On this day, in 1933, Ronald William Miller was born in Los Angeles,
California. The son of Canadian
immigrants, Ron played football at John C. Fremont High School before
continuing his sports career at the University of Southern California. While he
was there, he went on a blind date after a USC football game with a fetching
young woman by the name of Diane Marie Disney. It was love at first sight and
the couple was married on May 9, 1954. Ron then did a tour in the United States
Army, returning to Los Angeles in 1956 to play professional football for the Rams.
His career as a tight end only lasted one season. His father-in-law saw him
play in exactly two games. In the first one, Ron was knocked unconscious on a
carry early in the game and didn’t wake up until the third quarter. The second
only went marginally better. Walt informed his son-in-law that he wasn’t
interested in raising his own grandchildren, so why didn’t Ron come work for
Disney before he got himself killed? Ron felt good about achieving his dream to
play in the pros, agreed that Walt’s idea was probably a much safer way to go
and hung up his jersey at the end of the season.
|
Image courtesy thecount.com |
Ron’s
first job at his father-in-law’s company had actually occurred a few years
earlier. While waiting for his draft notice to come through from the army, he
shuttled plans for Disneyland back and forth between the WED Enterprises offices
in Burbank and the construction site in Anaheim. For his return, Walt sponsored
Ron’s membership in the Director’s Guild of America and made him an assistant
on Old Yeller (but whether it was an
assistant director or an assistant to the director is unclear, he didn’t get
any official credit).
Shortly
after getting his feet wet in production, Warner Brothers called Ron asking if
he would audition to replace an actor they were having problems with on their
popular Western Cheyenne. The audition led to a screen test, but didn’t go any
further. When Walt got wind of what was going on, he told his son-in-law to
forget acting and concentrate on being a producer. Ron acquiesced. The actor in
question, Clint Walker, soon settled with Warner Brothers and returned to the
show, so it’s a moot point whether Walt was simply being heavy handed with Ron
or if he had some knowledge as to how the situation was going to turn out and
was saving Ron some headaches. Either way, Ron never tried acting again.
|
Image courtesy latimes.com |
Putting
his nose to the grindstone, Ron began moving up the production ladder, moving
from associate producer to producer and, eventually, executive producer. He
worked on classic films like Son of
Flubber, Summer Magic and That Darn Cat! His first gig as a full-fledged
producer was for the 1968 comedy Never a
Dull Moment, starring Dick Van Dyke and Edward G. Robinson. Throughout the
Seventies, Ron racked up producing credits on movies like Tron, Pete’s Dragon, Escape to Witch Mountain, The Rescuers and The Fox and the Hound. He also produced
several episodes of The Wonderful World
of Disney anthology show, earning six Emmy nominations and one win along
the way.
|
Image courtesy nobhillgazette.com |
In 1978,
Ron became the President of the Walt Disney Company, the number two man to
then-CEO Card Walker. Ron was the more experimental of the two men. He embraced
new computer animation techniques for Tron.
He was a driving force behind the development and construction of Epcot Center.
He created The Disney Channel. When he moved into the CEO position in 1984, he
created Touchstone Pictures to open up the company creatively, which it desperately
needed. But he also made colossal blunders, too.
Under
Card, the company had been playing its cards very conservatively, spending most
of the almost two decades since Walt’s passing trying to guess what the founder
would have done. As a result, Disney stopped innovating (for the most part),
putting out mostly mediocre fare that really didn’t even play to the company’s
strengths much less build on them. Profits fell even though Disney held assets
that could have prevented that from happening, if utilized properly. A fact
that didn’t escape the notice of investors. One of them, Saul Steinberg,
attempted a hostile takeover. As CEO, Ron negotiated a buyout of Saul’s 11.5%
ownership, saving the company but at a huge cost (Saul made about $60 million
off the deal). A group of shareholders sued. Around the same time, Ron was
praising all the wonderful synergistic things that were going to happen along
with the next animated classic the company was putting out, so it’s okay that
it was the most expensive one yet (spoiler alert: The Black Cauldron failed on nearly every level). When a second
hostile takeover reared its ugly head, it proved to be too much. After just 18
months at the helm of the company, Ron was asked to resign and replaced with
Michael Eisner and Frank Wells.
|
Image courtesy wineindustryadvisor.com |
Following
his forced retirement, Ron and Dianne relocated to the Napa Valley. A few years
earlier, they’d purchased some land there with the intention of cultivating a
vineyard for their twilight years. That plan just got moved up a bit. They
founded the Silverado Vineyards, which currently produces five varieties of
wine.
In 2009,
Ron and Dianne help found the Walt Disney Family Museum in San Francisco,
California. Ron served on the board of the museum from the beginning and was
the President for several years. After Dianne passed away in 2013, Ron
continued to look after the museum and the winery, until succumbing to heart failure himself earlier this year. On February 9, 2019, he passed away in Napa, California, never quite shaking the stigma that comes with getting fired on such a grand scale, but always believing that he had left Disney stronger for his service. He was 85.
No comments:
Post a Comment