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August 16

August 16, 1924 – Actor and Disney Legend Fess Parker is Born

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“I’ve had the friendship and the interest of so many people and in such a broad way because Disney is not just a popular product in America, it’s a popular product in the world. And so to be a part of something of that nature and to share that with the individuals that created it…it’s been a wonderful experience.”

On August 16, 1924, Fess Elisha Parker, Jr. was born in Fort Worth, Texas. During WWII, Parker found problems enlisting due to his size, as he was too tall to be a pilot, and too big to be a radioman gunner; he finally found a fit as a radio operator in the Marine Corps. After the war ended, he attended Hardin-Simmons University on the GI Bill, and transferred to the University of Texas, graduating with a degree in history. He discovered a love of acting in college, and, with one year left on his GI Bill, he studied theater at the University of Southern California. Parker became a contract player with Warner Brothers in the early ’50s, and appeared in a science fiction film Them! It was this film that would change his life, as Walt Disney was watching the film to find an actor to play Davy Crockett. Although originally watching for James Arness, Disney was impressed with Parker’s acting, and Parker was soon asked to stop by the studios. The Davy Crockett serial proved to be explosively popular, and Parker then became a contract player for the studio, appearing in films The Great Locomotive Chase; Westward Ho, the Wagons!; Old Yeller; and The Light in the Forest. Outside of Disney, Parker also found fame in the television series Daniel Boone, shot by 20th Century Fox. Parker retired from acting in the 1970s, and dedicated his life afterwards to the Fess Parker Winery in Los Olivos, California. In 1991, Parker was named as a Disney Legend. He passed away of natural causes on March 18, 2010.

August 15

August 15, 1901 – Lyricist and Disney Legend Ned Washington is Born

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“[Washington] would win an Academy Award not just for ‘When You Wish Upon a Star,’ and for the score, but he won another Academy Award for another song he wrote in 1952…so he really is someone who, historically, is very much associated with very popular song.” – Daniel Goldmark, Music Professor at Case Western Reserve University

On August 15, 1901, Ned Washington was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania. He joined the Disney Studios in 1938, writing songs for the animated feature films Pinocchio, Saludos Amigos, and Dumbo. Washington was awarded two Academy Awards for Pinocchio, one for Best Original Song for “When You Wish Upon a Star,” and the other for Best Original Score. Washington was also nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song for “Baby Mine” from Dumbo. Washington left the Disney Studios in 1940. Over the course of his career, Washington was nominated for eleven Academy Awards, winning once more for his song “High Noon (Do Not Forsake Me, Oh My Darlin’)” from the 1952 film High Noon. Washington passed away in 1976. He was named a Disney Legend in 2001.

August 8

August 8, 1925 – Voice Actress and Disney Legend Ginny Tyler is Born

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“And I was raving away to Walt how wonderful Disneyland was, he said, ‘And that goes for my Disneyland Storyteller, too.’ I have never felt prouder in my entire life.”

On August 8, 1925, Merrie Virginia Erlandson was born in Berkeley, California; her family then moved to Seattle when she was a young girl. Steeped in a tradition of storytelling and imitations, Tyler began her career as a voice actor in the 1930s on the radio show Make Believe Island. By the 1950s, the show had been moved to television and renamed Magic Island. In the 1960s, Tyler was hired by the Disney Studios to narrate vinyl records for classic films Bambi and Babes in Toyland, and was known as one of the “Disneyland Storytellers.” Tyler was also a voice actress in several feature films, playing the amorous squirrel in The Sword in the Stone, several barnyard animals in Mary Poppins, and the bees in Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree. When the Mickey Mouse Club was in syndication, Tyler was hired as the Head Mouseketeer for the repackaged show, recording segments live from Disneyland’s Mickey Mouse Club Headquarters, located inside the Main Street Opera House. In 2006, Tyler was inducted as a Disney Legend. She passed away in 2012 at the age of 86,

August 2

August 2, 2001 – Stage 2 of the Walt Disney Studios is Dedicated as the Julie Andrews Stage

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“I’m so pleased to be here today as we honor Julie, our great friend and family member, in a very special way.” – Roy E. Disney

On August 2, 2001, Stage 2 of the Walt Disney Studios was dedicated as the Julie Andrews Stage in a special ceremony. The stage itself, opening in April of 1949, is the second oldest stage on the studio lot, and one of the largest in the Los Angeles area. It has served many purposes, from filming of The Mickey Mouse Club, to hosting the building of Disneyland attractions. Two of Andrews’ films were filmed on this stage: Mary Poppins and The Princess Diaries. Attending the ceremony to honor Andrews were Roy Disney, Chairman of the Walt Disney Motion Pictures Group Richard Cook, director of The Princess Diaries Gary Marshall and its star Anne Hathaway, Dick Van Dyke, and Richard Sherman of the Sherman Brothers songwriting team.

July 30

July 30, 1907 – “Big Moosketeer,” Animator, and Disney Legend Roy Williams is Born

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“Walt knew I loved kids…that’s why he put me on a kids’ show. I’m a down-to-earth guy, but I never dreamed of the kind of pleasure that working with those kids brought me. “

On July 30, 1907, Roy Williams was born in Colville, Washington. His family moved to Los Angeles, where he attended Freemont High School, and was hired by the Walt Disney Studios. He first animated shorts during the day, attending Chouinard Art Institute at night, and would later develop story ideas. He was also known as a publicity representative, as well as a popular caricaturist at Disneyland. Through his career, he developed a reputation as a talented and funny artist, which caught the attention of Walt Disney, who hired him as one of the hosts of the Mickey Mouse Club. Williams also created the Mickey Mouse Ears that the kids wore, based on a Mickey Mouse short film where Mickey removed his ears to greet Minnie. Although Williams couldn’t sing or dance, he was popular thanks to humor and warmth. Williams stayed with the studio until the 1970s, and passed away on November 7, 1976. He was inducted into the Disney Legends in 1992.

July 22

July 22, 1949 – Film Composer, Songwriter, and Disney Legend Alan Menken is Born

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“He’s a very clever man, that Alan Menken. He’s like Mr. Melody. Whenever he would send in a song on Beauty and the Beast or Hunchback [of Notre Dame] or some of the Aladdin songs, you can’t get them out of your mind. There’s no antidote for them except another Alan Menken song, cause they’re so getable and singable.” – Don Hahn, Producer

On July 22, 1949, composer and songwriter Alan Irwin Menken was born in New Rochelle, New York. His parents would play records of Broadway musicals and musical theater standards in his youth, and Menken displayed musical talents at an early age, studying the piano and violin. Coming from a family of dentists, Menken went to NYU as a pre-med student. He then changed his focus to music, and began to work in clubs and write jingles, and wrote a rock ballet right after college for the Downtown Ballet Company, where he met his wife Janis. His first musical success was an adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut’s God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater with Howard Ashman, who would become his close songwriting partner. The two would hit it big with the 1982 Off-Broadway hit Little Shop of Horrors.

Menken (L) and songwriting partner Howard Ashman

Menken (L) and songwriting partner Howard Ashman during the accolade season for The Little Mermaid

Ashman was approached by Disney to help create the music for a new animated feature, The Little Mermaid. As Menken has said in interviews, it was his and Ashman’s job to reinvent the Disney animated feature, bringing a real sense of current musical theater trends to these Disney musical films. The Little Mermaid became the biggest hit for the studio in decades, and ushered in a whole new era for Disney, known as the Disney Renaissance. The duo was honored with two Academy Awards between them for The Little Mermaid: Best Song (“Under the Sea”) and Best Original Score. Menken and Ashman were then asked to compose for Beauty and the Beast and Aladdin. Unfortunately, around this time, Ashman was diagnosed with HIV, and passed away before Beauty and the Beast was released in theaters. Menken continued to be hired by the studios, working with songwriter Tim Rice to complete work for Aladdin, which also won two Academy Awards for Best Song (“A Whole New World”) and Best Original Score.

For the film Pocahontas, Menken teamed up with lyricist Stephen Schwartz, once again winning two Academy Awards for its music. Menken continued to work with Disney on films Hercules, Home on the Range, Newsies, Enchanted, The Shaggy Dog, and Tangled. He has also moved back to Broadway, helping bring to the stage some of these Disney hits, including Beauty and the Beast and The Little Mermaid; he has also contributed to the stage shows featured at the Disney parks. Over the course of his career, Menken has won eight Academy Awards, holding the record for most wins for any living person. In 2001, Menken was named a Disney Legend.

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 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 10

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May 10, 2012 – Imagineer and Disney Legend Alice Davis is Honored with a Window on Main Street in Disneyland

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“All things good you have to wait a while for, and after 83 years, I got my wish. For years, both [husband Marc Davis] and I have had the great pleasure of bringing great fun and joy to people…”

On May 10, 2012, Alice Davis was awarded with a window on Main Street in Disneyland, which is one of the highest honors within the Walt Disney Company. Davis known for her costume designs, beginning with designing an outfit for the live-action model for Sleeping Beauty; she is best known for her work with fellow Disney Legend Mary Blair on the “it’s a small world” attraction, and for her work on the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction in 1965. Davis was the wife of animator, member of the Nine Old Men, and Disney Legend Marc Davis, whom she married in 1956.