Shrek is the Mickey Mouse of DreamWorks.

I'm always like Mickey Mouse with tattoos.

I literally have Mickey Mouse tattooed on me.

I'm Mickey Mouse. They don't know who's inside the suit.

I even done a doo-wop version of the Mickey Mouse march.

I love Mickey Mouse more than any woman I have ever known.

I played in rhumba bands, mickey mouse bands; all kinds of bands.

I'm a Disney fan. Like, seriously, if I see Mickey Mouse, I light up.

Las Vegas without Wayne Newton is like Disneyland without Mickey Mouse.

I'd vote for Mickey Mouse before I voted for John McCain and Sarah Palin.

I still don't know precisely why The Mickey Mouse Club ended when it did.

Kids, adults, men, women, everybody has a relationship with Mickey Mouse.

Mickey Mouse is, to me, a symbol of independence. He was a means to an end.

My dear friend Jimmie Dodd was the heart and the soul of The Mickey Mouse Club.

I've raced at the Hungaroring in Formula 3, and it's a bit of a Mickey Mouse track.

Mickey Mouse to me means safety, comfort and tradition. A general wash of happiness.

I adored Mickey Mouse when I was a child. He was the emblem of happiness and funniness.

I wasn't a trained Mickey Mouse club performer. I played in jazz clubs and restaurants.

The image we have would be impossible for Mickey Mouse to maintain. We're just... normal people.

Wayne was my hero. He really loved doing Mickey Mouse and was very proud that he did it 32 years.

My Mickey Mouse ears were given to me by a dear friend. They remind me of how I need to be silly.

Of the many guests we welcomed to the Mickey Mouse Club, my absolute favorites were the Lennon Sisters.

When people laugh at Mickey Mouse, it's because he's so human; and that is the secret of his popularity.

I do what I do because of Walt Disney. Goofy. Mickey Mouse. I never forgot how their films entertained me.

That was real baseball. We weren't playing for money. They gave us Mickey Mouse watches that ran backwards.

I grew up watching Mickey Mouse and going to Disney World, like, 2,000 times. Mickey Mouse is like my guru.

The original Mickey Mouse Club, established in the '30s, was designed to attract children to movie theaters.

I have a paper, pencil, and ink sketch for a Mickey Mouse cartoon short entitled 'Mickey's Garden' from 1935.

Michael has a connection with children, just like Mickey Mouse does, and he brings happiness to them, and joy.

When you say 'comic book' in America, people think of Mickey Mouse, and Archie. It has a connotation of juvenile.

Mickey Mouse did not stay the little squeaky guy in 'Steamboat Willie.' He went on to have many different versions.

America has the best athletic programs. Even when the Soviet Union existed, that was Mickey Mouse compared to the U.S.

Most original viewers of the Mickey Mouse Club didn't face the crush of family and social problems children have today.

There was a period of time when they estimated the two biggest stars in Hollywood were Charlie Chaplin and Mickey Mouse.

Mickey Mouse... is always there-he's part of my life. That really is something not everyone can call their claim to fame.

There's a brand, Mr. Bubble, that is sometimes called other things, like Mickey Mouse or other names. That's the stuff I use.

What about Mickey Mouse? Disney tried very hard to make him a star. But Mickey Mouse is more of a symbol than a real character.

Whether it's as the hero of an adventure story, as teacher and friend, as icon on watch, shirt or hat - everyone knows Mickey Mouse.

Americans are obsessed with wild, outlandish things. Marilyn Monroe, Mickey Mouse, and Michael Jackson are all wild, outlandish things.

I have two young kids. So my VCR, like, you kind of have to sift through a lot of, like, 'Animal Mechanicals,' 'Mickey Mouse Clubhouse.'

Shamu the killer whale is Sea World's Mickey Mouse; whales named Shamu are the star attractions of three parks and the focus of their marketing efforts.

Even in China. Children there, next to the Great Wall, who had never seen Mickey Mouse responded. So the studio did have that skill to communicate with images.

Finding your place as an artist is the hardest thing. You come out of college with what feels like a Mickey Mouse degree that qualifies you for nothing in the real world.

I went to Bali, and I was in a small village, and somebody who was with me showed a woman a little figurine of Bart and asked: 'Do you know who this is?' And she said: 'Mickey Mouse.'

I am generally a nostalgic person and super into the pop culture that I grew up on - I've got a framed ALF poster above my bed and a Mickey Mouse poster, and I've got this big VHS collection.

When I was on the 'Mickey Mouse Club,' there was Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake and Ryan Gosling and Christine Aguilera. But they were 12 and I was 17, so there was a bit of an age difference.

All the children had to wear a gas mask in case of a gas attack by the Germans. They tried to make the masks like Mickey Mouse faces so the children would like them. But I didn't. They had big ears on them.

As far as the timing, well, I'd write that off to luck as much as anything - I happened to be out looking for a development deal, and Disney happened to think my team and I might be the right people to make a Mickey Mouse game.

Mickey Mouse popped out of my mind onto a drawing pad 20 years ago on a train ride from Manhattan to Hollywood at a time when business fortunes of my brother Roy and myself were at lowest ebb and disaster seemed right around the corner.

I watching this Disney documentary, and I'm not Disney, but I was thinking about Mickey Mouse and he became an icon. Walt moved onto other things but he made him exist. I was thinking, 'Wow, is 'Samurai Jack' my 'Mickey Mouse?' Am I stupid to stop working on it?'

Share This Page