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Lady and the Tramp (1955)

7.1 | Jun 22, 1955 (US) | Family, Animation, Romance | 01:16
Budget: 4 000 000 | Revenue: 36 359 037

She's from the leash and license set... he's footloose and collar free!

Lady, a golden cocker spaniel, meets up with a mongrel dog who calls himself the Tramp. He is obviously from the wrong side of town, but happenings at Lady's home make her decide to travel with him for a while.

Featured Crew

Director
Director
Director
Producer
Animation, Animation Director
Animation
Visual Effects
Lyricist, Songs
Story
Animation, Animation Director

Cast

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Barbara Luddy
Lady (voice)
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Larry Roberts
Tramp (voice)
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Peggy Lee
Darling / Si / Am / Peg (voice)
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Bill Thompson
Jock / Bull / Policeman at Zoo / Dachsie / Joe (voice)
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Bill Baucom
Trusty (voice)
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Stan Freberg
Beaver (voice)
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Verna Felton
Aunt Sarah (voice)
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Alan Reed
Boris (voice)
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George Givot
Tony (voice)
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Dal McKennon
Toughy / Professor / Pedro (voice)

Lady and the Tramp Collection

Reviews

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Andre Gonzales
5 | Jul 08, 2023
I'm not into animation. It's a good romance story. I'm not really into watching dogs fall in love. Although it is cute,but not interested in ever watching this again.
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CinemaSerf
7 | Nov 14, 2022
One of the more endearing stories Walt Disney gave his magical animation treatment to. Based on a story that originally appeared in "Cosmopolitan" it tells the story of a molly-coddled spaniel "Lady" who finds her comfortable life completely trashed by the arrival of a baby to her owners and of two clever Siamese cats that belong to "Aunt Sarah" in her home. Before she knows it; she has a nice new muzzle and has run away to the zoo with local grifter "Tramp". The dogs embark on a series of fun, sometime perilous, adventures and slowly fall in puppy-love. The characterisations are amongst the studio's best - especially the beaver, and "Jock" the aptly named wee Highland terrier. It is simple, if a little over-scripted, and there are great songs "He's a Tramp" and "We are Siamese, if you Please" amongst the more memorable. The animations are a little static at times, but it's still up there as a genuinely enchanting piece of cinema.