When America's Sweetheart Got Her Own Prime-Time Story
There are certain names in the Disney universe that transcend mere celebrity. Annette Funicello is one of them. She was not just a Mouseketeer — she was the Mouseketeer, the girl-next-door face of the original Mickey Mouse Club era who grew up alongside a generation of American children and never quite left their hearts. In 1995, CBS paid tribute to that legacy with a prime-time television movie, A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes: The Annette Funicello Story, and this original print advertisement — pulled from the estate of a dedicated Disney collector — is a direct artifact of that broadcast moment.
Measuring a crisp 8.5 by 11 inches and printed on the newsprint stock typical of television listings publications of the era, this black-and-white ad represents a local KCBS-LA affiliate version of the CBS World Premiere Movie campaign. The KCBS-LA affiliate imprint makes it a regional variant, the kind of piece that was produced in limited quantities for specific broadcast markets and almost never saved — which is precisely what makes survivors like this one so appealing to ephemera collectors.
Annette, the Mickey Mouse Club, and Disney's Golden Television Age
Annette Funicello joined the Mickey Mouse Club in 1955 at the age of twelve, selected personally by Walt Disney himself after he saw her perform in a school production. She became the most beloved of all the Mouseketeers, and when the show ended she transitioned into a recording career and then into the iconic beach-party films of the 1960s — but she always remained inextricably linked to Disney and to the warmth of that original television era.
By the early 1990s, Annette had publicly disclosed her diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, a courageous act that drew an enormous outpouring of public support and renewed affection. The 1995 CBS biopic was a direct response to that renewed interest in her life and legacy. Eva LaRue, then best known for her work on All My Children, portrayed Annette in the film, capturing the star's sunny charisma while also tracing the more difficult chapters of her adult life. The title itself — drawn from the classic Cinderella ballad that had become almost synonymous with Disney's promise of hope and optimism — was a deliberate and affecting choice.
What This Piece Is and Why Collectors Seek It Out
Print advertisements from made-for-television movies occupy a fascinating niche in the collecting world. They are not lobby cards or theatrical one-sheets produced in large press runs; they are functional, disposable media — clipped from TV Guide, local newspaper entertainment sections, or regional affiliate program guides and almost universally discarded after the broadcast date passed. The KCBS-LA affiliate branding on this particular example adds an extra layer of regional specificity that collectors of California Disney history and Los Angeles broadcast ephemera will find especially resonant.
The black-and-white format is entirely period-correct and, in its own way, adds visual gravity to the piece. There is something fitting about a tribute to the early television era being rendered in the same monochrome palette as the original Mickey Mouse Club broadcasts. The Mickey Mouse Club styling elements visible in the advertisement — the ears, the branding language — anchor the piece firmly in Disney iconography even though it is, technically, a CBS Network production.
For collectors focused on Disney television history, Annette Funicello memorabilia, or 1990s Disney-adjacent ephemera, pieces like this are genuinely scarce. Most Annette collectors concentrate on the classic 1950s Mouseketeer merchandise, the 1960s beach-film promotional materials, or her recording-career items. The 1995 biopic represents a later, emotionally significant chapter that has not yet been as thoroughly documented in collector circles — which means supply is limited and awareness is still growing.
From an Estate Collection to Your Hands
This advertisement comes to us from a large Disney estate collection, assembled over decades by someone who understood that Disney's story is told not just through its films and theme parks but through every piece of printed culture it touched — or that touched it. Television movie tie-ins, regional affiliate variants, black-and-white newsprint ads from a mid-decade CBS broadcast: these are the connective tissue of Disney's cultural history, and they deserve to be preserved.
The piece shows the honest age one would expect from thirty-year-old newsprint — light handling, the natural patina of paper that has been carefully kept rather than displayed under harsh conditions — and retains strong contrast and legibility throughout. For anyone building a serious Annette Funicello collection, a dedicated shelf of Disney television history, or simply a display that celebrates the women who shaped Disney's mid-century identity, this is a rare and ready-made centerpiece.
A dream is a wish your heart makes — and sometimes, the most unexpected pieces are exactly the ones your collection has been quietly waiting for.
Thinking of selling? Get a free, no-obligation offer.
One direct offer on your entire Disney collection — no commission, no auction wait. We handle the shipping.