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Walt Disney
Alice Comedies
The new series, "Alice Comedies," was reasonably successful, and featured both
Dawn O'Day and Margie Gay as Alice after Virginia Davis’ parents pulled her out
of the series because of a pay cut. Lois Hardwick also briefly assumed the role.
By the time the series ended in 1927, the focus was more on the animated
characters, in particular a cat named Julius who recalled Felix the Cat, rather
than the live-action Alice.
Oswald the Lucky Rabbit
By 1927, Charles B. Mintz had married Margaret Winkler and assumed control of
her business, and ordered a new all-animated series to be put into production
for distribution through Universal Pictures. The new series, "Oswald the Lucky
Rabbit", was an almost instant success, and the Oswald character, first drawn
and created by Iwerks, became a popular property. The Disney studio expanded,
and Walt hired back Harman, Ising, Maxwell, and Freleng from Kansas City.
In February of 1928, Disney went to New York to negotiate a higher fee per short
from Mintz. Disney was shocked when Mintz announced that not only did he want to
reduce the fee he paid Disney per short, but that he had most of his main
animators, including Harman, Ising, Maxwell, and Freleng (notably excepting
Iwerks) under contract and would start his own studio if Disney did not accept
the reduced production budgets. Universal, not Disney, owned the Oswald
trademark, and could make the films without Disney.
Disney declined Mintz's offer and lost most of his animation staff. The
defectors became the nucleus of the Winkler Studio, run by Mintz and his
brother-in-law George Winkler. When that studio went under after Universal
assigned production of the Oswald shorts to an in-house division run by Walter
Lantz, Mintz focused his attentions on the studio making the "Krazy Kat" shorts,
which later became Screen Gems, and Harman, Ising, Maxwell, and Freleng marketed
an Oswald-like character named Bosko to Leon Schlesinger and Warner Bros., and
began work on the first entries in the Looney Tunes series.
It took Disney's company 78 years to get back the rights to the Oswald
character. In a move that sent sports broadcaster Al Michaels to NBC Sports for
their Sunday night NFL coverage, the Walt Disney Company reacquired the rights
to Oswald the Lucky Rabbit from NBC Universal in 2006.
Mickey Mouse
Main article: Mickey Mouse
The title card of Steamboat Willie credits both Walt Disney and Ub IwerksAfter
having lost the rights to Oswald, Disney had to develop a new "star". Most
Disney biographies state that Disney came up with a mouse character on his trip
back from New York. It is debated whether it was he, or Iwerks who actually
designed the mouse (which basically looked like Oswald, but with round instead
of long ears). The first films were animated by Iwerks, his name was prominently
featured on the title cards. The mouse was originally named "Mortimer", but
later christened "Mickey Mouse" by Lillian Disney.
Mickey's first animated short produced was Plane Crazy, which was, like all of
Disney's previous works, a silent film. After failing to find distributor
interest in Plane Crazy or its follow-up, The Gallopin' Gaucho, Disney created a
Mickey cartoon with sound called Steamboat Willie. A businessman named Pat
Powers provided Disney with both distribution and Cinephone, a
sound-synchronization process. Steamboat Willie became a success, and Plane
Crazy, The Galloping Gaucho, and all future Mickey cartoons were released with
soundtracks. Disney himself provided the vocal effects for the earliest cartoons
and performed as the voice of Mickey Mouse until 1947. Disney believed Mickey
would make it far into television.
Silly Symphonies
Joining the Mickey Mouse series in 1929 were a series of musical shorts called
Silly Symphonies. The first of these was entitled The Skeleton Dance and was
entirely drawn and animated by Iwerks, who was also responsible for drawing the
majority of cartoons released by Disney in 1928 and 1929. Although both series
were successful, the Disney studio was not seeing its rightful share of profits
from Pat Powers, and in 1930 Disney signed a new distribution deal with Columbia
Pictures.
Iwerks was growing tired of the temperamental Disney, especially as he was doing
the majority of the work, and so was lured by Powers into opening his own studio
with an exclusive contract. Disney desperately searched for someone who could
replace Iwerks, as he was not able to draw as well or as quickly; Iwerks was
reported to have drawn up to 700 drawings a day for the first Mickey shorts.
Meanwhile, Iwerks launched his successful Flip the Frog series with the first
sound cartoon in color, "Fiddlesticks," filmed in two-strip Technicolor. Iwerks
also created two other series of cartoons, the Willie Whopper and the Comicolor
cartoon series. Iwerks closed his studio in 1936 to work on various projects
dealing with animation technology. Iwerks would return to Disney in 1940 and, in
the studio's research and development department, would go on to pioneer a
number of film processes and specialized animation technologies.
Eventually, Disney was able to find a number of people to replace Iwerks. By
1932, Mickey Mouse had become quite a popular cartoon character. The Van Beuren
cartoon studio attempted to cash in on this success by creating a specific
process, making these the first commercial films presented in this new process.
The first color Symphony was Flowers and Trees, which won the first Academy
Award for Best Short Subject: Cartoons in 1932.
First Academy Award
In 1932, Disney received a special Academy Award for the creation of Mickey
Mouse, whose series was moved into color in 1935 and soon launched spinoff
series for supporting characters such as Donald Duck, Goofy, and Pluto.
The family grows
As Mickey's co-creator and producer, Disney was almost as famous as his mouse
cartoon character, but remained a largely private individual. His greatest hope
was to be a father to many children. However, the Disneys' first attempts at
pregnancy ended in miscarriage. This, coupled with pressures at the studio, led
to Disney having "a hell of a breakdown", as he called it. His doctors said that
he had to get away for a while, so he and his wife went on a Caribbean cruise
and then traveled to Washington, D.C.
When Lilly Disney became pregnant again, Disney told his sister in a letter that
he did not care what gender the child was, just as long as they were not
disappointed again. Lilly finally gave birth to a daughter, Diane Marie Disney,
on December 18, 1933. Disney was excited to finally have a child. A few years
later the Disneys adopted a second daughter, Sharon Mae Disney, born on December
21, 1936.
"Disney's Folly": Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Although his studio produced the two most successful cartoon series in the
industry, the returns were still dissatisfying to Disney, and he began plans for
a full-length feature in 1934. When the rest of the film industry learned of
Disney's plans to produce an animated feature-length version of Snow White, they
dubbed the project "Disney's Folly" and were certain that the project would
destroy the Disney studio. Both Lillian and Roy tried to talk Disney out of the
project, but he continued plans for the feature. He employed Chouinard Art
Institute professor Don Graham to start a training operation for the studio
staff, and used the Silly Symphonies as a platform for experiments in realistic
human animation, distinctive character animation, special effects, and the use
of specialized processes and apparatus such as the multiplane camera.
All of this development and training was used to elevate the quality of the
studio so that it would be able to give the feature the quality Disney desired.
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, as the feature was named, was in full
production from 1935 until mid-1937, when the studio ran out of money. To
acquire the funding to complete Snow White, Disney had to show a rough cut of
the motion picture to loan officers at the Bank of America, who gave the studio
the money to finish the picture. The finished film premiered at the Carthay
Circle Theater on December 21, 1937; at the conclusion of the film the audience
gave Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs a standing ovation. Snow White, the first
animated feature in English and Technicolor, was released in February 1938 under
a new distribution deal with RKO Radio Pictures. The film became the most
successful motion picture of 1938 and earned over $8 million (today $98 million)
in its original theatrical release, all the more amazing because children were
only charged a dime to see it. The success of Snow White allowed Disney to build
a new campus for the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, which opened for business
on December 24, 1939. The feature animation staff, having just completed
Pinocchio, continued work on Fantasia and Bambi, while the shorts staff
continued work on the Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy, and Pluto cartoon
series, ending the Silly Symphonies at this time.
Wartime Woes
Pinocchio and Fantasia followed Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs into movie
theatres in 1940, but both were financial disappointments. The inexpensive Dumbo
was planned as an income generator, but during production of the new film, most
of the animation staff went on strike, permanently straining the relationship
between Disney and his artists.
Shortly after Dumbo was released in October 1941 and became a successful
moneymaker, the United States entered World War II. The U.S. Army contracted for
most of the Disney studio's facilities and had the staff create training and
instructional films for the military, as well as home-front morale-boosting
shorts such as Der Fuehrer's Face and the feature film Victory Through Air Power
in 1943. The military films did not generate income, however, and the feature
film Bambi underperformed when it was released in April 1942. Disney
successfully re-issued Snow White in 1944, establishing a 7-year re-release
tradition for Disney features. (The pattern was not always strictly followed -
Disney's version of Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea was first
re-released in 1963, nine years after its first run in movie theatres, and
Disney's financially disappointing and critically drubbed version of Babes in
Toyland, went straight to television after its theatrical run, and never
re-appeared in movie theatres.)
The Disney studios also created inexpensive package films, containing
collections of cartoon shorts, and issued them to theaters during this period.
The most notable and successful of these were Saludos Amigos (1942), its sequel
The Three Caballeros (1945), Song of the South (the first Disney film to feature
dramatic actors) (1946), Fun and Fancy Free (1947), and The Adventures of
Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949). The latter had only two sections: the first based
on The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving, and the second based on The
Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame.
By the late 1940s, the studio had recovered enough to continue production on the
full-length features Alice in Wonderland and Peter Pan, which had been shelved
during the war years, and began work on Cinderella. The studio also began a
series of live-action nature films, entitled True-Life Adventures, in 1948 with
On Seal Island.
Testimony before Congress
After the 1941 strike of Disney Studio employees, Walt Disney deeply distrusted
organized labor. In 1947, during the early years of the Cold War,[1] he
testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee, where he branded
Herbert Sorrell, David Hilberman and William Pomerance, former animators and
labor union organizers, as Communist agitators. (All three men denied the
allegations.) Disney implicated the Screen Actors Guild as a Communist front,
and charged that the 1941 strike was part of an organized Communist effort to
gain influence in Hollywood. Documents obtained under the Freedom of Information
Act show that from 1941 until his death, he spied for the FBI on union activity
in Hollywood, and illegally intimidated union activists.[1] Since Jews were
prominent in the labor movement, some employees felt that Disney's actions were
motivated by anti-semitism.[2][3]
1955-1966: Theme Parks and beyond
[edit]
Carolwood Pacific Railroad
Main article: Carolwood Pacific Railroad
During 1949, Disney and his family moved to a new home on a large piece of
property in the Holmby Hills district of Los Angeles, California. With the help
of his friends Ward and Betty Kimball, owners of their own backyard railroad,
Disney developed the blueprints and immediately set to work creating a miniature
live steam railroad for his backyard. The name of the railroad, Carolwood
Pacific Railroad, originated from the address of his home that was located on
Carolwood Drive. The railroad's half-mile long layout included a 46-foot-long
trestle, loops, overpasses, gradients, an elevated dirt berm, and a 90-foot
tunnel underneath Mrs. Disney's flowerbed. He named the miniature working steam
locomotive built by Roger E. Broggie of the Disney Studios Lilly Belle in his
wife's honor. He had his attorney draw up right-of-way papers giving the
railroad a permanent, legal easement through the garden areas, which his wife
dutifully signed; however, there is no evidence the documents were ever recorded
as a restriction on the property's title. By tha MuRpH
Planning Disneyland
The "Partners" statue at Disneyland in Anaheim, featuring Walt Disney and Mickey
Mouse.On a business trip to Chicago in the late-1940s, Disney drew sketches of
his ideas for an amusement park where he envisioned his employees spending time
with their children. He got his idea for a children's theme park after visiting
Children's Fairyland in Oakland, California. This plan was originally for a lot
south of the Studio, just across the street. However, the city of Burbank
declined building permission. The original ideas developed into a concept for a
larger enterprise that was to become Disneyland. Disney spent five years of his
life developing Disneyland and created a new subsidiary of his company, called
WED Enterprises, to carry out the planning and production of the park. A small
group of Disney studio employees joined the Disneyland development project as
engineers and planners, and were dubbed Imagineers.
When describing one of his earliest plans to Herb Ryman (who created the first
aerial drawing of Disneyland to present to the Bank of America for funds),
Disney said, "Herbie, I just want it to look like nothing else in the world. And
it should be surrounded by a train." Entertaining his daughters and their
friends in his backyard and taking them for rides on his Carolwood Pacific
Railroad had inspired Disney to include a railroad in the plans for Disneyland.
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