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Tag Archives: Births

July 20

July 20, 1890 – Character Actress Verna Felton is Born

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“Walt found her voice wonderful, and he used her again and again.” – John Culhane, Author and Film Historian

On July 20, 1890, Verna Felton was born in Salinas, California. She began her career in radio, working on Red Skelton’s radio series and The Jack Benny Program. In 1941, Felton was hired as a voice actress for the Disney animated feature film Dumbo as Mrs. Jumbo (Dumbo’s mother) and the Elephant Matriarch. She would continue to be hired by the studio in a variety of roles, including the Fairy Godmother in Cinderella, the Queen of Hearts in Alice in Wonderland, Aunt Sarah in Lady and the Tramp, Flora in Sleeping Beauty, and Winifred the Elephant in The Jungle Book. The Jungle Book would be her last role, as she would pass away from a stroke on December 14, 1966, the day before Walt Disney passed away.

July 14

July 14, 1946 – Original Member of the Mickey Mouse Club Cubby O’Brien is Born

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“I was playing drums in a little Dixieland band…and we did a show at the Screen Actors Guild during Christmas, and I was playing double bass drums flipping drumsticks, and I looked like I was about two years old. And some producers were there, and they got in touch with my dad and said they were putting this show together at Disney, and would I be interested in auditioning. So that’s how it happened for me.”

On July 14, 1946, Carl Patrick O’Brien was born in Burbank, California. His father was well-known drummer Haskell O’Brien, who performed with several big band era ensembles. Cubby learned drumming from his father, and brought his skills to a show at the Screen Actors Guild, where he was spotted by Disney producers. Although he was considered for a guest spot on “Talent Round Up Day,” when they had spotted fellow Mouseketeer Karen Pendleton, they thought the two young children would make a great matched set of Mouseketeers. O’Brien was one of the few that earned a key spot on the “Red Team” and remained on the team through all three seasons of the show. After the show ended, he went with the main Mouseketeers on a tour in Australia from 1959 to 1960. After his work at Disney, he joined the cast of The Lawrence Welk show, then toured with Spike Jones and his band. He has also worked in the orchestra for several Broadway musicals, including The Producers, and the Bernadette Peters revivals of Gypsy and Annie Get Your Gun.

June 14

June 14, 1895 – Singer, Voice Actor, and Disney Legend Cliff Edwards is Born

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“Cliff Edwards, otherwise known as Ukelele Ike, is the voice, and really the character, of Jiminy Cricket in Pinocchio.” – Daniel Goldmark, Music Professor at Case Western Reserve University

On June 14, 1895, Clifton A. Edwards was born in Hannibal, Missouri. After leaving school at age 14, Edwards began his career as a singer in saloons, teaching himself how to play the ukulele, as many places didn’t have a working piano. This skill earned him the nickname “Ukelele Ike,” and he got his big break in 1918, where he and Bob Carleton wrote and performed a song that became a hit in vaudeville. In 1919, Edwards began making phonograph records, and soon became one of the most popular singers of the 1920s. After catching the attention of Irving Thalberg, Edwards was hired by MGM to star in the early talking films. Edwards’ best known role came in 1940, when he starred as the voice of Jiminy Cricket in the Disney animated film Pinocchio and sang one of the most recognized songs of his career, “When You Wish Upon a Star.” He would go on to  voice the lead crow in Dumbo. Edwards battled with alcoholism and drug addiction later in his life, and spent his days around the Disney studios, entertaining the animators with stories about vaudeville. He passed away in 1971 due to cardiac arrest. Disney honored Edwards as a Disney Legend in 2000.

May 19

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May 19, 1941 – Dancer, Singer, and Mouseketeer Bobby Burgess is Born

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“After being in seventy-five amateur shows, I was ready for a job where I’d just be dancing. I wanted to pay my dues and get some professional experience.”

On May 19, 1941, Robert Wilkie Burgess was born in Long Beach, California. He first began dancing and playing the accordion at age 5, and when he auditioned for the Mickey Mouse Club at age 13, he had already won several amateur talent competitions with his tap and jitterbugging skills. At his audition, he was prepared to audition for acting more than dancing, reading for a role in the upcoming serial The Adventures of Spin and Marty. However, the role had already been cast, and Burgess was directed to the Mousketeer auditions instead. He auditioned with a barefoot jazz number to “Rock Around the Clock,” and won a coveted role on the show. After the show ended, he moved back to his parents’ house in Long Beach and was one of the few Mouseketeers to have a smooth transition from child star to normal adult. He entered a dance contest with his girlfriend, winning the chance to star on The Lawrence Welk Show, and stayed on the show until its final episodes in 1982. Burgess currently runs a dance studio in Long Beach that specializes in ballroom dancing.

May 15

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May 15, 1908 – Character Designer, Storyman, and Disney Legend Joe Grant is Born

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“I think there was always a gentle sweetness to Joe and his work. There’s a gentility in everything he touched. But there’s also a great sophistication. He was one of the truly great craftsmen of our art, but he always saw his craft as a way to communicate ideas.” – Roy E. Disney

On May 15, 1908, Joe Grant was born in New York City. After attending the Chouinard Art Institute, he joined the Walt Disney Studios in 1933 as a character designer and a story artist, and his first assignment was the Mickey Mouse short film Mickey’s Gala Premiere. He also designed the look of the Queen and the Wicked Witch for Disney’s first feature film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. The Character Model Department was created around this time, with Grant as the head, working out ideas for stories and characters through model sheets and three-dimension figures known as maquettes. Grant was also known for his work with partner Dick Huemer, working on story direction for Fantasia, and screen story for Dumbo. During World War II, Grant worked on story ideas and designs for several shorts, including Reason and Emotion, and Der Fuehrer’s Face. In 1949, Grant left the studio, due to the disbandment of the Character Model Department, and opened a ceramics studio and a greeting card company.

Almost forty years after leaving Disney, Grant received a call from the Animation Department, asking him to consult on Beauty and the Beast, and was credited for visual development on the final film. Grant then rejoined the studio as a story advisor for Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, and Home on the Range. Grant also contributed to the Pixar film Monsters, Inc., coining the title for the film. He was named a Disney Legend in 1992, and has been awarded a special career achievement award by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. Grant passed away on May 6, 2005, at the age of 96.

May 11

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May 11, 1913 – Composer, Arranger, and Disney Legend Salvador “Tutti” Camarata is Born

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On May 11, 1913, Salvador “Tutti” Camarata was born in Glen Ridge, New Jersey. He studied music at Julliard, and began his career playing trumpet for the likes of Benny Goodman and Jimmy Dorsey, ­eventually becoming Dorsey’s lead trumpeter and arranger. In 1956, Camarata was hired by Walt Disney to form Disneyland Records, and work to expand the record company from its output of children’s music. Camarata brought in many of his connections in the music industry for concept albums, including Louis Armstrong and Louis Prima. Over a five-year period, Camarata supervised the recording of over 300 albums. His biggest success with the label was the idea of bringing Annette Funicello in as the first artist in residence. While looking for material for Funicello, Camarata discovered Richard and Robert Sherman, and brought them in to the label; they would eventually be the first staff songwriters of the company. He was honored as a Disney Legend in 2003 for his work with music in the company. Camarata passed away in 2005.

May 5

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May 5, 1929 – Singer, Actress, and Disney Legend Ilene Woods is Born

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“I didn’t know that I would even be considered until, of course, Mr. Disney heard the recordings, and that’s when the excitement started, that’s when all the butterflies started batting around inside of my stomach, when I was called to see Mr. Disney.”

On May 5, 1929, Jacqueline Ruth “Ilene” Woods was born in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. She began acting at the age of two, and at the age of 15, she was hired to sing on “The Philco Hall of Fame” radio show, which led to her own radio show The Ilene Woods Show. During this show, she became friends with songwriters Mack David and Jerry Livingston. In 1948, David and Livingston asked Woods to record a few songs for them, which were presented to Walt Disney for inclusion in the animated feature film Cinderella. After hearing the demo recordings, Disney himself asked Woods to voice the titular character. Woods accepted, and was surprised to learn that she had won the role against almost 400 people. Woods was named as a Disney Legend in 2003. She passed away from Alzheimer’s disease on July 1, 2010.

April 25

April 25, 1953 – Animator, Director, Producer, and Screenwriter Ron Clements is Born

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“I think John [Musker] and Ron [Clements] are really great storytellers. They understood the essence of a great Disney animated movie.” – Jeffrey Katzenberg

On April 25, 1953, Ronald Francis Clements was born in Sioux City, Iowa. He began his animation career at Hanna-Barbera; soon after starting there, he was accepted into the Disney Talent Development Program, working under legendary animator Frank Thomas. He began full employment at Disney in 1977, working as a character animator on the films The Rescuers and Pete’s Dragon. Clements would then become the animation supervisor on the 1981 film The Fox and Hound, with future collaborator John Musker working under him as a character animator. Clements and Musker would then pair up as story artists on the film The Black Cauldron in 1985. In 1986, the two would make their directorial debut on the film The Great Mouse Detective.

In 1985, there was what was called a “gong” show, which was a way to call for story ideas from the staff. Clements brought forth the idea The Little Mermaid, writing a two page treatment for the story. At first, Clements’ idea was “gonged” because a sequel to the hit film Splash was in development, but the next day, Jeffrey Katzenberg told Clements that he liked the treatment, and the studio was willing to go forward and create the film. Clements and Musker then wrote and directed The Little Mermaid, which became a huge success for the studio, revitalizing the animation department. Clements and Musker would repeat their success in 1992 with Aladdin, which they both wrote, directed, and produced. The two would then direct the modest success Hercules in 1997. In 2002, the pair directed Treasure Planet, which was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, but it was a commercial failure. The two were reunited as directors for the 2009 film The Princess and the Frog.

April 18

April 18, 1946 – Actress and Disney Legend Hayley Mills is Born

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“Walt was very fond of Hayley Mills, as he should be, because she was a wonderful little  actress, and he wasn’t very impressed with most actors and actresses, but as a young girl he thought she had the charm that he wanted in pictures like Pollyanna .” – Matte Artist Peter Ellenshaw

On April 18, 1946, Hayley Catherine Rose Vivien Mills was born in London, England, to actor Sir John Mills and writer Mary Hayley Bell. At the age of 12, Mills played the lead role in the 1959 British crime drama film Tiger Bay. After seeing her performance, Lillian Disney suggested to her husband Walt that Mills would be perfect for the lead role in the upcoming live-action feature film Pollyanna. The role shot her to super-stardom, and she was awarded a special Academy Award  for Most Outstanding Juvenile Performance; she would be the last person to receive this award. She was then cast in the dual role of twins Susan and Sharon in the 1961 film The Parent Trap, which helped cement Mills’ star status. She had a song in the film written by the Sherman Brothers called “Let’s Get Together,” which became a hit song on the Billboard Charts, peaking at number 8. This song lead to the release of an album on the Buena Vista label, called “Let’s Get Together with Hayley Mills.” which had one other hit song, “Johnny Jingo.” She acted in four more films for Disney: In Search of the Castaways, Summer Magic, The Moon-Spinners, and That Darn Cat!.

 After her contract with Disney, she starred in the 1966 film The Trouble with Angels, then returned to England, hoping to break out of her girl-next-door image. She played a mentally challenged teenager in the film Sky West and Crooked, written by her mother and directed by her father. She then starred in the films The Family Way, Pretty Polly, Endless Night, and The Kingfisher Caper, after which she left the film business for a few years. She returned to UK series acting in 1981 in the television miniseries The Flame Trees of Thika, and made some other appearances in television work, including appearances in The Love Boat. In 1987, she starred in the Disney Channel series, Good Morning, Miss Bliss as the title character. The show was cancelled after thirteen episodes, and the rights were purchased by NBC, with the show being retooled as Saved by the Bell. Mills also reprised her roles as Sharon and Susan for three made-for-television sequels to The Parent Trap: The Parent Trap II, The Parent Trap III, and The Parent Trap IV: Hawaiian Honeymoon. In 1998, Mills was honored as a Disney Legend.

April 17

April 17, 1933 – Former President and CEO of The Walt Disney Company Ron W. Miller is Born

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“I’m really very proud of having been a professional athlete. I think it teaches you to be competitive, to accept challenges, and to see things through.”

On April 17, 1933, Ronald William Miller was born in California. He attended the University of Southern California, lettering in football. It was there where he met Diane Disney, daughter of Walt, on a blind date. The two married in a small church ceremony on May 9, 1954. Soon ­after the wedding, Miller was drafted into the Army, but on his return, he played with the Los Angeles Rams as a tight end. During one game, when Walt was watching from the stands, Miller was hit hard enough to be knocked unconscious. Worried about the danger of the sport and his grandchildren, Disney offered Miller a job, which Miller accepted. He joined the company in 1957, with his first assignment as a second assistant on the 1957 film Old Yeller. He would soon move to the role of associate producer for Bon Voyage, Summer Magic, Moon Pilot, and A Tiger Walks. After this, he moved up to the role of co-producer on such films as The Monkey’s Uncle, That Darn Cat!, and Monkeys, Go Home! Miller had his first full producer credit on the 1968 film Never a Dull Moment, and served as an executive producer for 12 years. In 1980, Miller was elected president of the Walt Disney Company, and was also named CEO in 1983. During his term, the Touchstone label was created, with its first film being the hit Splash; Miller was also responsible for creating The Disney Channel and initiating the studio’s first attempts at computer animation, thanks to the film Tron. Unfortunately, Miller’s tenure was rife with corporate takeover attempts, and in 1984, Miller was ousted in favor of Michael Eisner and Frank Wells. He now spends his days at the Silverado Vineyards Winery, building its reputation.