The Lottery (1989 film) explained

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.

Plot

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.

Production

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.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Lottery. 14 August 2009.