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May 5

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May 5, 1905 – Disney Legend and Cartoonist Floyd Gottfredson is Born

“…since Walt hired me as backup man on the strip, he asked me to take it over. By now I had become very interested in animation and told Walt I’d rather stay in it. So Walt asked me to take over the strip for two weeks until he found another artist to do it. Nothing further was ever said about it, and I continued to draw the Mickey daily for 45 years – until my retirement in October 1975.” – Floyd Gottfredson

Floyd Gottfredson, the man behind the Mickey Mouse comic strip and Mickey’s “second father,” was born on May 5, 1905, in Kaysville, Utah. His interest in drawing came about due to an accident when he was eleven: he went hunting with his cousin one Sunday instead of going to church, and was accidentally shot in the arm. Unable to play with the other children, Gottfredson turned to art, and his talent blossomed under the care of his mother. Although his father disapproved of his son’s artistic ambitions, Gottfredson continued to pursue drawing, not letting his injury slow him down. In 1928, after winning second place in a national cartoon contest, he developed enough confidence to quit his job in Utah and move to Los Angeles to become a newspaper cartoonist. Although unsuccessful in that venture, fate led him to apply to the Disney Studios, where he was hired as an inbetweener.

When Gottfredson began at the Disney Studios, the Mickey Mouse comic was already being worked on by several artists. Although he had expressed interest in working on the strip, Disney talked him out of it, but did give him the job as a back-up man for those animators. By the time Gottfredson was asked to draw the comic, he had become fond of the animation medium and wanted to stay there. Disney asked him to draw the comic for at least two weeks until they found a replacement, which led to Gottfredson drawing the comic until his retirement 45 years later.

A publicity shot for Gottfredson and the comic

Through the Mickey Mouse comic strip, Gottfredson ended up pioneering a new kind of comic: the funny animal adventure story. Although the early strips were basic retellings of the shorts in theaters, Gottfredson soon added his own spin to the stories, telling grand adventures that reflected the issues of the time. Gottfredson also had Mickey, the plucky underdog, pitted against corrupt politicians, mad scientists, and other assorted villains, with Mickey’s goal to protect his friends and his country. He retired from the comic on October 1, 1975, and on July 22, 1986, he died at the age of 81. He was inducted as a Disney Legend in 2003, and was inducted into the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards Hall of Fame in 2006.

April 7

April 7, 1995 – The Documentary, Frank and Ollie, is Shown at the Cleveland Film Festival

“Seemed like you seldom heard Frank’s name without Ollie’s along with it, or Ollie’s without Frank’s name. It was Frank and Ollie.”

On April 7, 1995, the documentary film, Frank and Ollie, was shown at the Cleveland Film Festival. Written and directed by Frank’s son, Theodore Thomas, it tells the story of Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston, two members of the elite group of animators at the Disney Studios known as the Nine Old Men.

The documentary is a touching tribute to the friendship of the two, which began at Stanford University in the art department. Through their long tenure at the Walt Disney Studios, the two not only helped pioneer the field of animation, but also used what they learned to help teach other artists, including Brad Bird, who gave them a cameo in The Incredibles. Frank and Ollie goes through their history with the company, from the success of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the studio’s change during World War II, the unexpected death of Walt Disney, and their work on The Jungle Book. The film also shows their daily lives in California, where the two friends were also next-door neighbors.

Frank Thomas (L) and Ollie Johnston, sitting down and discussing their memories at the studio

Frank and Ollie premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 1995, and then was shown at the Cleveland Film Festival, with a full release to theaters on October 20, 1995, so that the film could be considered for an Academy Award. The documentary received very good reviews upon release, and captures a rare history of life inside the Disney Studios.

April 3

April 3, 1994 – Frank Wells, Former President of The Walt Disney Company, Dies in a Helicopter Accident

“It was Easter Sunday, 1994, and a single event in Nevada’s Ruby Mountains would set in motion an unimaginable chain of events.” – Don Hahn

On April 3, 1994, the President of the Walt Disney Company, Frank Wells, while attempting to return from a ski trip, died in a helicopter crash in the Ruby Mountains of Nevada. It was the only helicopter crash in the company’s history at that point. Wells’ death brought a shadow over the company. Peter Schneider said, “Frank was the peacemaker amongst all these tremendous egos, and when Frank died, there was no one to talk to.” With Wells’ death, the already fragile atmosphere of the Disney Studios began to crumble, especially with Jeffrey Katzenberg lobbying for Wells’ job. Michael Eisner and Roy Disney did not wish to give the job to Katzenberg, and were angry about the amount of publicity Katzenberg seemed to get when promoting a film, instead of the film getting the attention. Wells truly brought life back into the company with Eisner, helping bring about the Disney renaissance. The Lion King, which was in production when Wells died, was dedicated to his memory.

Wells was a classmate of Roy Disney’s in college, and had convinced Disney to make Michael Eisner the chairman of Disney Studios in the 1980s. Disney remarked that the relationship between Eisner and Wells reminded him of his dad and Walt, and brought both on as the heads of the studio. Don Hahn remarked on their partnership, “Michael was kind of the sane one. Frank, he did bold and crazy things like swimming oceans, climbing the great summits of the world, and calling at 3 a.m. to ask what Goofy’s original name was.” Wells kept himself humble while he worked at the top, and was known for being the peacemaker between Eisner, Disney, and Katzenberg. At the memorial service, Michael Eisner said of Wells, “While we all…grieve [Frank’s death], we all share the joy of having known Frank. That is why we are here today, to remember…and to celebrate, to pay tribute to one man who had magic and to share the magic with him through his whole creative life.”

March 24

March 24, 1901 – Birth of Disney Legend, Ub Iwerks

“Ub helped make this art form of animation grow from a novelty, something in the penny arcades, to the art form we know of today. He really laid the groundwork for a lot of the work we do today. Walt and Ub recognized that you could make animation truly three dimensional, and a hundred percent believable.”- John Lasseter

There is so much that there could and should be said about Ub Iwerks. He was a true animation renaissance man, dabbling in all forms of the art form, from creating Mickey Mouse to developing the Xerox Process. Sometimes, however, Ub is overlooked by those who are only casually aware of Disney history. However, you could not have had Walt and Walt’s success without Ub’s hand. As Ub Iwerks is one of my heroes, I hope that this post does him justice – there is a lot more that could be said about this truly remarkable man.

Ubbe Ert Iwwerks was born on March 24, 1901, as an only child of Dutch and German descent. His father, Eert Ubbe Iwwerks, was an amateur inventor, whose inventions no doubt left an impression on young Ub. In the age of progress of his youth, Ub was fascinated with the new idea of bringing moving pictures to life. When Ub was 14, his father abandoned the family, and Ub had to take on the new responsibility of providing for his mother. Ub would never speak of his father again. He worked odd jobs to support the family, and drew in his spare time. At age 18, he enrolled at the Fine Arts Institute, determined to become an artist.

Ub and Walt after meeting at the Pesman-Ruben Commercial Art Studio

While working at the Pesman-Ruben Commercial Art Studio, where Ub’s unique skills as a draftsman were gaining attention, Ub met a young man named Walt Disney. Ub and Walt became fast friends, sharing a similar background and a passion for animation, and decided to set up shot for themselves. Unfortunately, they quickly found that they weren’t going to be successful on their own, and business closed down after a month. They then decided to work at the Kansas City Slide Company, where they were able to learn more about motion picture production, particularly animated images. Although an innovative idea at the time, animation wasn’t a profitable business. Walt and Ub decided to try their hand at an animated commercial. They were commissioned to create cartoons known as Laugh-O-Grams, which helped the pair create their own company again, this time known as Laugh-O-Grams, Incorporated. Ub’s draftsmanship proved to be one of the keys to the studio’s success, and they soon came up with the idea for the Alice comedies. But before they could develop the idea, their money ran out, and Ub got a job back at the Kansas City Film Ad Service, while Walt decided to go out to Hollywood.

Ub and Mildred Henderson, who met on a blind date in 1926; they married in 1927

Ub had been promoted to the head of the art department at the Kansas City Film Ad Service when Walt invited him out to Hollywood, and he decided to take the trip out there with his mother. Once he arrived, he became the top animator of the Disney Brothers Studio, and the highest paid employee, even above Walt. The two began their production of the Alice Comedies, which became very popular. After the Alice Comedies had worn out their welcome, Ub and Walt were tasked by Charles Mintz to design a new character, which would become Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, Universal’s first cartoon series. The cartoon was a huge success, and Ub was finally able to have a social life after working so hard for so long. In 1926, he met Mildred Henderson on a blind date, and in January 1927, Ub and Mildred married.

In 1928, Charles Mintz offered Ub a job, in hopes of stealing Oswald away from Walt. Though Ub turned the offer down, he learned that the other artists in the studio had agreed to join with Mintz. He warned Walt, but Walt couldn’t believe it. When Walt came back from the loss of Oswald in New York, the two decided secretly that they needed a new character. Although the story of how Mickey Mouse came to be is still shrouded in mystery, it was very clear that Ub was the one who first drew Mickey, and in two weeks, Ub completed the first Mickey Mouse cartoon, Plane Crazy. Ub’s work led to a growth of personality animation, rather than just straight character animation, as had been seen before. Ub said in an interview that Mickey was based on Douglas Fairbanks Sr., making him heroic and dashing, never a sissy. After the creation of Steamboat Willie, the first synchronized sound cartoon, Mickey’s popularity soared.

Ub included a lot of barnyard humor when he created many of the Mickey Mouse shorts. Due to the udder jokes he liked to use, the censorship board asked that the cows be given modest skirts to wear. And while Mickey’s popularity grew, another animated series began to take shape, known as the Silly Symphony. The first short film, The Skeleton Dance, was drawn by Ub, who seemed to be thoroughly inspired by the music for the short. The entire film, minus one or two scenes, was animated by Ub, who experimented with many elements of perspective and shape. Ub’s animation skills were praised by the animation community, and Ub continued to experiment with each new short he animated.

A caricature of Ub Iwerks and his creation, Flip the Frog

In 1929, tensions grew between Ub and Walt, as Walt began to take control of the artistic direction of the company, which caused Ub some concern. When Walt, who was getting all the attention for Mickey Mouse, began to interfere with Ub’s artistic ideas, Ub was tempted to leave Walt to set up his own studio. Ub finally decided that it was time for him to leave Walt and explore his own opportunities. He created his own new character, known as Flip the Frog. The animation style was very different than what he had done at the Disney Studio, with new kinds of gags and a distorted realism. Another character created by Ub was Willie Whopper, a chubby boy who had surrealistic adventures. His studio was a success, and Ub continued to push the envelope artistically, to the delight of audiences.

Ub created his own cartoon series known as the ComiColor series, in which he was able to use his technical and inventive skills to create new areas of techniques in animation. His created his own version of the three-dimensional camera, with $300 and parts from a 1920s Chevrolet, around the same time the Disney Studios were inventing their multi-plane camera. Unfortunately, while Ub was starting to make great strides with his animation technique, the Hays code was passed, and many of the adult jokes that were contained in his cartoons had to be cut. Also, Ub’s characters imitated life a little too much for Depression audiences, who wanted an escape from their troubles, not a reminder of them. MGM, Ub’s cartoons distributor, was a little disturbed with the cartoons that were being sent to them. The distribution contract with MGM was dissolved in 1934, and Ub was forced to close the studio in 1938, and retired from animation, deciding to venture into the challenge of technical innovations in the arena of animation.

Ub (R) and Walt after Ub rejoined the studio, studying methods for the World War II projects

Finding that Ub was now available, Walt asked Ub to come back to the studio. Ub agreed, returning to the studio in 1940, and welcoming the chance to collaborate with Walt in an entirely new way. At this point, the studio was helping the war effort, which put a tight strain on the budget. Disney needed to come up with new technological advances to make the production of animated films more cost effective. Named as the head of the Photographic Effects lab, Ub received one of his first assignments, to expand upon the idea from more than twenty years ago in the Alice Comedies – combining live action and cartoon – for the movie The Three Caballeros.

Ub’s most recognized technical achievement was for the film One Hundred and One Dalmatians, where he changed not only the style of Disney animation, but also the speed at which things were animated, thanks to the Xerox Process (see January 25th article for more information). The process adapted the Xerox method to animated cells, displacing the inking process altogether and allowing the animator’s intended lines to appear directly on the screen. This process helped the Disney films’ success all the way into the 1980s.

Ub (L) winning a special Academy Award for the sodium matte traveling process used successfully in Mary Poppins

In 1956, Ub invented a sodium traveling matte process, which helped pave the way for creating live action animation combinations, and was first successfully used in Mary Poppins. Ub went on to win a special Class One Scientific Academy Award for the sodium matte traveling process. Not only was Ub recognized for his work at Disney, but Alfred Hitchcock also asked him to create the effects in the movie The Birds with the sodium matte process. John Lasseter once remarked on Ub’s technical advancements, “A lot of the work that Ub did was to take people’s suspension of belief to another level, to where they never thought they were looking at drawings anymore.”

Ub’s advances were numerous, ranging from technical achievements in films (like the split screen technique in The Parent Trap), to creating a quicker editing system for television. Much of his work in the Disney parks, including bringing to life the audio animatronics found throughout the parks, is still used today.

Ub and Walt, two parts of the whole that made up the success of the Disney Studios

Walt’s death greatly affected Ub, as the two were lifelong friends and collaborators, although their relationship was not an easy one at times. Don Iwerks, Ub’s son, remarked that, upon hearing of Walt’s death, Ub remarked, “That’s the end of an era.” The following five years after Walt’s death, Ub continued to push the boundaries of the field. In July on 1971, Ub passed away of a heart attack at age 70. He was honored as a Disney Legend in 1989 for all of his achievements.

March 4

March 4, 1914 – Birth of Disney Legend Ward Kimball, One of the Nine Old Men

“I checked out a scene of Ward Kimball’s animation on Cinderella, and it had some of his rough notes on the scene. He had done the mice in the scene, and Cinderella was also in the scene, but the note to his assistants was, ‘The stooge enters here,’ and the stooge was Cinderella. I think [Kimball] had a certain attitude toward the straighter characters…he lived for the comedy and the counterpoint to the [straight character.]” – Animation Director John Musker.

Ward Walrath Kimball, known as one of Disney’s famed Nine Old Men, was born on March 4, 1914, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He attended the Santa Barbara School of Art in California, with an ambition of becoming a magazine illustrator. But after catching a screening of Walt Disney’s Three Little Pigs, Kimball quickly put together a portfolio and headed straight to Disney Studios, which he joined in 1934.

Kimball’s animation style, with his focus on comedy, and the emotion he was able to infuse in his drawings was quickly noticed in the studio, One of the most well-known characters he developed was Jiminy Cricket in Pinocchio, which was a bit of a gift from Walt after one of Kimball’s scenes was cut from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Kimball remarked on this: “I spent eight months on it. It was all cleaned up and ready to be inked and painted. Walt sensed it stalled the plot at that point. So he called me to his office and said, ‘Ward, I hate to say this, but I’m going to have to take out this soup sequence.’ Of course, I was crestfallen, but right away he came in and said, ‘But I’ve got a little character in our next picture and we’re going to call him Jiminy Cricket. I’d like to have you be the animation supervisor on this.’ My first impression of him was, ‘This ugly insect.’ I said, ‘How can that guy carry the picture?’ My only answer to this is I’ve got to make him look funny. Walt didn’t really want a clown-looking cricket. As he put it, ‘Make him cute, Kimball.’”

Kimball (R) in a scene from The Reluctant Dragon, showing Robert Benchley how animated characters move

Along with many of the Nine Old Men that created the rules of modern animation, he continued to learn throughout his entire career. “An artist always goes back to the source,” he said wisely. “If he’s drawing animals, he looks at the giraffes and the lions; he caricatures them, but he starts out drawing realistically. Like on Bambi, the guys used to go down at the zoo and see how the animals acted.”

Kimball also animated Tweedledee and Tweedledum in Alice in Wonderland, and Lucifer in Cinderella, as well as the Academy Award-winning shorts Tootle, Whistle, Plunk and Boom – the first Cinemascope cartoon – and It’s Tough to Be a Bird. Kimball branched out of animation for the Disneyland show, producing and directing three episodes about space: Man in Space (which discusses the history of rockets), Man and the Moon (about man’s fascination with the moon), and Mars and Beyond (narrated by Paul Frees and discusses the possibility of life on other planets). Kimball also expanded into the story division, and helped write the script for the live-action film, Babes in Toyland.

Kimball brought his unique sense of humor to every aspect of his life, including performing with the famous Firehouse Five Plus Two

Kimball had many interests beyond animation. A railroad buff, his enthusiasm for his hobby spurred Walt to set up a backyard railroad of his own. Kimball was also a fantastic trombone player, and played in the famous group, “Firehouse Five Plus Two,” most notably with Frank Thomas, another member of the Nine Old Men. He was awarded as a Disney Legend at the ceremony in 1989, and his plaque honors his sense of humor by adding an extra finger to the hand holding the wand. Ward Kimball passed away on July 8, 2002, in Los Angeles, California.

 

February 27

February 27, 1930 – Birth of Imagineer and Disney Legend Rolly Crump

To get a handle on this spirited, multi-talented Disney designer, think: Leonardo da Vinci’s Universal Man.

Born February 27, 1930, in Alhambra, California, Roland “Rolly” Crump became one of the most imaginative people in the Imagineering field. He began working at Disney in 1952, leaving a job as a dipper in a ceramic factory to become an inbetweener artist. He eventually became an assistant animator, with his work including the films Peter Pan, Lady and the Tramp, and Sleeping Beauty.

Crump (L) on the 10th Anniversary Show, explaining the upcoming attraction known as the Museum of the Weird

In 1959, Crump moved over to WED Enterprises, designing some of the most popular attractions at Disneyland, including The Haunted Mansion and the Enchanted Tiki Room. Crump even appeared on the Disneyland 10th Anniversary episode, where he explained the idea of a Museum of the Weird (which eventually morphed into part of the Haunted Mansion), where the Imagineers would collect weird things from around the world. “I did a candle man that was melting, I did a chair that stood up and talked,” Crump said of the humble beginnings of the Museum of the Weird. “And while I’m working on all of this, the management at WED and the art directors said, ‘That stuff’s too weird, Walt’s not gonna like that.’ They put all my stuff on a table against a wall in a corner. Finally Walt said, ‘Well, is that it?’ And Dick Irvine said, ‘Yes, Walt, that’s it.’ He said, ‘What’s this stuff in the corner?’ He and I both sat in front of this stuff, and I took him through it. He said, ‘It’s weird.’…The next morning I come to work at 7:30, Walt’s sitting at my chair in the same clothes he was wearing when he left that afternoon the day before, and he said, ‘I didn’t sleep last night…because of all the weird stuff you showed me.’”

Crump also was a key designer for many of the Disney attractions at the New York World’s Fair, particularly the Tower of the Four Winds Marquee for the It’s A Small World attraction. Crump designed the animated clock for the attraction when it was moved to Disneyland.

In 1970, Crump left Disney to become a consultant at other theme parks, including Busch Gardens in Florida and California. In 1976, he returned to Disney as a project designer for Epcot, particularly the “Wonders of Life” and “The Land” pavilions. He left again in 1981, launching the Mariposa Design Group, which created many themed attractions around the world. In 1992, he came back to Disney again, and he again worked with the Epcot pavilions, redesigning and refurbishing the lands there. Crump then retired from Disney in 1996, although he continues to create and dream up new interesting attractions. He was inducted as a Disney Legend at the 2004 ceremony.

 

February 18

February 18, 1967 – Birth of Disney Legend, Animator, and Current Voice of Donald Duck, Tony Anselmo

“The legacy is in my heart and soul that, I feel that it’s an honor to be the guy who gets to be the keeper of the keys or the carrier, or what have you, of this legacy. I love that so much, that’s so important to me. That’s the best part [about being Donald] for me. It’s fun. It can actually be a lot of work, you know, and you have to do long sessions, especially if there’s a lot of tantrums.”

Born February 18, 1967, in Salt Lake City, Utah, Tony Anselmo loved animation from an early age. “I would write the animators, you know, Frank Thomas, and Ollie Johnston, and Jack [Hannah] about what it took to be a Disney animator,” Anselmo explained, “and they would write back, very generously with advice.” While in high school, he took night classes in figure drawing and acting, and submitted his portfolio to the studio. After Ollie Johnston and Jack Hannah saw it, they sent him to the California Institute of the Arts, where he spent three years studying animation under Hannah’s direction. “At that time, I remember telling people I wanted to be an animator, and they didn’t know what that was,” Anselmo recalled. “Since The Little Mermaid, I think there’s been a popularity of what animation is, and everybody wants to be a part of it, but before that it was a very, sort of a cultish thing, where there were very few of us who knew what Disney animation was, and who those people were, the Nine Old Men and California Institute of the Arts.”

After graduating from CalArts, Anselmo was placed into a training program with famed animator Eric Larson for eight months, studying Disney style animation and being given animation tests. After that, Anselmo became and inbetweener at the studio. Anselmo credits Jack Hannah for his entering the studio; coincidentally, Hannah became the director of the Donald Duck unit under Walt Disney, so the old director of Donald hired the new voice of the duck.

Anselmo being interviewed by Leonard Maltin in 2005

When asked how he became the voice of Donald, Anselmo responded that “It wasn’t anything I actually intended to do, but…it really was a small family, everybody knew everybody. And the first day I was on the lot, I was walking up Dopey Drive, and a man came down the steps of the animation building, five-foot-two and white hair [Clarence Nash, longtime voice of Donald Duck], and he passed me and he goes, ‘Good morning’ [in Donald’s voice], and I, in a split second, I had never met him before, and I had never seen who did Donald’s voice, so to hear that distinctive voice coming out of a man who I hadn’t met before was shocking, but at the same moment it was like, that’s Donald Duck! It would have been like being at MGM and seeing Clark Gable.

“Clarence was a good friend. And, doing voices and being the class clown, Donald was a voice that I couldn’t do. And I asked [Nash], for fun, ‘How do you do that?’ And he showed me, and I couldn’t do it. But I would practice from time to time – any voice person will tell you that the best place to practice is in the car, or in the shower – and one day it kind of clicked in, and I thought, ‘Okay, I think that I did it.’ The next time I saw Clarence I said, ‘Is this it?’ and goes, ‘That’s it!’ But it was just the sound, and there’s much more to it. You know, how to enunciate as much as possible. There’s certain words you use, certain words you try not to use, or you use something that means the same thing.

“It wasn’t until…he was supposed to the Rose Parade. In his fiftieth year, I think Ducky got the attention and the acclaim that he had, I think, always deserved. To celebrate Donald’s fiftieth birthday, he put his hand and footprints at the Chinese Theater, he was on the Tonight Show, the Academy Awards, and he was supposed to do the Rose Parade, and I didn’t know that he was sick; he had gotten leukemia. And I went to the Rose Parade and he wasn’t in the car, and Margie Nash called and said he was in the hospital. So I went to the hospital to visit…and he said, ‘You’re gonna do this.’ It all came at the same time and I thought, ‘You’re dying, and you want me to do that? No, I don’t want you to die, and no, I want you to do this.’

“The odd thing about it was, for a period of about six months before that, I thought it was just because we were friends and he thought it was fun, he would come in my room in the animation building when I was drawing, and he would say, ‘Try this,’ or ‘What would you do if Donald had to be in this situation, what would you say?’ or ‘Say this,’ and I would go, ‘Okay,’ and I thought it was fun. I really didn’t think he was spending the time, you know…I felt like he had taken me under his wing, to use a corny phrase, but I didn’t know why he was spending so much time with me. And it wasn’t until he was ill in the hospital and he told me, that it was like, ‘Oh.’ So, I’m very protective of it. It’s a legacy of not only Clarence and Jack, who were dear friends of mine, who I respected, and miss, but Walt Disney, and a legacy that I wanted to be a part of. It’s something that I watch over and I’m very protective of it, because I want to keep the integrity of not only the sound of it, but the integrity of the personality of Donald, what he does, what he doesn’t do. It’s not just the way Donald sounds, it’s how he reacts to any given situation. He would react differently to the same situation as Mickey or Goofy would act differently.”

In 1990, Anselmo put both of his skills to good use by animating and voicing Donald in Disney’s version of Mark Twain’s The Prince and the Pauper. He continues voicing Donald in various Disney projects, most recently the Kinect Disneyland Adventures game, and has said, “Pending natural disaster, I expect to be doing Donald the rest of my life.” He was named a Disney Legend in 2009 at the D23 Expo in Anaheim.

February 15

February 15 1899 – Birth of Disney Legend and Wife of Walt Disney, Lillian Disney

Lillian, far left, stands with Walt, his sister Ruth, Roy, and Roy's wife Edna, in a shot from 1925

“I think my dad fell in love with her almost immediately … she was an independent little lady.” – Diane Disney Miller

Lillian Bounds Disney, wife of Walt Disney, was born in Spalding, Idaho, in 1899 as the tenth and youngest child of the family. In 1923, she traveled to Los Angeles to visit her sister, and a friend of hers recommended her for a job at the Disney Brothers Studio as an ink and paint girl. There was one condition: “Don’t flirt with the boss,” her friend warned her. “He’s all business.” Lillian, however, had no intention of flirting with Walt; this was not a love-at-first-sight romance for either of them, for Walt was too consumed with the business, and Lillian was not impressed with the shabbiness of his clothes. She took the job due to its proximity to her sister’s house and the salary of fifteen dollars a week.

Walt would drive Lillian and another coworker home after long days at the studio. Lillian later said, “When Walt started dropping the other girl off first so he could talk to me, I knew he was interested.” She also admitted that during these rides home, she started to see Walt differently, looking at him “like he was a somebody.” One evening as he dropped her off, he informed her, “I’m going to buy a new suit. When I get it, would it be all right if I called on you?” Lillian said that it would, and when Walt got his new suit in celebration of a check for their films, he arrived at her house and asked her eagerly about the suit. They dated steadily after that, and on July 13, 1925, Walt and Lillian were married. From then on, Lillian worked at the studio only in times of emergency.

One of the major contributions attributed to Lillian involved Walt’s famous creation, Mickey Mouse. While the story of Mickey’s creation has been shrouded in legend and mystery, the one common factor is that Lillian came up with the name for the new character. Walt wanted to name the mouse Mortimer, but Lillian decided that the better name would be Mickey, and he agreed.

Lillian accompanying Walt to the premiere of Mary Poppins

Lillian was not one to meekly listen to Walt, nor was she one to care about what the press reported about him. Walt once told a reporter that Lillian didn’t care what reporters would say about him. “I keep reporters away from her,” he explained. “She’s given them the lowdown.” Perhaps the success to their long marriage was the fact that Lillian was never overly impressed by Walt and his accomplishments. She did worry when he worked long hours, but overall, she didn’t regard him as a genius, as most people did. Walt, however, would show her affection by either physical actions, such as wrapping an arm around her, or learning how to dance so they could dance together during social functions.

After Walt’s death, Lillian stepped in the public arena to lend support to the Florida Project, which would be renamed Walt Disney World in his honor. She attended the dedication ceremony in 1971, saying, “I think Walt would have approved,” when asked what Walt would have thought of the park. She continued her late husband’s support of education by providing financial gifts to the California Institute of the Arts, particularly to remodel a campus theater in 1993, which was renamed the Walt Disney Modular Theater. In 1987, Lillian announced a $50 million gift to build a symphonic hall for the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, now known as the Walt Disney Concert Hall. The building was designed by architect Frank Gehry and opened in 2003.

In 1969, Lillian remarried to John L. Truyens, but he unfortunately died in 1981. Lillian herself passed away on December 16, 1997, after suffering a stroke at the age of 98. She was named a Disney Legend in 2003, honoring all of her contributions in support of the company’s growth.

February 11

February 11, 1918 – Birth of Disney Legend Blaine Gibson

Gibson (L) showing Julie Reihm and Walt Disney one of the scultpures for the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction

“…I was told Walt was expecting me to work on these projects. So I said to myself, ‘what the heck’ and went (to Walt Disney Imagineering). I was never sorry after that.” – Blaine Gibson

Born February 11, 1918, in Colorado, Blaine Gibson joined the Walt Disney studios in 1939, working as an inbetweener and assistant animator. Gibson built up an impressive resume working on the films Fantasia, Bambi, Song of the South, and Peter Pan, just to name a few. Gibson would work on sculpting in his spare time, and when Walt saw an art exhibit with Gibson’s sculptures in 1954, he asked him to help work on special projects for the upcoming Disneyland.

In 1961, after doing part-time work for WED Enterprises, Gibson left the animation arena and began sculpting full time. Gibson ended up heading the sculpture department, working on most of the heads of the Audio-Animatronics characters, including 41 presidents for the Hall of Presidents at Walt Disney World (the last being Bill Clinton), and the pirates for the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction. Gibson makes an appearance in the Wonderful World of Color episode Disneyland 10th Anniversary, showing Disney and Julie Reihm one of the heads of the pirates he’s been working on. Reihm notes that the pirate looks rather angry, to which Gibson responds, “Well, he has to be a tough guy. The pirates were pretty tough.”

The Partners statue Gibson designed, located in the hub of Disneyland

One of the most recognizable works of Gibson’s is the “Partners” statue in the Central Hub of Disneyland, which depicts Walt Disney holding hands with Mickey Mouse. It was finished in 1993, the same year Gibson was named a Disney Legend, and the statue has become a symbol of Disneyland itself. Gibson retired from the company in 1983, but continues to consult on projects, including The Great Movie Ride in Walt Disney World.

 

February 7

February 7, 1947 – Birth of Disney Legend Wayne Allwine, Former Special Effects Technician and Former Voice of Mickey Mouse

“Wayne was fond of saying, ‘We only carry the torch of these characters for a while, and then we pass it on.’ Well, he just carried it a little bit higher than anyone else.” – Bill Farmer, current voice of Goofy.

Wayne Allwine, best known as the third voice actor of Mickey Mouse, was born on February 7, 1947, in Glendale California. Active on stage and screen from an early age, Allwine ended up performing in bands until 1966, when he began to work for Disney in the mailroom, which was known as “traffic” in those days. Allwine recounts how he got the job at Disney, as well as how he became Mickey Mouse:

 

“I had wanted to work for Disney since I was a kid, but didn’t know how to get in. Well, one of the bands I was playing with, Tom Jackman’s father – Tom was the leader of the band – his father Bob Jackman ran the music department. And Bob gave me an application and a recommendation, and I started in the mailroom…way, way back when. And the thing that’s funny is a little known fact: Bob Jackman, after Pinto Colvig had left the studio, Bob supplied the voice for Goofy in several of the cartoons. So, in essence, Goofy hired the future Mickey…

“But I started out carrying mail. I saw Walt a couple of times, but we only spokeonce. He was very sick. [But] it was a magic time, it really was. 1966. John McCarthy was running traffic, as the mailroom was called back then, and just said, ‘Take a walk around, see what you wanna do.’ So I walked around, and the first thing I thought of, ‘Well, I’ve done some acting. Wardrobe looks like fun.’ Cause I love clothes, love clothes. Did that for a while. Went back into traffic and said, ‘Gee, I don’t really know what I wanna do, Mac. I might leave. I might leave for a while and just see what’s on the outside.’

“So great. I left, and I got a call about two months after I left, saying, ‘Would you like to come in and learn Jimmy MacDonald’s job?’ Now, at the time, I didn’t know who Jimmy was. ‘Sure. What am I supposed to do?’ ‘Follow Jimmy. Do everything he does.’

“So, I followed Jimmy, and I learned how to do sound effects. Jimmy only voiced Mickey for radio interviews; I think he was on the Dave Letterman show twice. But other than that, he didn’t do Mickey…he was having a rough time and couldn’t really voice Mickey any longer. And the studio had an open audition. An actor didn’t show up. There was a call from the soundstage: ‘Send the kid down. He works with MacDonald.’ Three months later Lou Debney stopped me and said, ‘Kid, you gotta join the Screen Actors Guild. They’re gonna use you.’

 “And that’s how I became Mickey Mouse.”

Allwine provided the voice for Mickey in Mickey’s Christmas Carol (1983), Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), Runaway Brain (1995), and The Three Musketeers (2004). He also voiced the character in the television shows Mickey’s Mouse Works, House of Mouse, and Mickey Mouse Clubhouse, as well as in the video game series, Kingdom Hearts. “The main piece of advice that Jim gave me about Mickey helped me keep things in perspective,” Allwine recalled in a 2004 interview with Leonard Maltin. “He said, ‘Just remember, kid, you’re only filling in for the boss.’ And that’s the way he treated doing Mickey for years and years…Mickey’s the real star. You know, you just have to love the little guy while you have him, because he won’t be yours forever.”

Allwine (L) working with some of the special effects tools designed by Jimmy MacDonald (R)

In addition to his voice acting, Allwine was an accomplished sound effects technician, winning an Emmy and a Golden Reel Award for his work in Steven Spielberg’s Amazing Stories, and another Golden Reel Award in 1986 for his contributions to the Disney animated feature The Great Mouse Detective.

One of the little known facts about Allwine is that in real life, he was married to the voice of Minnie Mouse, Russi Taylor. “It was just a total friendship, and the next thing you knew, we were just sort of like, always together,” Taylor said of how their relationship developed. On October 13, 2008, the couple were inducted as Disney Legends.

Mickey (Allwine) and Minnie (Taylor) together

On May 18, 2009, Allwine passed away at the age of 62. The game Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days, his last vocal project as Mickey, was dedicated in his memory. “Wayne’s dedication to preserving the legacy of the character who began with Walt Disney himself was steadfast,” Tony Anselmo, voice of Donald Duck and close friend, said about Allwine. “He was one of the kindest men I ever knew, a true gentlemen, and funnier than any professional comedian. A truly gifted and talented man.” Allwin’s voice is still heard at parks around the world, as well as on television on the show Mickey Mouse Clubhouse. “It’s a great honor,” Allwine said of voicing Mickey. “It’s a great honor to represent what Walt loved so dearly, and what Jimmy kept alive so well.”