December 26 - Byron Howard
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Image copyright Disney |
On this day, in 1968, Byron P. Howard was born in Misawa, Japan.
Byron grew up in Issaquah, Washington, a small city about 15
miles east of Seattle. He graduated from Issaquah High School in 1986 and moved
on to Evergreen College in Olympia. His dream had always been to be an animator
for Disney and to help achieve that dream he wrote Frank Thomas, one of Disney’s
Nine Old Men, for advice. The letter he got back was treated like a roadmap to
success and it clearly worked (or I wouldn’t be talking about him today).
To help speed up his goals, Byron moved to Orlando, Florida
after his college graduation and began submitting his portfolio in an effort to
get hired. While he was waiting to check that box, he figured why not and took
a job at the Disney-MGM Studios as a guide on the animation tour. In 1994, after
four submissions, Byron was selected to be a part of the internship program. He
began as an inbetweener on Pocahontas.
He then became a full-fledged animator for Mulan
and by Lilo and Stitch, a mere five
years after being hired, he was the supervising animator for the character of
Cobra Bubbles. He continued that role with Brother
Bear as supervisor for Kenai. After the release of Brother Bear (and the
collapse of the Florida animation department), Byron relocated to Southern
California and enjoyed another promotion.
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Image copyright Disney |
In 2008, Byron co-directed
Disney’s 48th animated feature, Bolt, with Chris
Williams. Bolt
was only moderately successful at the box office but signaled a turnaround in
Disney’s commitment to story and quality in its animated offerings. Byron and
Chris’ efforts earned them an Oscar nomination for Best Animated Feature (they
would lose to Disney’s other feature that year, WALL*E). Byron
followed his freshman picture with the even more successful Tangled.
He co-directed the Rapunzel tale with Nathan Greno (and it strangely did not
get nominated for the Oscar).
As they sometimes say, the
third time’s the charm. In 2016, Byron teamed up with Rich Moore to direct the
mega-hit Zootopia. This time out,
Byron’s work became the fourth animated film to rack up over $1 Billion in
worldwide box office receipts (which still only made it the fourth highest
grossing film of the year) and put several little golden statues on his mantle including
an Oscar, a Golden Globe, a Critic’s Choice Award and an Annie. As a follow up
to Zootopia, Byron is reportedly
working on a new story with Lin-Manuel Miranda, who we all now know as Jack
from Mary Poppins Returns (I think he
also did some sort of historical piece on Broadway).
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