✦ Sheet Music & Records

When You Wish Upon a Star — Original 1939 Pinocchio Sheet Music (Irving Berlin Inc.)

Original 1939 sheet music for When You Wish Upon a Star from Pinocchio, published by Irving Berlin Inc., approximately 9 by 12 inches

A Song That Changed Everything

There are songs, and then there are anthems. When You Wish Upon a Star belongs to a very short list of the latter — melodies so deeply woven into the American imagination that hearing just the first few notes conjures something primal and hopeful. This original 1939 sheet music edition, published by Irving Berlin Inc. at the moment of the film's theatrical debut, is not simply a piece of paper with notes printed on it. It is a primary document from the birth of one of the most enduring songs in the history of popular music.

Released alongside Walt Disney's Pinocchio in February 1940, the song was composed by Leigh Harline with lyrics by Ned Washington. It was sung in the film by Jiminy Cricket — voiced with warmth and gentle humor by Cliff Edwards — as the little wooden boy slept, unaware of what lay ahead. The song won the Academy Award for Best Original Song at the 13th Academy Awards and went on to become the unofficial anthem of The Walt Disney Company itself, opening every iteration of The Wonderful World of Disney for decades. Few pieces of sheet music carry that kind of cultural weight.

Pinocchio and the Golden Age of Disney Animation

Pinocchio arrived as Disney's second animated feature, following the runaway success of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in 1937. Walt Disney and his studio were in full creative flight, and the ambition on display in Pinocchio remains staggering even by modern standards. The animators tackled translucent water, candlelight, the interior of a whale, and crowds of distinct characters — all by hand, frame by frame. The result was widely praised as a technical and artistic triumph.

Pinocchio himself — the little marionette who wants nothing more than to be a real boy — struck a universal chord. And standing beside him through every misadventure was Jiminy Cricket, his appointed conscience, a wisecracking optimist who delivered When You Wish Upon a Star with such sincerity that audiences left the theater humming it. The song's message — that earnest desire, pointed at something bright and distant, can reshape a life — felt true in 1939 and still does. It was the right song for a world on the edge of uncertainty, and it has remained the right song in every era since.

The Sheet Music as Artifact

This particular piece measures approximately 9 inches by 12 inches, the standard format for popular song sheet music of the late 1930s. Published by Irving Berlin Inc., one of the preeminent music publishers of the era, the edition was produced to capitalize on the film's release and feed the enormous appetite Americans had for playing popular songs on home pianos. Sheet music was the streaming platform of its day — the primary way a new song traveled from the movie house into the parlor.

What makes original 1939 publication copies so sought-after is exactly this contemporaneous nature. The printing marks, the paper stock, the typography, the cover illustration — all of it reflects the aesthetic of that precise cultural moment. Collectors who specialize in Disney paper ephemera understand that these early pieces carry a directness that later reprints simply cannot replicate. You are holding something that existed in the same year the film did, produced to serve an audience hearing this song for the very first time.

The cover art on Disney sheet music from this period is itself a collector category, often featuring character illustrations produced with the same studio oversight as any licensed product of the era. The combination of musical content and visual art makes each piece a small, frameable window into Golden Age Disney.

From an Estate Collection to Your Hands

This copy comes to us as part of a larger Disney estate collection — the kind of assemblage that forms over a lifetime of deliberate, passionate collecting. Estate collections like this one routinely yield pieces that have been carefully stored and rarely handled, having passed directly from original acquisition into long-term preservation. That kind of history tends to be kinder to paper than decades of circulation.

For the serious Disney collector, a first-year sheet music edition of When You Wish Upon a Star occupies a particular place of honor. It predates the song's elevation to institutional symbol; it belongs to the moment of first introduction. Whether displayed behind glass, filed with a broader paper ephemera collection, or simply held and considered for what it represents, this piece carries the full resonance of one of the most remarkable creative moments in American entertainment history.

When you wish upon a star, makes no difference who you are. Eight decades on, those words still land. And this small sheet of music is where they first went out into the world.

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