Showing posts with label Der Fuehrer's Face. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Der Fuehrer's Face. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 7, 2019

August 6 - Oliver Wallace

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On this day, in 1887, Oliver George Wallace was born in London, England. Oliver was classically trained as a musician and conductor in his native Britain before moving across the pond to Canada in 1904 and then on to Seattle, Washington by 1910. He began honing his eclectic musical stylings alongside vaudeville acts and silent movies in Canadian theaters and continued doing so when he moved to America. Oliver is generally credited with being the first person to play a pipe organ to accompany motion pictures but he was just as comfortable conducting a house orchestra. He slowly worked his way down the West Coast, becoming the house organist at San Francisco’s Granada Theater and then the Rialto Theater in Los Angeles. Along the way, he became an American citizen in 1914 and composed a hit song, Hindustan, in 1918.

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Oliver’s ability to write popular music, coupled with the improvisational skills he picked up backing unpredictable silent pictures, would serve him well when movies began arriving at theaters with their own music, putting a lot of other organ players out of business. He began his film score career composing and playing for Columbia Pictures and Universal Studios. For a great example of his mad organ playing skills, listen to the soundtrack of Universal’s Bride of Frankenstein. Then, in 1936, he was hired by the Walt Disney Studio where he would remain until his death.

Oliver was a natural fit for the world of animation. Because of his years of experience playing behind silent movies he could create music to fit any mood or action the animators could come up with, no matter how outrageous. Over the course of his career, Oliver wrote the scores for almost 140 Disney shorts in every category. Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Silly Symphonies, you name it, Oliver has a credit (or twelve) somewhere in there. One of his most notable contributions to the Shorts Department (although his short scores as a whole have been called a virtual textbook for writing music for cartoons) came during World War II when he composed and wrote the lyrics for the title song from the Academy Award winning Donald short, Der Fuehrer’s Face. Spike Jones and his band would reach #3 on the popular charts with their rendition of it. Oliver would score another Oscar winning short, the classic Toot Whistle Plunk and Boom, a decade later.

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But don’t start thinking that the multi-talented Oliver was relegated to just the Shorts Department (even though he was really good at it). Walt had him conduct the orchestra for the studio’s second feature, Pinocchio, and co-write the score for the fourth one, Dumbo. He would be instrumental (literally and figuratively) in developing the songs Pink Elephants on Parade and When I See an Elephant Fly for the picture. Oliver and his fellow composer, Frank Churchill, would go on to win the Academy Award for Best Musical Score for their work, the only win that Oliver received from his five overall nominations. He would go on to contribute to the scores of Bambi, Make Mine Music, Fun and Fancy Free, Peter Pan, Cinderella and Lady and the Tramp.

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As Disney moved into the realm of live action productions, Oliver took the same journey. It turns out that his talent for scoring animated shorts translated very well into scoring the documentaries the studio began making. Most of the 17 shorts in the Academy Award winning People and Places series boast scores by Oliver, including The Alaskan Eskimo, Men Against the Arctic and Japan Harvests the Sea. He also wrote the music for a handful of the True-Life Adventures (most of which were scored by the Legendary Paul Smith), notably doing Seal Island, the first film in the series, and Jungle Cat, the last film. His score for 1958’s White Wilderness was even nominated for an Oscar, a rare honor for music coming from a documentary.

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Outside the realm of non-fiction, Oliver began to build his repertoire of whimsical and dramatic scores for other Disney projects. He is credited for his work on Darby O’Gill and the Little People, Ten Who Dared, Old Yeller (for which he also penned the titular song) and its sequel Savage Sam, Tonka and 1963’s The Incredible Journey. As happened with so many employees at the Walt Disney Studio, Oliver occasionally got roped into lending his voice to a character in a film. He has two acting credits with the studio that we know of: Mr. Winky, the gang leader, in The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad and the Bandleader in Toby Tyler or Ten Weeks with the Circus.

When the fellow that the Legendary animator Frank Thomas once described as a madman who was funny, eccentric, noisy, unexpected and loved by everyone suddenly passed away on September 15, 1963, the 76-year-old was still working at Disney full time. Forty-three years later, in 2008, for his nearly three decades of constantly improving the works of the studio with his musical genius, Oliver was officially, and most deservedly, declared a Disney Legend.

Tuesday, August 6, 2019

August 4 - Don DaGradi

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On this day, in 1991, Don DaGradi passed away in Friday Harbor, Washington. Born on March 1, 1911, on the East Coast in New York City, Don actually spent most of his childhood growing up on the West Coast in San Francisco, California. After graduating from high school, he took his artistic talents south to Los Angeles and the Chouinard Art Institute. He honed his skills for a few years before joining the Walt Disney Studio in the mid-Thirties, at the height of the Great Depression, as a background painter. He was quickly bumped up to the Story Department, where he contributed gags and minor plot points to many of the studio’s shorts produced at the time.

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As the studio grew, Don's responsibilities grew as well. By 1940, he was the production designer on Dumbo. Throughout World War II, he was put in charge of layouts for in the Shorts Department (really the only thing the studio was producing in those lean years). His work can be seen in classic films including Der Fuehrer’s Face and Victory Through Air Power. Following the war, Don added features to his plate as the layout artist for The Three Caballeros, Make Mine Music and Fun and Fancy Free.  At the end of the Forties, he started designing the color schemes and the overall feel of features. He sharpened the look of The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad, Cinderella, Alice in Wonderland and Peter Pan.

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As successful as all of Don’s endeavors were up to this point, he didn’t really start hitting his stride until he became a senior member of the story department in the mid-Fifties. He has a full story credit on Lady and the Tramp and contributed additional story elements to Sleeping Beauty (as well as being part of that production’s design team). Then, in 1959, he made the leap into live action movies and blossomed like never before.

Don’s Legendary co-workers, the Sherman Brothers, once said that he wrote scripts with a sketch pad and pencil, meaning that Don’s pictures were worth more than a thousand words. He could draw a quick picture of what a scene looked like in his head and everyone else could see it too. Pages of words could flow from each drawing, most of the time with very little effort. Don’s first effort in the live action arena was at Walt’s personal request. He designed and wrote the underground cavern scenes in Darby O’Gill and the Little People. He followed that up by developing sequences in The Absent-Minded Professor, Pollyanna, Kidnapped and The Parent Trap. For the sequel to Professor, Son of Flubber, Don teamed up with the Legendary Bill Walsh, completely writing that film’s script between the two of them. It was a professional match made in heaven that would last until Don’s retirement nearly a decade later.

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After Flubber, Don and Bill created the script for what is arguably the Walt Disney Studio’s magnum opus, as far as live action films go. Mary Poppins turned out to be as whimsically delightful as it is because of the two men wrote it. Don is credited with creating the visions of everything from people popping out of chimneys and flying through the air to how a tea party on the ceiling might look. His sense of wonder paid off. Audiences have adored the film since its debut and it was honored with five Academy Awards. Don and Bill’s script had also been nominated for an Oscar but lost out to Beckett.

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The overwhelming success of Mary Poppins basically gave Don and Bill carte blanche as screenwriters. While they would never reach those same heights again, they add several more classic Disney films to their resumes. Over the next seven years, the duo wrote Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N., Blackbeard’s Ghost, The Love Bug, Scandalous John and Bedknobs and Broomsticks.

During his career, Don was also tapped to occasionally do some moonlighting over in Imagineering. He designed costumes for Disneyland cast members including the outfits the resident marching band wore. He also designed the look of the exteriors of attractions, like Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride, keeping them in line with the looks he helped create for the animated features they were based on. And then, in 1970, after 34 years of making magic on and off the silver screen, the man who often described himself as a misplaced cartoonist retired from Disney.

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Don and his wife of many years, Betty, moved north to the state of Washington, enjoying their post-work life away from the hubbub of Hollywood for the next two decades. When Don passed away in August 1991, it was just a few months before his old company would honor him, and his writing partner Bill, as official Disney Legends. He might have been 80 years old at his death, but in his heart he still saw magic everywhere he looked.


Wednesday, May 8, 2019

May 6 - Joe Grant

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On this day, in 2005, Joe Grant passed away in Glendale, California. Born on May 15, 1908 in New York City, Joe and his family moved to Los Angeles, California when he was two. His father was a newspaper art editor, which gave Joe exposure to the possibilities of the art world from an early age. Following high school, Joe attended classes at the famed Chouinard Art Institute. His first professional gig was drawing caricatures of celebrities for a local newspaper. One of the readers of that paper was Walt Disney, who was impressed enough with Joe’s style to invite him to submit some caricatures for incorporation into the 1933 short Mickey’s Gala Premier.

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The success of Joe’s work in Gala led to him being offered a full time job with the Walt Disney Studio as production on Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was ramping up. Joe was given the task of designing the Queen and her alter ego, the Wicked Witch. Supposedly the old hag’s appearance (but not, presumably, her evil intent) was fashioned after a woman who lived across the street from Joe at the time. He continued working on character designs for Pinocchio before switching over to the story department when production began on Fantasia. Not only did Joe help develop the plot of several of the segments in Fantasia, he assisted in helping Walt and Leopold Stokowski choose what music would be used in the first place.

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Joe received credit for co-writing the script on his next two films, Dumbo and Saludos Amigos. As World War II raged on, he went back to the Shorts Department (of course so did everyone else, really; even the features during that period were just shorts that had been cobbled together). His input can be seen in the propaganda shorts The New Spirit, Reason and Emotion and the Academy Award winning Der Fuehrer’s Face. Following the war, Joe served as Production Supervisor on Make Mine Music. He then began working in earnest on a story he’d first conceived of in 1937. While watching the antics of his English springer spaniel after his daughter was born, he made some sketches and wrote a bare bones plot for a film that was known for years as Lady, after his spaniel. Even though Joe tinkered with the story off and on for almost a decade, Walt was never quite satisfied with the direction it was taking. After reading a 1945 short story, Happy Dan, the Cynical Dog, Walt thought that merging it with Joe’s story just might do the trick and Lady and the Tramp was born.

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Joe didn’t stick around to see his story develop into a classic film, though. He left Disney in 1949, six years before Lady hit theaters, but not because of any animosity or hard feelings. Wanting a new challenge in his life, Joe left to open his own ceramics studio. Some years later, he started up his own greeting card company. Throughout the years, no matter what else he was doing, he would still occasionally come over to the Disney lot to consult on a character’s design or a particularly sticky situation in a movie’s plot, chat with the boys and then return to his pots or cards.

In 1989, when Joe was 81, the age when most people have long since retired, he was apparently looking for another new challenge. Whether it was because the Disney Renaissance was just starting to hit its stride making animation exciting again or Joe just missed the good old days, he returned to work at Disney, forty years after he left. And not just on a consulting basis, but actual full time work. He would come into the studio at least four days a week from then until his death, over fifteen years later.

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Joe became part of the Visual Development team on Beauty and the Beast. From there he added Character Design back into his repertoire and did both tasks on The Lion King, Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Hercules and Tarzan. He added to the stories of Mulan and Lilo and Stich and came up with the concept of giving yo-yos to a flock of flamingoes for the Carnival of the Animals sequence in Fantasia 2000 (making him the only person to contribute new material to both Fantasia movies). In 1992, long before he was done making significant contributions to the company but decades after he had started, Joe was declared an official Disney Legend

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Joe’s final project was a short called Lorenzo, which he thought up after observing another pet of his, this time a cat, after it had been in a fight with two poodles. He thought What would happen if my cat lost its tail and what would that look like set to tango music?  Lorenzo was initially supposed to be part of a third Fantasia film, but when that project fell apart it was released on its own in 2004. The following year it received an Oscar nomination and won the Annie Award for Best Animated Short. Just over two months later, Joe was sitting at his drawing desk at home (it being one of the few days he didn’t go to the studio), doing one of the things he loved most in this world, when he suffered a fatal heart attack. The Legendary story man was just nine days short of his 97th birthday.

Friday, March 29, 2019

March 29 - Jack Kinney

On this day, in 1909, John Ryan Kinney was born somewhere in Utah. By his teens, Jack's family had moved to Los Angeles, California where he was a football player at John C. Fremont High School with Roy Williams (who would later become the Big Mooseketeer on The Mickey Mouse Club). In February 1931, he began working at the Walt Disney Studio as an animator. He worked on Mickey Mouse shorts like The Band Concert and Silly Symphonies like The Cookie Carnival. He then moved into the story department and became a story director for Mickey and Pluto shorts. Some of his credits in this phase are the classics Brave Little Tailor, Mickey's Trailer and Bone Trouble.

By 1940, Jack had moved to sequence director for feature films. He worked on sections of Pinocchio, Dumbo, Saludos Amigos, The Three Caballeros, Make Mine Music, Fun and Fancy Free, Melody Time and The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad. During World War II, Jack help direct the animated documentary Victory Through Air Power and won an Academy Award for the Donald Duck short Der Fuehrer's Face.

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During the same time Jack was directing sequences for the feature films, he was one of two directors for all the Donald shorts (Jack King was the other) and he was the main director for all the Goofy shorts from 1940 until 1945. He is credited with the creation of Goofy's How to... series and directed the only Goofy short to ever receive an Oscar nomination, How to Play Football.

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As the Fifties began, Jack began directing some of the Walt Disney Specials series of shorts. 1954's Pigs Is Pigs nabbed him a third Academy Award nomination. The same year, he also directed The Lone Chipmunks, Chip and Dale's final short. Jack then briefly moved into television animation, putting together episodes of the Disneyland series, but the writing was on the wall. When the Shorts Department was dissolved in 1958, so was Jack's position. After 27 years with Disney, he no longer had a place to hang his hat.

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Not to be deterred, Jack started his own studio with Hal Adelquist, another former Disney man looking for a new home. Their first project was a feature for UPA/Columbia featuring Mr. Magoo, an adaptation of 1001 Arabian Nights. He then teamed up with his younger brother Dick (who had also been an animator for Disney) to produce a new television series of Popeye the Sailor. Then he became a story man for The New Three Stooges. He eventually landed at Hannah-Barbera in the late Seventies as a story director for Saturday morning fare like Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo and it was there that he ended his career in 1983.


Also in 1983, Jack was awarded the Windsor McCay Award at that years Annies for his lifetime of contributions to the art of animation. In 1988, he published a short memoir titled Walt Disney and Other Assorted Characters, detailing his years in Burbank. On February 9, 1992, Jack passed away quietly at his home in Glendale, California. He was 82.