Keeping Walt in Disney | Walt Disney's The Prince and the Pauper Part 1: "The Pauper King" Season 8 Ep 21 (Edited) @keepingwaltindisney | Uploaded April 2024 | Updated October 2024, 30 minutes ago.
From Season 8 of Walt Disney's Disneyland Anthology program we have Episode 21: The Prince and the Pauper Part 1: "The Pauper King" which originally aired on March 11th, 1962. The Prince and the Pauper is on Disney+ so we provide here Walt Disney's lead-in to the episode, a scene deleted from the television broadcast, Walt's lead-out and the closing credits.
DELETED SCENES from theatrical release (timing is based on Disney+ release, timing in parentheses is timing of this video):
At 31:55 (Disney+) (4:17, this video) Lord Hertford informs the King that the Great Seal of England is missing.
The Prince and the Pauper is Mark Twain's timeless story of a poor English boy who trades places with a prince. It was presented in three parts in 1962 on The Wonderful World of Color. This particular upload is from April 16th, 1967. The Prince and the Pauper was released theatrically in 1962. It starts Guy Williams, Laurence Naismith, Sean Scully and Donald Houston.
From Season 8 of Walt Disney's Disneyland Anthology program we have Episode 21: The Prince and the Pauper Part 1: "The Pauper King" which originally aired on March 11th, 1962. The Prince and the Pauper is on Disney+ so we provide here Walt Disney's lead-in to the episode, a scene deleted from the television broadcast, Walt's lead-out and the closing credits.
DELETED SCENES from theatrical release (timing is based on Disney+ release, timing in parentheses is timing of this video):
At 31:55 (Disney+) (4:17, this video) Lord Hertford informs the King that the Great Seal of England is missing.
The Prince and the Pauper is Mark Twain's timeless story of a poor English boy who trades places with a prince. It was presented in three parts in 1962 on The Wonderful World of Color. This particular upload is from April 16th, 1967. The Prince and the Pauper was released theatrically in 1962. It starts Guy Williams, Laurence Naismith, Sean Scully and Donald Houston.