In 1934, Bill headed west to Hollywood. He started out in publicity, writing not only press releases but sketching advertisements. One of his clients happened to be Edgar Bergen, who used Bill to juice up gags for his ventriloquist act. And one of Edgar's good friends happened to be Walt Disney.
By 1943, Bill was working for The Disney studio, writing gags and stories for the Mickey Mouse comic strip. He happily did that for several years until one day the big boss called him into his office. Bill tells this story: "Walt said he'd decided to go into television and I was the guy who was going to do it. I looked stunned and said 'But I don't know anything about television.' Walt smiled back at me and said, 'That's okay. Nobody does.'"
In 1950, Bill wrote and produced One Hour in Wonderland. It was Disney's first attempt at a television program and was a promo for the soon to be released Alice in Wonderland. It was also a smash hit, at least by the modest standards of early television shows. It was enough of a success that Bill would go on to produce both The Mickey Mouse Club and Davy Crockett programs.
Bill moved from the small screen to the big one in 1956. Over the next two decades, he would be an integral part as both writer and producer of 18 movies for the studio, seven of which appeared on a 1973 list of all-time box office champions. Maybe you've heard of a few of them: The Shaggy Dog, The Absent Minded Professor, That Darn Cat!, The Love Bug and Bedknobs and Broomsticks. His grandest achievement coincided with Walt's. He co-wrote Mary Poppins with Don DaGradi, earning one Oscar nomination and a Writer's Guild of America win, and also produced the film, earning a second Oscar nomination.
Shortly after returning home from the set of his last film, One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing, Bill suffered a heart attack and passed away on January 27, 1975. In 1991, he would become an official Disney Legend for his 32 years of outstanding work with the Walt Disney Company.
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