reid contributed to a cover album featuring songs like "The Age of Not Believing" and "Eglantine," supported by Hugh Paddick and The Rita Williams Singers, which drew from deleted sequences to expand its selections.[34] These releases prioritized narrative medleys over strict fidelity to the film's versions, often incorporating promotional tie-in elements.Release and Distribution
Initial Theatrical Release
Bedknobs and Broomsticks premiered in the United Kingdom on October 7, 1971, during a charity event, with general release following on October 8.[45][46] The film reached the United States on December 13, 1971, distributed by Buena Vista Distribution Company under Walt Disney Productions.[1][5] The initial theatrical version ran 117 minutes, shortened from an original cut exceeding two hours to suit audience attention spans and runtime norms.[47] Rated G by the Motion Picture Association of America, it targeted family audiences amid competition from other holiday releases.[1]
In North America, the film's initial release generated $17.87 million in box office earnings, reflecting modest performance relative to its $6.3 million production budget and the studio's expectations for a post-Mary Poppins successor.[48] International rollout followed similar patterns, with early screenings in countries including Israel, India, and Mexico during 1971.[46] Promotional efforts emphasized the blend of live-action, animation, and musical elements, drawing on wartime nostalgia for British audiences while positioning it as whimsical escapism in the U.S.[45]
Restorations and Re-Releases
The film underwent a theatrical re-release in 1979, shortened to 97 minutes by excising most songs except "Portobello Road" and "The Beautiful Briny," along with other footage to streamline runtime for audiences.[49][45] This version prioritized action sequences over musical elements, reflecting Disney's strategy during the late 1970s to broaden appeal amid shifting market preferences for faster-paced family entertainment.[49] In 1996, marking the film's 25th anniversary, Disney restored it to nearly its original intended 139-minute length by reintegrating the majority of previously deleted scenes and musical content, drawing from surviving elements to reconstruct the narrative as closely as feasible to director Robert Stevenson's vision.[47] This version addressed earlier cuts made post-premiere, which had reduced the 1971 release from 141 minutes, and became the basis for subsequent home video editions emphasizing the full musical fantasy.[49] Later restorations included a 2001 digital remastering that preserved the extended cut but encountered criticism for audio synchronization issues in certain sequences, stemming from challenges in aligning original mono tracks with new stereo mixes.[50] The 2009 Enchanted Musical Edition further refined visuals and sound, incorporating high-definition transfers while retaining the reconstructed structure, though it did not introduce new footage.[51] No additional theatrical re-releases followed the 1979 version, with Disney favoring home media for preserving restored iterations.[45]Home Media and Availability
Bedknobs and Broomsticks was first released on VHS in the United States on March 4, 1980, marking one of Disney's early home video offerings. Subsequent VHS editions included a 1989 "Sorcerer Mickey" version and a 1991 Buena Vista reissue, with a 30th Anniversary Edition in 2001 featuring supplemental content like "Music Magic: The Sherman Brothers". A 25th Anniversary Special Edition appeared on LaserDisc in 1997. The film transitioned to DVD with the 30th Anniversary Edition in 2001, presented in remastered form. An Enchanted Musical Edition DVD followed on September 22, 2009, including restored and remastered visuals along with bonus features such as deleted song recreations. The Special Edition Blu-ray, utilizing a high-definition transfer, debuted on August 12, 2014, with enhanced audio and the 117-minute cut plus supplements like a featurette on the Sherman Brothers' score. Digital downloads and HD versions became available prior to the Blu-ray, with iTunes offering an extended cut in HD by 2014 based on the 2001 master. As of 2025, the film streams exclusively on Disney+ in most regions, typically featuring the standard theatrical edit, though some users report omissions of sequences like "With a Flair" compared to physical editions. It is also purchasable or rentable digitally on platforms including Amazon Video and Apple TV for $3.99 or higher, with physical Blu-ray and DVD copies distributed via partners like Sony Pictures Home Entertainment since February 2024.Reception and Performance
Box Office Results
Bedknobs and Broomsticks was released theatrically in the United States on October 7, 1971, by Walt Disney Productions following an earlier premiere in London.[48] The film earned a domestic box office gross of $17,871,174, which represented its total worldwide earnings as no significant international figures are recorded separately.[48] Produced at a cost of $20 million, the movie underperformed financially relative to its budget, exacerbating Walt Disney Productions' box office challenges in the post-Walt era amid rising production expenses for its hybrid live-action and animation format.[48][52] Despite the shortfall, it ranked ninth among the top-grossing films of 1971 in the domestic market.[53]Critical Reviews
Upon its release on December 13, 1971, Bedknobs and Broomsticks received mixed reviews from critics, who frequently compared it to Disney's earlier success Mary Poppins (1964) and noted its blend of live-action, animation, and musical elements as both a strength and a source of unevenness.[3] [54] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times awarded it 2.5 out of 4 stars, praising Angela Lansbury's charismatic performance as the apprentice witch Miss Price, the children's likable mischief, and the film's charming animated sequences, such as encounters in an animal-ruled kingdom, while critiquing its occasional lapses into formulaic Disney whimsy without the tighter narrative cohesion of its predecessor.[3] Vincent Canby of The New York Times described the film as a "tricky, cheerful, aggressively friendly Walt Disney fantasy for children," highlighting its inventive magical set pieces—like the bed traveling to fantastical locales—and Lansbury's engaging portrayal of an eccentric, spell-learning spinster, though he implied its aggressive amiability bordered on overreach in appealing to young audiences.[55] Variety offered a more enthusiastic assessment, stating that "the magic of Walt Disney lingers magnificently" in the production's technical achievements, including seamless live-action/animation integration and the rousing "Portobello Road" sequence, which showcased vibrant production design and choreography despite the film's sprawling 117-minute runtime.[54] Critics commonly lauded the special effects, which won an Academy Award for Best Visual Effects in 1972, and the score by the Sherman Brothers, but faulted the narrative for pacing issues and tonal shifts between wartime peril and lighthearted escapism.[3] [54] Retrospective analyses, aggregating 35 critic scores, reflect this divide with a 66% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, where reviewers appreciated the film's anti-invasion climax as a timely WWII allegory but noted its indulgence in extremes rendered it "unwieldy."[56] Modern commentators have increasingly valued its historical context, with some observers in 2021 emphasizing Lansbury's witch as a symbol of British resilience against fascism, though contemporary family-oriented critiques still point to dated elements like the children's occasionally bratty behavior disrupting emotional flow.[57]Awards and Nominations
At the 44th Academy Awards held on April 10, 1972, Bedknobs and Broomsticks received five nominations and secured one win for Best Special Visual Effects, awarded to Alan Maley, Eustace Lycett, and Danny Lee for their innovative integration of live-action footage with animated sequences, including the film's climactic battle scene.[58] The other nominations included Best Original Song for "The Age of Not Believing" (music by Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman, lyrics by Richard M. Sherman), Best Original Dramatic Score for Irwin Kostal's composition, Best Art Direction (John B. Mansbridge, Peter Ellenshaw, and others), and Best Film Editing for Cotton Warburton's work.[59]| Award | Category | Recipient(s) | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Academy Awards | Best Special Visual Effects | Alan Maley, Eustace Lycett, Danny Lee | Won |
| Academy Awards | Best Original Song ("The Age of Not Believing") | Richard M. Sherman, Robert B. Sherman | Nominated |
| Academy Awards | Best Original Dramatic Score | Irwin Kostal | Nominated |
| Academy Awards | Best Art Direction | John B. Mansbridge, Peter Ellenshaw, et al. | Nominated |
| Academy Awards | Best Film Editing | Cotton Warburton | Nominated |