The Lottery | |
Director: | Garry Marshall |
Producer: | Debra Hill |
Starring: | Bette Midler |
Music: | James Patrick Dunne |
Cinematography: | Billy Williams |
Studio: | The Walt Disney Company |
Distributor: | Walt Disney World |
Runtime: | 3 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
The Lottery is a 1989 American comedy short film starring Bette Midler and directed by Garry Marshall which was shown at the then Disney-MGM Studios in line for the first versions of the Studio Backlot Tour.
Bette Midler stars as a music teacher giving a singing lesson to a student in her apartment. She suddenly wins the lottery but quickly loses the ticket when it is swept out her window by a gust of wind and subsequently chases the ticket all over New York City. A pigeon helps retrieve it for her and she spends some of her winnings to buy a golden statue of the pigeon.
The Lottery was shot on February 3, 1989, at Disney-MGM Studios on the New York City backlot set and it took a crew of over 100 people to produce.[1]
It was the first film to be completely filmed at the Disney-MGM Studios theme park.
It was used to demonstrate general filmmaking, the use of exterior sets and soundstage sets, special effects and stunts.