Wordcraft Community Home Page
Mickey the Dunce

This topic can be found at:
https://wordcraft.infopop.cc/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/932607094/m/1181004225

February 09, 2008, 09:56
daveb
Mickey the Dunce
from whence is the phrase Mickey the Dunce derived? Especially in its use as to play Mickey the Dunce meaning to fake being ignorant. I suspected either an Irish-American slur or a Disney reference but I can not come up with anything definitive.

This message has been edited. Last edited by: daveb,
February 09, 2008, 09:59
Richard English
I've certainly never heard it used in UK English.


Richard English
February 09, 2008, 11:07
arnie
I've never heard it, either. However, I was interested to learn the etymology of dunce. It apparently was used to followers of the philosopy scholar John Duns Scotus. Unfortunately for Scotus, subsequent theologians took a dim view of all those who championed his viewpoint. These “Scotists,” “Dunsmen,” or “Dunses” were considered hairsplitting meatheads and, eventually, just “dunces.” See http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=dunce&searchmode=none


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
February 09, 2008, 13:51
daveb
Googling "Mickey the Dunce" gets you a bunch of examples of contemporary use. EG:
"To assume that mortgage brokers could play Mickey the Dunce and not hurt anyone is flawed." (Boston Globe)
Mr. Lund said he "did not have an answer" to the question of whether CBS was putting its access to a Super Bowl at risk. "I don't want to play Mickey the Dunce," he said, "but I didn't participate in the N.F.L. negotiations and I don't know how the league intends to assign the rights to that fourth game." (NYTimes)
The Mickey-the-Dunce mantra of "I didn’t know anything about this” is an excuse Pitt wants to take away from CEOs in the future. (NewsMax.com)
February 09, 2008, 15:12
BobHale
I did google but all of the hits appeared to be of recent American usage. Wherever the phrase originates I'm afraid you'll need some input from the US as, like Richard and arnie, I have never come across it over here.

From google though it seems that there is no general consensus as to its exact meaning. Even the examples you cite seem to me to have different intended meanings.

This message has been edited. Last edited by: BobHale,


"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson.
February 09, 2008, 17:36
daveb
I think the context indicates that there is or once was a character named Mickey the Dunce in some literary or entertainment work, whom we can now imitate, playing Mickey the Dunce, either inadvertently because we're stupid or slyly to pretend we're stupid. So what is that work wherein Mickey first appears? Mickey Mouse shows up in a dunce cap in the 1930's, but is this an appropriated allusion to an earlier work or a coincidence, or is it the original source? And when did the phrase start appearing? If you guys are right that it isn't British, it may date to post-1840's American anti-Irish ethnic slurs, as "Mick" was a derogatory slang term for Irishman. I first heard the phrase from a Greek-American slumlord in the late 1970's or early 80's.
February 09, 2008, 18:01
zmježd
I'd never heard it before. Searching for the phrase in Google Books gives a respectful 13 hits, all with the meaning of 'fool'. Two of the earliest, 1970 and 1979, are in books by Don Asher, The Electric Cotillion and Honeycomb: Ballad of a North Beach Cabaret. Another early one, 1979, is from a book on psychology, Practical Psychology in Construction Management, by Tom Melvin. I have a feeling it's criminal argot or from the music industry, probably derived from the famous cartoon character who is simple and trusting.


Ceci n'est pas un seing.
February 09, 2008, 18:47
tinman
I've never heard the phrase before. Google News says it appeared in a May 31,1932 newspaper.
quote:

Sometimes the best way to learn things is to play 'Mickey-the-dunce.

February 09, 2008, 20:10
Kalleh
Welcome, daveb! See your PMs.

I've not heard of it, either. While looking for it, I did find from the not-always-reliable Urban Dictionary that "mickey" is an Irish slang word for "penis." Has anyone heard that before?
February 10, 2008, 00:42
Richard English
I've heard the word "mickey" used for all sorts of things, of which "taking the Mickey" is probably the most common in the UK. This is a response to a suggestion, claiming that it is surely not serious. For example,

"Could you lend me £100 and your car so I can take your daughter out?"

"Are you taking the Mickey, mate?"

I do not know the phrase's origin but It is certainly as old as I am.

There are probably as many euphemisms for penis as there are for almost anything, but "mickey" is not one that I have heard before.


Richard English
February 10, 2008, 01:22
tinman
For what it's worth, Wikipedia says the same thing. A dictionary of Irish slang says Mickey is a "child's name for a penis."

Here are definitions of mickey from the OED Online:

February 10, 2008, 14:05
daveb
Mickey the Dunce is a
hard phrase to research.
I've Googled it out 'til my
search engine's sore.
Is he Irish or Disney,
from Farquhar or features?
I'll say "I don't get it" while
you hunt for more.
February 10, 2008, 19:37
Kalleh
quote:
I've heard the word "mickey" used for all sorts of things
Yes, you are correct, Richard. And there's always "slipping someone a mickey..." That must be a reference to the last definition that Tinman posted.
February 12, 2008, 13:42
daveb
Still searching...
In the 1870's and later there were bunch of popular early Broadway shows in New York. Among them, "The most popular burlesque musicals of the 1890s were created by comedians Joe Weber and Lew Fields. Weber played the short, rotund "Mike," while Fields was the tall and lean "Meyer," a bully who constantly schemed to swindle Mike out of his money."
Was Mike the original Mickey? Another candidate for the character is the even earlier oeuvre of Harrigan and Hart:
"The versatile Harrigan performed, produced, and directed while writing the scripts and lyrics. The action was always set on the scruffy streets of downtown Manhattan, with Harrigan playing politically ambitious Irish saloon owner "Dan Mulligan" and Hart winning praise as the African American washerwoman "Rebecca Allup." ... "After their "Mulligan Guards" sketch made them variety stars, the team developed a series of songs and sketches featuring lower class characters drawn from the streets of New York. In time, these sketches evolved into seventeen full length farcical musical comedies that delighted Broadway audiences from 1878 to 1885."

It will be a challenge to find libretti for these shows to see if MtD shows up.
February 12, 2008, 19:15
shufitz
Very interesting. Almost all the references speak of "playing Mickey the Dunce," in the sense of feigning stupidity or ignorance.

I found it back in 1932, in a newpaper's serialization of a novel. On May 31 the Chronicle Telegram (Elyria, Ohio) printed chapter 20 of The Sacred Eye: A Story of Mystery and Love in the South Seas, by Bruce E. Griggs:And this from 1948:
February 13, 2008, 13:38
daveb
Hey, apologies for my newbieness - I hadn't read the rules when I posted a DD earlier in this thread. I was just responding with naive glee to the superficial aspects of the form, without adequate comprehension of its deeper pleasures. Here's another, hopefully more worthy, effort:

In again, Finnegan,
Mickey the Dunce - oh his
history mystery
leads me to grouse,
Will it turn out he's a
tatterdemalion
Irish-American
or just a mouse?
February 17, 2008, 05:17
Caterwauller
I like both of your poems. IMHO, the first one is better, despite the rule-breaking.

Welcome to the forum!


*******
"Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions.
~Dalai Lama