Wednesday, May 25, 2022
Random Disney Mix
Thursday, May 19, 2022
1990 at Disney Animation
We had just screened a work in progress version of The Prince and the Pauper for two Disney icons, Marc Davis and Joe Grant. Here they are commenting on story, animation and general entertainment. This is 32 YEARS AGO!!! That might be the reason why I don't remember one thing these two legends said. At that time I had been at Disney for 10 years. And I was so lucky to have gotten to know Marc and Joe, but also Frank and Ollie, Kimball, Milt and of course Eric Larson.
That's Dan Rounds on the left, the producer of the film. He not only imitates my pose, but also my sense of fashion... ;)
Tuesday, May 17, 2022
A Medusa Cel
What a great cel of Madame Medusa from The Rescuers. Milt Kahl was very concerned about how the final cels with his animation would turn out. In the end he was very happy with certain visuals that mattered to him. During a conversation with Penny Medusa has taken off all of her eyelashes. At this point Milt wanted to show no eyelashes at all, not even her natural ones. The xerox line defining the edges of her eyes was eliminated, and a flesh colored ink line was added. This is all about contrast. Big eyelashes at first, then none at all. That's a clear graphical statement.
Earlier on Medusa removed half of her lipstick, and again, that side of her mouth doesn't show any lip definition at all! Contrast, contrast!
To some viewers this might be gross looking, and it is, but sooo in character. I just love this sequence.
Friday, May 13, 2022
Another Look at Sleeping Beauty
Marc Davis draws Maleficent. This is not a scene from the film Sleeping Beauty, the sketch was made for publicity purposes. As I pointed out before, Marc worked on this film longer than any other animator. He actually skipped the production of Lady & the Tramp, so he could focus on and animate the movie's heroine as well as its villain. Aurora and Maleficent. This was a first, and it hasn't been done since.
A live action photostat of Jane Fowler (later Boyd) as Maleficent. Voice actress Eleanor Audley also acted out important scenes for the animators.
A Frank Thomas sketch of the Three Fairies, pretty much as they appear in the film. But it took many exploratory versions to get to this point.
Tuesday, May 10, 2022
Alice
A photo from quite a few years ago, taken at the home of Marc Davis. Alice Davis is giving a tour of Marc's art on display in their home. A visit to the Davis home is like walking through a museum, filled with extraordinary art from one of animation's grand masters. It makes your head spin, so much to look at, so much to appreciate and be inspired by.
That is Jake Friedman on the right. His new book on the infamous Disney strike is about to be released. Jake has a new book and I have a new animated film about to come out!
Wednesday, May 4, 2022
Mark Adlington
All images copyright Mark Adlington.
Friday, April 29, 2022
A Visit from Clint Howard
Actor Clint Howard stopped by a few weeks ago for an interview about his role in Disney's classic film The Jungle Book. Clint voiced the baby elephant, also known as Hathi jr.
The interview will be a part of the upcoming exhibition at the Walt Disney Family Museum Walt Disney's The Jungle Book: Making a Masterpiece. It was wonderful getting to know Clint, whose 1967 TV show Gentle Ben was a favorite of mine as a kid. Of course Clint has been in many movies, including Apollo 13, a film directed by his brother Ron. A true classic!
Here is the link to the the Disney Museum's Jungle Book announcement:
https://www.waltdisney.org/jungle-book
This exhibition will be spectacular.
Tuesday, April 26, 2022
Visual Development
Imagine as a Disney animator looking at these terrific development visuals for an upcoming feature! How can you not get super excited, you just want to get to work! The Dance of the Hours from Fantasia is one of the best things ever animated. If you worked on this short, you can practically retire because this piece represents a high for the medium that would not be repeated.
An extraordinary layout for the 1958 short film Paul Bunyan. I never cared for the animation much, but the look, the graphic world the artists created is stunning.
This piece from 101 Dalmatians makes me laugh, because it represents an artistic hangover. The crew had just finished Sleeping Beauty and was gearing up for a new film set in a contemporary style. What they couldn't shake yet were square and round tree shapes. If you take the park bench out of the picture, you'd expect Aurora walking through the scenery talking to birds.
A back alley setting for The Aristocats. My educated guess: this is the work of the great Vance Gerry.
This one is close to home. The Snow Queen was going to be our next animated feature after the 2011 film Winnie the Pooh. Paul Felix had developed extraordinary settings for the project, we could not wait to get started. Bette Middler had been asked to voice the title character... then the shoe dropped. The CG shoe. The film ended up with a one word title...and the rest is history.
Would I have lobbied for the Bette Midler character...of course!!
Wednesday, April 20, 2022
Disney in 1978
LOS ANGELES “THE BLACK CAULDRON” Walt Disney's $15 million animated film scheduled for 1980 — is four years behind schedule. It will not be completed until Christmas, 1984, because the new crop of young animators the studio has spent six years acquiring are not yet competent to handle its complexities. “The Black Cauldron,” which is based on Lloyd Alexander's interpretations of medieval Welsh mythology, will be replaced in 1980 by a simpler and easier movie about animal friendship, “The Fox and the Hound.”
At the same time that Disney's young animators are floundering in waters still too deep for them, classic Disney animation is enjoying a surprising artistic and box‐office renaissance.
The re‐release of Disney's 1967 “The Jungle Book,” is bringing the studio $14 million, $2 million more than the picture made when it was first released 11 years ago. And the studio's last animated film, “The Rescuers,” is outdrawing “Star Wars” in Paris, as an adult cult film in Western Europe, it has earned $45 million for the studio, and has recently become the largest grossing picture of all time in West Germany.
Mickey Mouse Turning 50
But the last Mickey Mouse cartoon was made in 1953; and only ‐two of the nine young men who cut their artistic teeth on “Snow White” in 1938 are still at the studio.
“We never get old, never die, never retire,” said 73‐year‐old Eric Larson. “We accepted that and the studio accepted it. They never looked beyond us. “
Pompousness ‘Rewarded’
“I worked the first two weeks for nothing and then got $15 a week. There was no pay for overtime and no air conditioning.
We stripped to the waist in the summer and if a guy was taking himself too seriously we'd stick a flutter pad under his seat so he'd make rude noise when he sat down. There were 180 people at the studio, including the night watchman and the janitors. Today, it's a corporate structure, large and complicated place.”
Walt Disney called them his nine old men: Les Clark, Marc Davis, Ollie Johnston, Milt Kahl, Mr. Kimball, Mr. Larson, John Lounsbery, Wolfgang Reitherman and Frank Thomas.
“The Rescuers,” exactly 40 years after “Snow White,” is the last film to bear their stamp. Mr. Lounsbery directed “The Rescuers.” Mr. Thomas and Mr. Johnston animated the mice—Bernard and Miss‐ Bianca — in the months before their retirement. Mr. Kahl drew the villainous Medusa and her 2 alligators and also retired.
Talent‐ Search Is Unproductive
When his nine old men really became old. Walt Disney was dead; and his studio was unprepared. A talent search begun by Mr. Larson in 1972 has brought surprisingly meager results.
“We'd like (to add) 30 good animators,” he said. He has looked at thousands of portfolios and tried out 100 young animators in the last six years. Of those, 35 remain; and only 16 are in animation. “When someone is hired, you can't tell how good he'll be,” Mr. Larson said. “ Animation is limited only by imagination and the ability to draw what you can imagine.
“People come with master's degrees in art and they can't draw worth damn. Art teachers are interested in static figure drawing. We deal with weight, action, movement. You have to be able to draw the relationship of character's coat to the rest of his body or the relationship of his cuffs to the rest of his coat.”
Conception of Space Vital
“A person can show you drawings that knock you out,” said Mr. Kimball, “but he may not have a conception of movement, may not be able to put something in a space. And there are more choices today. A lot of young animators don't want to work here, don't want to knuckle down to the training required of Disney animators.”
Disney has its own reservoir in the animation school it has set up at the California Institute of the Arts to teach the Disney style of animation. Yet, out of 19 portfolios from Cal Arts this year, Mr. Larson found only two good. “And three more are passable.” The special skills required in animation mean that, in the movie business, where nepotism is a way of life, there is almost never a second‐generation animator. Mr. Larson can think of only one, John Kimball, Ward Kimball's son.
Disney's Death a Blow
The death of Walt Disney in 1966 was a special blow to his animators. Movies — regarded as the most collaborative of arts — seem a hermit's paradise next to the number of people required to create the 129,000 drawings used in an animated feature. “Walt had such an ego, he was so tremendous, that he could weld us into a team,” Mr. Larsbn said. “It's a big problem for these new people to become a cog in a team effort. They want to be in ‘the industry,’ not at this particular studio. There was a loyalty to this particular place. And I'm not sure we can renew it.”
“I don't think there has ever been an artistic medium that requires as many people,” said Mr. Reitherman, who is directing “The Fox and the Hound.”
“It's definitely a team sport. But how do you train a young animator? A feature film is very expensive. ‘The Fox and the Hound’ will cost $8.5 million. And it's four years of pregnancy before it's finished. We used to make 24 shorts a year. We don't have that way to train people anymore.”
Shorts Were Great School
“I was at the studio five years before Walt made his first feature,” said, Ward Kimball. “We made six or seven minute shorts. What a great school to break in new animators. You could see your work on the screen in weeks.”
Today, shorts lose money. The last Disney cartoon was “Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too” in 1974. Partly to give the young animators some experience, the studio is now making a 25‐minute animated short, “The Small One,” which will be released next Christmas. The director of “The Small One” is 39year‐old Don Bluth, the most highly regarded of the next generation of Disney animators.
Then the younger animators will face a New‐style Disney film, “The Black Cauldron,” requiring a whole new generation of animators (with more sophisticated characters than) the happy dog and cheerful fox of “The Fox and the Hound. The Black cauldron, is a kettle that has the ability to bring the dead to life and is guarded by three witches who can interchange themselves.
“As far as drawing is concerned, entertainment is concerned, background and layout and effects are concerned, that's terribly challenging staging,” Mr. Larson said.
“The picture also has a boy hero and a girl heroine. As soon as you start working with human figures, you let the audience compare their movements with the movements of a real person the same size. Animals and’ caricature figures like Medusa are much easier.”
What makes it all so difficult is that, beyond technical competence, there is something more important to men who speak of animation as magic rather than skill. “Animating isn't moving things,” said Mr. Larson. “It's trying to make them live.”
“Shere Khan in The Jungle Book’ didn't really look like George Sanders, the actor who was his voice,” Mr. Reitherman said. “But he had the imperious attitude, the arrogance. He was the essence of George Sanders; Eva Gabor said the tiger was more like her husband George Sanders, than Sanders (himself).
“I retired,” said Ward Kimball, “because I was beginning to get bored. Maybe subliminally I missed Walt. Without him, things weren't fun anymore.
Monday, April 18, 2022
Raven Studies
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
A Visit from Darleen Carr
Some of you might have heard the news that the next grand exhibition at the Walt Disney Family Museum will be: Walt Disney's THE JUNGLE BOOK, Making a Masterpiece. I had the honor of guest curating, and the show will open this summer. More details to come.
Recently the lovely Darleen Carr stopped by for an interview about her experience of working on the 1967 animated film. Darleen sang the beautiful song "My Own Home" as the character of the Indian Girl.
It has been a great joy to help put together this extraordinary exhibit...you all have to come and visit!
The catalogue is available for pre-order at Amazon.
And here is the link to a previous post about the "Jungle Girl":
https://andreasdeja.blogspot.com/2012/01/jungle-girl.html