Disney's girl next door exploring the star image of Annette Funicello /
Abstract (Summary)
Becca Cragin, Advisor
This thesis explores the cultural significance of actress and former Mouseketeer Annette
Funicello and the public perception that she embodies the social values of morality and chastity.
The catalyst of this study is the question of the source of Funicello’s popularity. Compared to
other stars, her acting is average and her singing flat, but her looks, personality, and careful
marketing positioned her as one of Walt Disney Studio’s biggest stars in the 1950s. This study
contends that examining cultural connotations of Funicello’s celebrity is the key to
understanding the root of Funicello’s popularity.
Using Richard Dyer’s concept of the star image, this study deconstructs Funicello’s
celebrity persona to uncover greater meaning in her cultural identity as a “girl next door.” An
analysis of teen-oriented magazine coverage of Funicello reveals that of the three components of
Dyer’s star image theory—success, ordinariness, and consumption—ordinariness is the most
prominent in Funicello’s star image. Funicello’s depiction of the character Annette McCleod
from the “Annette” serial stands as textual evidence of the calculated effort of Disney to
commodify the girl-next-door persona. In the early 1960s Disney loaned Funicello to American
International Pictures for a series of youth-oriented beach films in which Funicello played the
only chaste girl on a beach of promiscuous college students. The significance of Funicello’s role
in these films is analyzed through a historical lens that focuses on the influence that these more
adult roles had on her star image. Finally this thesis discusses how the Disney Channel markets
their modern day tween stars as the girl next door, using an extended comparison of actress
Hilary Duff and Funicello.
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This study finds that through the employment of the girl-next-door persona, Disney has
capitalized on their viewers’ yearning to imagine that they could be the stars they watch and
admire. Through textual analysis of her work on the 1950’s children’s show the Mickey Mouse
Club, her singing career, and her work in the beach party films of the 1960s, this study locates
Funicello as the personification of a larger Disney fantasy that is marketed and commodified
through most, if not all, of Disney products.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:Bowling Green State University
School Location:USA - Ohio
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:funicello annette teenage girls in motion pictures
ISBN:
Date of Publication: