Thursday, March 21, 2019

March 17 - Kurt Russell

Image courtesy people.com
On this day, in 1951, Kurt Vogel Russell was born in Springfield, Massachusetts. As the only boy in a family of four children, Kurt was predestined to follow in his father's footsteps somehow. His father, Bing Russell, was both an actor and a baseball team owner, so Kurt began acting at the age of 11 and played ball through high school and on into a minor league career (he actually advanced into AA ball), but a torn rotator cuff injury in 1973 ended his game. After graduating form Thousand Oaks High School in 1969, he had also joined the California Air National Guard, spending six years as part of the 146th Tactical Airlift Wing in Van Nuys, California.

Kurt's film debut was an uncredited role as Shin Kicker in an Elvis Presley movie, It Happened at the World's Fair, in 1963. His small screen debut came the same year as the title character in The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters, a Western that lasted one season on ABC. Over the next few years, he made guest appearances on several popular Westerns like Gunsmoke, The Virginian, Laredo and several episodes of Daniel Boone, as well as shows like Gilligan's Island and The Fugitive.

Image copyright Disney
In 1966, Kurt joined the Disney family when he was cast as Edward White Jr. in Follow Me Boys, starring Fred MacMurray and Vera Miles. Boys would be the last live action film to be produced by Walt Disney and was released just two weeks before his death. Kurt's involvement with the picture would give him a mysterious entry into the lore of Disneyana. After Walt passed, what is believed to be the last memo he ever wrote was discovered on his desk. It's titled "TV Projects in Production: ready for production or possible for escalation and story" and listed four items underneath: Ron Miller, 2 way down cellar, Kurt Russell, CIA - Mobley. We'll never know for sure why Kurt was included in this list. We do know that Walt was thoroughly impressed with Kurt's talent (he'd mentioned it several times before) and had made sure to get Kurt a contract with the studio. But the delightfully vague memo doesn't give any clues as to what Walt planned to do with his newly contracted talent. And it really doesn't matter as Kurt would go on to become one of Disney's biggest box office draws of the Seventies anyways.

Image copyright Disney
After being featured in 1968's The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band, which starred Buddy Ebsen and Lesley Ann Warren (with Goldie Hawn, Kurt's future life partner, in her big screen debut), Kurt would go on to star in a string of hits for the company. The same year, he appeared with Dean Jones in The Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit. In 1969, he played Dexter Riley for the first time in The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes. Computer spawned two sequels, giving Kurt two chances to reprise Dexter in Now You See Him, Now You Don't and The Strongest Man in the World. In 1971, he played opposite Raffles, the chimpanzee, in The Barefoot Executive (which happened to be John Ritter's big screen debut). These were followed by Charley and the Angel, again with Fred MacMurray, and Superdad with Bob Crane.

Image copyright 20th Century Fox (so now Disney)
By the end of his ten year contract with Disney, Kurt was not only a well established, successful movie star but was able to continue that stardom into more adult roles in pictures at other studios. As the Eighties began, he teamed up with director John Carpenter for a string of movies that have earned cult status including Escape From New York, Big Trouble in Little China, a remake of The Thing and Escape from L.A. Outside of that relationship, Kurt earned a Golden Globe nomination playing opposite Meryl Streep and Cher in the 1984 drama Silkwood. He found commercial success in such films as Backdraft, Stargate, and Tango and Cash.

Image copyright Disney
Kurt continued to contribute roles to his Disney portfolio over the years as well. He provided the voice for Adult Copper in The Fox and the Hound. He played the title character in Touchstone Pictures' 1992 comedy Captain Ron. He starred as Wyatt Earp in the Hollywood Pictures' Western Tombstone. Kurt was the coach of the US Olympic Hockey team in Miracle and played a super hero in Sky High. His latest role for the company was as Ego, Peter Quill's father, in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2. For all of his hijinks on film, Kurt was made an official Disney Legend in 1998.

In the last two decades, Kurt has also managed to land a recurring role in the Fast and the Furious franchise as Mr. Nobody and teamed up with Quentin Tarantino several times. He was last seen over the holiday season on Netflix as Santa Claus in The Christmas Chronicles and has two projects due out later this year: a money laundering crime thriller called Crypto and another Tarantino film, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, both of which I'm sure will feature his usual shenanigans.

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

March 16 - Joyce Carlson

Image courtesy jimhillmedia.com
On this day, in 1923, Joyce Carlson was born in Racine, Wisconsin. Joyce and her family moved to Southern California when she was 15. After graduating from Santa Monica High School, she needed a job and became a member of the Traffic Department at the Walt Disney Studio. Her job was to deliver mail, paint brushes, coffee and anything else that was needed to the various departments of the studio. It wasn't long before she wanted something more, so Joyce created a portfolio of drawings, showed them to management and was promptly moved into the Ink and Paint Department.

Image copyright Disney
Joyce's first assignments were the shorts Disney created for the United States Government during World War II. She was quickly moved into the Feature Animation division and worked on The Three Caballeros, Cinderella and Peter Pan. During production on Lady and the Tramp, Joyce was promoted to a Lead Ink Artist position which carried on into Sleeping Beauty and One Hundred and One Dalmatians. Technology had advanced by that time, however. Dalmatians ushered in the era of xerography, which allowed animators drawings to be photocopied onto cels, eliminating the need for inkers. As the Ink and Paint Department shrunk accordingly, Joyce, after 16 years of expertly floating paint on acetate, transferred to WED Enterprises and began the Imagineering phase of her career.

Image copyright Disney
In 1962, Joyce began a mentoring process under two legends: Mary Blair and Marc Davis. Her first project was as part of the team designing and dressing the sets for the Carousel of Progress for the 1964 World's Fair. She worked closely with Leota Toombs, who had also come from the Ink and Paint Department (and would later achieve immortality as the face of Madame Leota in the Haunted Mansion), specifically creating the sturdier show hinges on all of the doors of the GE appliances that were used in the attraction.

Image copyright Disney
Joyce is best known for her work on another ride for the Fair, UNICEF's It's a Small World. She was responsible for designing and building the majority of the singing children figures seen throughout the attraction. She was also one of handful of cast members who traveled to New York to oversee the installation of all the Disney created pavilions. After the Fair, she was in charge of moving It's a Small World across country to Disneyland and eventually supervised the creation of the versions in Florida, Tokyo and Paris.

After the World's Fair projects were completed, Joyce and Leota continued to work together making models and final figures for all sorts of attractions. Her work can be seen in The Enchanted Tiki Room, Pirates of the Caribbean, the Haunted Mansion, Country Bear Jamboree and America Sings (which had a whole slew of its figures recycled into Splash Mountain), to name a few.

Image courtesy mouseplanet.com
In 1982, Joyce moved to Florida where she became the resident Small World expert and was promoted to Senior Show Production Designer for Walt Disney World. She was the first female employee of the company to reach both the 50 and 55 year anniversary marks. She retired from full time work in 2000, but like most of Disney's old timers, continued to work at least part time for six more years and was available to mentor new Imagineers beyond that. Just after her retirement in 2000, Joyce was made an official Disney Legend. She was also given her own window on Main Street, USA in the Magic Kingdom that reads "Dolls by Miss Joyce - Dollmaker for the World - Shops in New York, California, Florida, Japan and Paris - Owner and Founder, Joyce Carlson." The eagle eyed among us can also spot a figure in her likeness in the Florida version of Small World. Joyce succumbed to cancer on January 8, 2008 at her home in Orlando, Florida. She was 84.

Tuesday, March 19, 2019

March 15 - J. Pat O'Malley

Image courtesy behindthevoiceactors.com
On this day, in 1904, James Patrick Francis O'Malley was born in Burnley, Lancashire, England. His professional career began in 1925 as a singer going by the name of Pat O'Malley. In 1930 he joined Jack Hylton and his orchestra, eventually recording more than 400 songs that were popular at the time. In 1935, Hylton crossed the pond to America bringing Pat with him. The move didn't pan out for the orchestra, but Pat stayed in the States and began a long acting career, changing his name to J. Pat O'Malley to avoid confusion with another actor.

Over the next four decades, Pat became a prolific character staple in Hollywood. From his first role as a fish peddler in 1940's Captain Caution to his last as the landlord in 1981's Cheaper to Keep Her, he made a comfortable living admirably filling in the little gaps of dozens of films and television shows. Some of his notable film roles include Hynes in Lassie Come Home, Ratliff in The Long, Hot Summer with Paul Newman, and Muldoon in A House Is Not a Home with Shelly Winters. On television he guest starred on everything from The Adventures of Kit Carson to The Dick Van Dyke Show to a memorable turn on The Twilight Zone to playing Carol Brady's father on The Brady Bunch.

Image copyright Disney
Pat is a venerated member of the Disney family. His first roles for the studio came in 1949 for the package film The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad. He played Cyril Proudbottom, Mr. Winkie, a Policeman and the Paper Boy. Two years later he gave voice to Tweedle Dee, Tweedle Dum, the Walrus, the Carpenter and Mother Oyster in Alice in Wonderland. For 1961's One Hundred and One Dalmatians he was Jasper Badun and the Colonel. He provided the voice for several of the cockney characters in the Jolly Holiday section of Mary Poppins including the Master of the Hounds and the Pearly Drummer. Unfortunately, he is also credited with being Dick Van Dykes dialect coach, so that awful accent of Bert's is at least partially Pat's fault. His final credited voice roles for Disney were as the vulture Buzzie and stuffy old Colonel Hathi in The Jungle Book (he did manage to sneak in an uncredited turn as the blacksmith dog in Robin Hood).

Image copyright Disney
Pat played a big part in the Spin and Marty serial that was shown as part of The Mickey Mouse Club. For three years, he played Perkins, Marty's butler and the Triple R Ranch's assistant cook. You can also catch a glimpse of Pat in the 1963 comedy Son of Flubber as a sign painter.

Throughout the Seventies, Pat continued popping up on television series like Emergency!, Three's Company and Barney Miller, with his last appearances on both big and small screens occurring in 1981. On February 27, 1985, just two weeks before his 81st birthday, Pat passed away from cardiovascular disease at his home in San Juan Capistrano, California.

Monday, March 18, 2019

March 14 - Billy Crystal

Image courtesy hollywoodreporter.com
On this day, in 1948, William Edward Crystal was born in Manhattan, New York. As a toddler, Billy's family moved to Long Island so his father could take over his maternal grandfather's record store, the Commodore Music Store. The store was a big promoter of jazz musicians through it's record label, Commodore Records, founded by Billy's Uncle Milt. As a result, he grew up constantly surrounded by jazz legends. Louis Armstrong and Pee Wee Russell were frequent dinner guests. He saw his first movie in a theater, Shane (featuring future co-star Jack Palance), sitting on the lap of Billie Holiday. Billy and his brothers would entertain everyone with routines they'd memorized from comedy albums from their fathers store It was a pretty idyllic life until his mid teens. In 1963, unable to compete with new discount record chains, Commodore Music was forced to close and, a few months later, Billy's dad suffered a fatal heart attack at the age of 54.

Image courtesy ifc.com
Billy graduated from Long Beach High School in 1965 and moved on to Marshall University in West Virginia on a baseball scholarship. He would not get a single at-bat at the school, however. The baseball program was axed in his first year. Rather than return to Marshall the following year, Billy stayed in New York (mainly because of a cute girl, Janice Goldfinger, to whom he's been married since 1970) and began studying acting at the Herbert Berghof Studio and directing at New York University. He graduated in 1970 with a Bachelor's degree and immediately put it to good use as a stand up comedian.

Image courtesy youtube.com
Billy spent most of the Seventies doing all the things a stand up comic does. He performed at colleges and in coffee houses in a trio with friends, eventually creating a solo act playing gigs at comedy clubs. To keep his comedy career afloat, he subsidized his income as a substitute teacher in the New York City public school system (a fertile ground for bits for his act, I'm sure). He was scheduled to appear on the very first episode of Saturday Night Live, but his sketch was cut at the last minute (he made up for it, and then some, later). He also made the rounds on the syndicated game show circuit and still holds the record for getting his contestant the the top of The $20,000 Pyramid the fastest (26 seconds). He was part of the Dean Martin Roast of Muhammad Ali and a guest on the first Tonight Show with Johnny Carson (he would also appear on Carson's last show 22 years later).

Image copyright NBC
In 1977, Billy's acting career began with a bang when he became part of the cast of Soap. His portrayal of Jodie Dallas is sometimes credited with being the first openly gay character on television (it was actually the second, the first happened on The Corner Bar, a 1972 series that only lasted 16 episodes). Although Jodie would have relationships with women over the course of the series (and the network would be really skittish about anything overtly same-sex) Billy and the producers maintained that he was gay the whole time. While highly controversial with the religious right, Jodie never actually received any protests from the gay community (once some initial fears were satisfactorily dealt with).

Image courtesy goldderby.com
When Soap ended it's run in 1981, Billy was given his own variety show The Billy Crystal Comedy Hour but it only lasted two episodes. He then hosted Saturday Night Live and joined the regular cast for a season in 1984. His big contribution to the SNL oeuvre was the talk show host Fernando and the catch phrase "You look maahvelous!" Billy's most successful run on television is undoubtedly as an awards show host. He's emceed three Grammy Awards (all in a row) and hosted the Oscars nine times (second only to Bob Hope's nineteen turns) earning himself two Emmy Awards in the process.

Image courtesy neatorama.com
Billy's film career did not begin as well as his television one. His debut was in a Joan Rivers directed clunker called Rabbit Test in 1978. He plays the world's first pregnant man, a premise which definitely has potential, but there's a reason Joan never directed anything ever again (it is notable only for being the big screen debut of Billy and Michael Keaton). Things picked up for Billy when he teamed with Rob Reiner for three films. After a bit part in This Is Spinal Tap, Billy gave a star turn as Miracle Max in The Princess Bride. The duo's third film together, When Harry Met Sally..., is arguably Billy's best performance ever and earned him a Golden Globe nomination.

Image courtesy hollywoodreporter.com
In the years since, Billy's films have been a mixed bag. He earned another Golden Glob nomination for the classic Western comedy City Slickers (with Jack Palance) and helped start Robert DeNiro's comedy career with Analyze This but also did films like the box office bomb Father's Day. He actually used his degree in directing for the first time in 1992 for Mr. Saturday Night (a box office flop that was nonetheless nominated for a few acting awards) and again in 1995 on Forget Paris (a modest box office success). In 2001, Billy directed a HBO movie, 61*, which chronicled the race to break Babe Ruth's single season home run record and nabbed him an Emmy nomination for directing.

Image copyright Pixar
Billy could have become part of the Disney family in 1995. He was asked to take on the role of Buzz Lightyear in Toy Story. He turned it down. The subsequent popularity of that franchise was definitely an influence when, six years later, he accepted the part of Mike Wazowski in Monsters, Inc. He reprised the role twelve years later for the prequel Monsters University and made a cameo as Mike Car in 2006's Cars.

In recent years, Billy has written a memoir of his father, 700 Sundays, which was developed from a successful one man show of the same name on Broadway. It won a Tony Award for Best Special Theatrical Event in 2005, He is part owner of the Arizona Diamondbacks baseball team, which earned him a World Series ring in 2001 when his team triumphed over his beloved New York Yankees. And I would be terribly remiss if I didn't mention the decades of philanthropy Billy has done, starting with hosting Comic Relief in 1986, his signing of a Harley Davidson motorcycle that supported Gulf Coast relief in 2005 and his continued participation in the Simon Wiesanthal Center Museum of Tolerance. Happy birthday Billy. May we be the one millionth person to tell you that you really do look maahvelous (and ask if you fee
l up to another Academy Awards broadcast; they could really use you).

Saturday, March 16, 2019

March 13 - Joe Ranft

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On this day, in 1960, Joseph Henry Ranft was born in Pasadena, California. As a kid, Joe developed two great passions in his life: magic and film. By the time he was 15, he was a member of the Magic Castle Junior Group (which, as anyone who is into magic knows, is a big deal). Unlike most of the members of that group, who go on to become professional magicians, Joe felt the pull of comedic storytelling a little bit more and enrolled at CalArts to study character animation. Working alongside fellow students like John Lasseter and Brad Bird, Ranft eventually caught the eye of Disney with a student film called Good Humor. After graduating in 1980, he moved right into the Television Department at the Disney Studios (knowing full well that if it didn't work out, he always had a bit of magic in his back pocket to rely on).

Image copyright Pixar
The first five years of Joe's career weren't exactly what anyone would call auspicious. He worked on all kinds of projects, developing stories and creating storyboards to go along with them, but none of them were ever actually produced. Eventually Joe was transferred into the Feature Animation Department where he had the good fortune to apprentice under one of Walt's Nine Old Men, Eric Larson and his prospects picked up considerably. Joe spent the rest of the Eighties and early Nineties working on the stories of films like Oliver and Company, The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin and The Lion King. He was Story Supervisor on The Rescuers Down Under and Storyboard Supervisor for The Nightmare Before Christmas and James and the Giant Peach.

Image copyright Pixar
In 1991, Joe's old schoolmate, John Lasseter, asked him to join his new venture, a studio called Pixar. The move earned Joe his only Oscar nomination (for Best Original Screenplay on Toy Story). In addition to being Story Supervisor on Toy Story and A Bug's Life, he began to get more heavily into voice work (hey, Pixar was a small place at the time; everyone had to do multiple things). He'd already provided some screams in Beauty and the Beast and was Igor, Dr. Finkelstein's assistant, in The Nightmare Before Christmas, but now he actually got dialogue. Joe is the voice of Lenny the Binoculars in Toy Story, Heimlich in A Bug's Life, Wheezy in Toy Story 2, Pete "Claws" Ward in Monsters, Inc., Jacques the Shrimp in Finding Nemo, and Doggy Loggy in Chicken Little.

In the early Aughts, Joe was elevated to co-director on Cars. He provided the voices for Red and Peterbilt, but never got to see them on the big screen. Tragically, on August 16, 2005, Joe was a passenger in car that lost control, crashed through a guardrail and fell 130 feet into the Navarro River in Mendocino County, California. Joe and the car's driver were killed on impact. Both Cars and Tim Burton's Corpse Bride (which Joe had been executive producer for) were dedicated to his memory. He was posthumously made a Disney Legend in 2006 and given the Windsor McCay lifetime achievement award at the 2016 Annie Awards. He was only 45 at the time of his death and was a loss felt throughout the entire industry.

March 12 - Frank Welker

Image courtesy disney.fandom.com
On this day, in 1946, Franklin Wendell Welker was born in Denver, Colorado. Since the total box office take of all the films he has ever been in is well over $6 Billion, I probably don’t need to tell you who Frank Welker is. I do? But what about all the iconic characters he’s played on television? You say you still couldn’t pick him out of a crowd of one? To be honest, neither could I but what I could do is listen to his voice and tell you who his is. If you haven’t figured it out by now, Frank is a voice actor, and not just any old guy who sits in front of a microphone for a living, either. He’s considered by many to be the King of Voiceover Land.
In the early Sixties, Frank moved to Southern California and decided to become a corsair at Santa Monica City College studying the theatrical arts. His first professional acting gig was as Rutgers College Kid in Elvis Presley’s second to last film, 1969’s The Trouble with Girls. Around the same time he was cast as a disembodied voice in a Friskies commercial. During the Friskies shoot, Frank heard about an audition that was taking place over at the Hanna-Barbera studio for a new cartoon series about a group of meddling kids and their dog. He auditioned for part of the dog, but when the cast list for Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? came out, he’d won the role of Fred Jones. Not only has Frank been performing as Fred ever since (he’s the only original actor still involved with the franchise), he’s become an almost ubiquitous voice in the industry.
Image copyright Hanna-Barbera
Frank’s early years centered almost exclusively on Hanna-Barbera productions. In addition to Fred, he was the voice of Jabberjaw, Wonder Dog, Dynomutt (theDog Wonder), the Schmoo, and Marvin White. As the Seventies wore on, he began to branch out to other studios until he was one of the busiest actors in Hollywood. His resume is a who’s who of Eighties and Nineties cartoons:
Inspector Gadget: Brain, Dr. Claw and MAD Cat
Super Friends: Mister Mxyzptlk, Darkseid and Kalibak
G.I. Joe: Wild Bill and Dreadnok Torch
Image courtesy theinfosphere.org
The Transformers: Megatron, Soundwave, Buzzsaw, Ravage, Mirage and about a dozen others
The Real Ghostbusters: Ray Stantz and Slimer
The Muppet Babies: Kermit, Beaker, Skeeter and Camilla the Chicken
Johnny Quest: Dr. Jeremiah Surd
The Smurfs: Hefty Smurf, Poet Smurf and Peewit
The Simpsons: Santa’s Little Helper and Snowball II
Futurama: Nibbler
Image copyright Warner Bros.
Animaniacs: Mr. Plotz, Runt, Ralph the Guard and Buttons
Tiny Toon Adventures: Gogo Dodo, Furball and Bleeper
And those are just the highlights. From those two decades. And only covers television. This brings us to some of his film work, which is again a widely varied group of characters. Frank’s been the voice of the martians in Mars Attacks!, the penguins in Mr. Popper’s Penguins, Spock’s screams in Star Trek III, the Thing in The Golden Child, Jinx the robot in SpaceCamp, Alien Sil in Species, Malebolgia in Spawn, Azrael, Gargamel’s cat, in the latest Smurf movies, a whole slew of bots in the Transformers film series, Stripe and Mogwai in Gremlins and Mohawk in Gremlins 2.

Image copyright Disney
Frank has managed to pretty well permeate the Disney family as well.  For a while there, if there was a cute, usually fuzzy sidekick in a Disney film, chances were pretty good that it was one of Frank's performances. He's been Louie the Hot Dog Vendor and additional dogs in Oliver and Company, Dumbo in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Max in The Little Mermaid, Stuffed Tiger in DuckTales the Movie, Marahute and Joanna in The Rescuers Down Under, the Footstool in Beauty and the Beast, Abu, Rajah and the Cave of Wonders in Aladdin, several additional voices in The Lion King, the Reindeer in The Santa Clause, Bigfoot in A Goody Movie, Flit in Pocahontas, Pegasus in Hercules, Cri-Kee, Khan, Little Brother and Hayabusa in Mulan, Thumper in A Bug's Life, Sabor in Tarzan, Nana 2 in Return to Neverland, the Anglerfish and the Whale in Finding Nemo, the Bandersnatch in 2010's Alice in Wonderland and will be reprising his roles of Abu and the Cave of Wonders in the live action version of Aladdin coming out later this year.

Image copyright Disney
As if that weren't enough, he's appeared in the following television series for the company as well: DuckTales, Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers, TaleSpin, Darkwing Duck, Goof Troop, The Little Mermaid, Bonkers, Aladdin, Gargoyles, Timon and Pumbaa, Quack Pack, Jungle Cubs, 101 Dalmatians, Hercules, Recess, Mickey Mouse Works, Buzz Lightyear of Star Command, House of Mouse, The Legend of Tarzan, Kim Possible, Lilo and Stitch and The Emperor's New School. And we haven't even touched video games yet (just know that there are dozens, including the role of Oswald the Lucky Rabbit in Epic Mickey).

At the age of 73, Frank seems to be slowing down, if only slightly (he is already in pre-production on another Scooby-Doo movie). But even if he were to stop cold today, he leaves behind a body of work that most actors can only dream of. So it is with a joyful heart and many thanks for bringing so much of our childhoods to life that we wish a happy birthday to the King of Voicelandia!

Friday, March 15, 2019

March 11 - Bruce Healey

On this day, in 1950, Bruce Healey was born in St. Louis, Missouri. As a child, Bruce began, like many kids, learning how to play the piano (with a healthy dose of percussion thrown in) and, like most kids, he hated it. Okay, considering how his life progressed, maybe hate is a strong word but he did not grow up wanting to be a musician. That dream took years to form. As he got better at playing different instruments, he began to study how to arrange songs for those instruments which led him to actually composing his own pieces. And that’s when he first thought “Hey, this could be a career.” In order to further those plans, Bruce enrolled at California State University, Fullerton as a Music Composition student. At the same time he got a part time job at Disneyland, playing the drums in the marching band for the Christmas parade (all music for the parades used to be live). Thus, his growing love of music became intertwined with a growing love for all things Disney.
Image copyright Disney
Bruce began working for Disney full time in 1973, after graduating from CSU with his Bachelor’s degree. As part of the team in charge of providing music for everything from parades, to television specials to Super Bowl half time shows, Bruce spent his days arranging and composing pages and pages of music. By 1980, he’d become Music Coordinator and Arranger and six years later he’d moved up to Music Director for Walt Disney Attractions, the position he still holds today. He will proudly tell you that he is responsible for every piece of music produced by Disneyland (and just as quick to point out he doesn't do it alone) since 1986 but his work can be heard at theme parks spanning the globe.
Image copyright Disney
Perhaps his most famous piece is currently heard around the Rivers of America in Disneyland, off of Sunset Boulevard in Disney’s Hollywood Studios in Florida and in the Mediterranean Harbor area of Tokyo DisneySea. Some of you are smiling knowingly because you know I’m talking about Fantasmic!, one of the most popular night time spectaculars that Disney’s ever created and has been running for almost 27 years in California, where it all began. So even though Bruce says it’s okay if people know his music but don’t know him, the next time you find yourself daydreaming about slaying a dragon, and you find yourself humming a familiar little tune, may you think fondly of a man who has devoted his life to making so many of your favorite Disney elements sound really good. Happy birthday Bruce!