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Tag Archives: Disney Legend

October 29

October 29, 2007 – Disney Legend Fulton Burley is Honored at the Golden Horseshoe Revue

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“Is everybody happy?”

On October 29, 2007, a special show of the Golden Horseshoe Revue was held to honor Disney Legend and actor Fulton Burley, who had passed away earlier that year on May 7th. Burley had been a member of the Golden Horseshoe for 25 years, and was also known for voicing the Irish parrot Michael in the Enchanted Tiki Room attraction; he was honored as a Disney Legend in 1995 for his work in Disneyland. Several well-known performers were on hand to celebrate Burley’s life and talent, including Dick Hardwick, Jay Meyer, and Wally Boag.

October 22

October 22, 1991 – The 1991 Class of Disney Legends is Inducted

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“Disney Legends honor the many individuals whose imagination, talents and dreams have created the Disney magic.”

On October 22, 1991, the 1991 class of Disney Legends was inducted, giving nine talented men and women the distinction from all ranges of Disney. They included Ken Anderson (Animation and Imagineering), Julie Andrews (Film), Carl Barks (Animation and Publishing), Mary Blair (Animation and Imagineering), Claude Coats (Animation and Imagineering), Don DaGradi (Animation and Film), Sterling Holloway (Voice), Fess Parker (Film and Television), and Bill Walsh (Film & Television). Blair, DaGradi, and Walsh were awarded posthumously.

September 6

September 6, 1972 – Actress and Disney Legend Anika Noni Rose is Born

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“I always dreamed of being a voice in a Disney movie…I feel like what an honor that this is how the dream comes true, bigger and stronger than I had even imagined it.”

On September 6, 1972, Anika Noni Rose was born in Bloomfield, Connecticut. After graduating from Florida A&M University with a degree in theater, she moved to San Francisco to study at the American Conservatory Theater. After this, Rose moved to New York, where she landed a role in the Broadway production of Footloose, playing the character Rusty. Her big break, however, came with the musical Caroline, or Change, playing the role of Emmie Thibodeaux, and winning the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical. Rose also starred in a string of films, with her best known role being the character Lorrell in Dreamgirls; for this role, she was awarded several nominations. In 2009, she won the coveted role of Tiana in the Disney animated feature The Princess and the Frog. She continues to work in television, film, and theater, including a Broadway production of A Raisin in the Sun in 2014, and continues to voice the character of Tiana in special Disney projects. In 2011, Rose was named a Disney Legend for her work as Tiana.

September 3

September 3, 1910 – Imagineer and Disney Legend Yale Gracey is Born

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“Whenever we needed a special effect, we went to Yale.” – John Hench, Imagineer and Disney Legend

On September 3, 1910, Yale Gracey was born in Shanghai, China. Gracey was the son of an American consul, and attended an English boarding school before moving to the United States to study at the Art Center School of Design. Gracey began his career at the Disney Studios in 1939, working as a layout artist on Pinocchio and Fantasia, as well as for several short films. During his lunch hour, Gracey would work on gadgets and models, some of which caught Walt Disney’s attention; Gracey was then offered a position in WED Enterprises to create attractions and special effects for Disneyland. He began work at WED as a research and development designer, creating several illusions that are still well-known and loved today, including the “grim, grinning ghosts” in the Haunted Mansion. Gracey also worked extensively on the attractions for the 1964-1965 World’s Fair, including the Carousel of Progress. Gracey retired in 1975 after 36 years of work with the company, but continued to serve as a consultant for new attractions at Walt Disney World. He passed away on September 5, 1983. In 1999, Gracey was honored as a Disney Legend for his work as an Imagineer.

August 20

August 20, 1928 – First Female Imagineer and Disney Legend Harriet Burns is Born

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“What really earned respect for Harriet Burns was her creative skill…Fred Joerger, Wathel Rogers and Harries became known as the WED Model Shop, the heartbeat of Walt’s design engine for Disneyland and beyond.” – Disney Legend Marty Sklar

On August 20, 1928, Harriet Bruns (née Tapp) was born in San Antonio, Texas. Burns studied art at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, and went on to study advanced design at the University of New Mexico. She married William Burns, and in 1953, she, her husband, and their daughter moved to Los Angeles. While there, she found a job at the Dice Display Industries Cooperative Exchange designing props and interiors part-time. In 1955, after the company closed down, she was advised to apply for Disney, and started working there the same year. She began her career at Disney as a prop and set painter for the Mickey Mouse Club; she immediately stood out as the “best-dressed employee,” wearing dresses and high heels while working with saws and sanders alongside the men. Soon after, she moved up the ranks, creating the show’s color styling, and designing the Mouse Clubhouse. While there, Burns worked alongside Fred Joerger, who was a model builder for the Disneyland project.

When WED Enterprises was founded (later to be known as Walt Disney Imagineering), Burns was one of the three employees tapped to be a part of the group, alongside Joerger and Wathel Rogers. One of Burns’ first assignments was the model of Sleeping Beauty Castle, which was soon followed by designs of New Orleans Square, the Haunted Mansion, Storybook Land, and the design of the birds of The Enchanted Tiki Room. Burns also contiributed greatly to the Disney attractions at the 1964 New York World’s Fair, particularly the Carousel of Progress and the Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln. In 1986, Burns retired from Walt Disney Imagineering, and in 1992, she was honored with a window on Main Street, being the first woman in Disney history to be honored in this way. In 2000, she was further honored as a Disney Legend for her work in Imagineering. She passed away on July 25, 2008, at the age of 79.

August 14

August 14, 1945 – Comedian, Actor, Musician, and Disney Legend Steve Martin is Born

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“I also got to wander around Disneyland to my heart’s content. I could scrounge tickets to rides, sometimes finding them on the ground, sometimes a departing fat cat would slip me his remaining coupons.”

On August 14, 1945, Stephen Glenn Martin was born in Waco, Texas. At a young age, his family moved to California, where he ended up living two miles away from Disneyland. Through his teens, Martin worked in the park, and eventually worked in Merlin’s Magic Shop, selling magic tricks and gag items. He would often watch the work of Disneyland performer Wally Boag, whose comedic timing and style would greatly influence Martin’s own comedic style. He attended California State University, majoring in philosophy, but later transferred to UCLA and switched from philosophy to theater before dropping out of college altogether. His career began in 1967, when he got a writing job for the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour; his first television appearance was in 1969 on The Steve Allen Show. He would appear on several television shows after this, including The Tonight Show, The Muppet Show, and Saturday Night Live, with the latter gaining high viewership when he made a guest appearance. His numerous comedy albums sold quite well, and he continued his stand-up career until 1981, when he decided to concentrate on his film career. His work with Disney, other than working at Disneyland, includes several film projects, such as Father of the Bride, Father of the Bride II, and an appearance in Fantasia 2000. In 2005, Martin was inducted as a Disney Legend for his work at Disneyland.

August 10

August 10, 1914 – Director and Disney Legend Ken Annakin is Born

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“Ken was an important part of the Disney legacy and made several memorable films for my Uncle Walt.” – Roy Disney

On August 10, 1914, Kenneth Cooper Annakin was born in Beverly, England. He began his career in films with the RAF Film Unit, working as a camera assistant to create propaganda films for the war effort after being injured in the blitz. In 1947, Annakin had his directorial debut with the feature film Holiday Camp, a comedy set at a summer holiday camp. This was then followed with the film Miranda, a comedy about a mermaid, which became a blockbuster in 1948; this film also starred fellow Disney Legend Glynis Johns, who would go to star in Annakin’s second film for Disney, The Sword and the Rose.

While working for England’s Pinewood Studios, he was approached by Disney to direct a series of films. After World War II, a policy was passed that money made in England during the war was not allowed to leave the country. To use these funds, Disney decided to create a series of live-action films, with Annakin directing a few of these later classics. The first film was The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men, based on the classic legend. Annakin’s work for the studio was followed by the successful films The Sword and the Rose, Swiss Family Robinson, and Third Man on the Mountain. While working for Disney, Annakin picked up the technique of storyboarding, which had mainly been used only for animated features, but Annakin continued to use this long after his work with Disney. In 2002, Annakin was honored as a Disney Legend, the second director to receive this honor. The same year, Annakin was awarded with an Order of the British Empire, and an honorary degree from Hull University. He passed away on April 22, 2009, at the age of 94.

July 20

July 20, 1923 – Publicist and Disney Legend Charlie Ridgway is Born

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“Disneyland was one public relations job I thought I would enjoy, and I was right.”

On July 20, 1923, Charlie Ridgway was born in Chicago, Illinois. He began his career as a journalist after receiving his degree from the University of Missouri, and joined the staff of the Los Angeles Mirror-News in 1952. While there, he wrote articles about the construction of Disneyland, and covered the opening day of Disneyland on July 17, 1955. Eight years after he covered the opening, he was hired as part of the park’s publicity staff. His background as a newsman gave him the skills needed to relate to other reporters, and the knowledge to know what they would need to represent the park appropriately. Ridgway quickly moved up the ranks, and soon was asked to help the publicity department for the Florida Project, which was to become Walt Disney World. He moved to Orlando, and soon became the Walt Disney World director of press and publicity. Over his 30 year career with the company, he worked on over 150 special projects, including one for Donald Duck’s 50th birthday, and the launches of Epcot and Disneyland Paris. He retired from Disney in 1994, but would continue to consult with the company on other projects. He was named a Disney Legend in 1999, and published his memoir Spinning Disney’s World in 2007.

June 26

June 26, 1909 – Animator, Member of Disney’s Nine Old Men, Director, and Disney Legend Wolfgang “Woolie” Reitherman is Born

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“I just felt [animation] was a twentieth century art form, probably the most unique of anything that had appeared on the art horizon for decades since perspective. I was just fascinated because you could move those things. You can’t move a painting.”

On June 26, 1909, Wolfgang Reitherman was born in Munich, Germany. His family moved to California when Reitherman was an infant. Fascinated with airplanes from a young age, he attended the Pasadena Junior College to study aircraft engineering, and later got a job at Douglas Aircraft as a draftsman. Reitherman changed his career path in 1931 to study his other passion of art, enrolling in the Chouinard Art Institute, studying watercolor. As fate would have it, Reitherman met an instructor who taught at the Disney Studios, and in 1933, Reitherman joined the company in the animation department. When World War II began, Reitherman served in the Air Force, earning the Distinguished Flying Cross for his services in Africa, China, India, and the South Pacific. He returned to the studio after the war, and contributed to more than 30 Disney short films throughout his career, including Water Babies and Donald in Mathmagic Land. Reitherman also contributed to several feature animated films, including Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella, and One Hundred and One Dalmatians.

Reitherman’s first foray into directing came with the animated feature film Sleeping Beauty. In 1961, Reitherman was named co-director of the film One Hundred and One Dalmatians alongside Hamilton Luske and Clyde Geronimi. In 1963, Reitherman was named the director of the film The Sword in the Stone, a first for an animator in the studio’s history. He would continue to serve as an animator of Disney features, which include The Jungle Book, The Arisocats, Robin Hood, and the cartoon feature Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day. A trademark in Reitherman’s films was the reuse of animation, as evidenced in Robin Hood’s “Phoney King of England” scene, which borrowed heavily from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. In 1981, Reitherman retired from the Disney Studios, having dedicated nearly 50 years of his life. Unfortunately, Reitherman died in a car accident on May 22, 1985, in Burbank, California. As a tribute to his life and his work at Disney, he was honored as a Disney Legend in 1989.

June 22

June 22, 1920 – Voice Actor and Disney Legend Paul Frees is Born

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“Color has its harmony and just like I have said: red, yellow, green, red, blue, blue, blue, red, purple, green, blue, purple, red, red!”

On June 22, 1920, Solomon Hersh Frees was born in Chicago, Illinois. He began his career as a radio actor, but his career was put on hold when he was drafted during World War II, and fought in the D-Day landings at Normandy, France. Injured in battle, he was sent back to the United States to recover; after the war, he attended the Chouinard Art Institute, but left to take care of his ailing first wife and returned to his radio career. He quickly became busy, working on such series as Escape and Gunsmoke. Frees was a major player during the Golden Age of Animation, asked to work for the major studios to include Disney, UPA, Jay Ward Productions, and Hanna-Barbera, just to name a few. For Disney, Frees’ unusual four-octave range allowed him to play parts ranging from the Ghost Host in the Haunted Mansion to his most well-known role of zany Professor Ludwig von Drake, who appeared in eighteen episodes of the Disney anthology series. Frees did a plethora of voices for Disneyland, including the narration for Adventure Thru Inner Space, as well as several of the pirates in Pirates of the Caribbean. As Ludwig von Drake, Frees recorded several songs on the Disneyland Records label, including “The Spectrum Song.” During the 1960s and 1970s, it was near impossible to not hear Frees’ voice on a program. Frees continued to be active as a voice actor until his unfortunate death of heart failure at the age of 66. In 2006, Frees was honored as a Disney Legend.