editors
JERRY BECK (LA)
AMID AMIDI (NY)
Searle and Disney
by amid
September 8, 2008 2:05 pm


Ronald Searle and Walt

No particular reason that I’m posting this photo other than I’ve never seen it before and figured it’d be fun to share with everybody. Walt, of course, is instantly recognizable, but the other guy is somebody who I often refer to as the greatest cartoonist of the 20th century, Ronald Searle. The pic is from July 1957. I’m not entirely sure but it appears that they’re on the Zorro set. Click on it for bigger version.

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Bugsmer says:
09/8/08  2:12pm

This is certainly an unusual photo of Walt, Amid. I’ve never seen it before either.

 
Fran Krause says:
09/8/08  2:50pm

What happens in the basement of Sleeping Beauty’s Castle STAYS in the basement of Sleeping Beauty’s Castle.

 
Floyd Norman says:
09/8/08  2:55pm

This looks like a jail house on one of Disney’s live-action sets. Walt made a lot of westerns back in the fifties and sixties, and it seems there was always a jail.

The animation artists did pretty much the same thing. We took photos of each other “locked” behind bars. Looks like the “Old Man” enjoyed the gag as well.

 
red pill junkie says:
09/8/08  4:04pm

Didn’t Leon Schlesinger use to keep this photo in his WB’s office? ;-)

 
Kyle Maloney says:
09/8/08  4:29pm

“please Eisner, don’t make a bunch of crappy sequels to my beloved masterpieces and ruin my reputation, I’ll do anything!”

 
brigette b says:
09/8/08  5:17pm

Weird…I’ve never seen an actual photo of Ronald Searle before. I always pictured him all bumpy and smeary and inky like his drawings.

He looks pretty normal though!

 
John A says:
09/8/08  5:31pm

So THIS is where they’ve been keeping Walt for all these years.

 
Tom Pope says:
09/8/08  8:18pm

That’s the kookiest durn picture of Walt I’ve ever seen.

 
Chuck R. says:
09/8/08  10:35pm

Ronald Searle looks less comfortable behind bars than Walt. Maybe that’s because of his years spent as a POW of the Japanese?
Interesting pic.

 
Jason says:
09/8/08  10:40pm

“Please, Mike, don’t let my company and theme parks get infested with those moth-eaten Muppets. Please don’t invite in the Japanese-born plague that is the Power Rangers. Please don’t buy crap and put my name on it. And please please please don’t build California Adventure!!!”

You know, when I wrote that stuff above, I meant it to be kind of funny…but somehow, after reading it…I think I’m gonna cry…

 
Alfons Moline says:
09/9/08  2:18am

Speaking of Ronald Searle, now that we have recently lost Bill Melendez, does anybody remember the obscure 1975 Searle-designed feature DICK DEADEYE OR DUTY DONE, based on Gilbert and Sullivan´s pirate-themed operettas and made at Melendez´studio in London? (well, not that obscure -at least it has been issued on Region 2 DVD in the U.K.)

 
OM says:
09/9/08  6:10am

“…Honest! We were only joking about being Nazi sympathizers! C’mon, even FDR got the joke!”

 
zavkram says:
09/9/08  7:18am

“…I really think Michael Eisner should be here instead of me!!!”

 
Robert Schaad says:
09/9/08  10:26am

The Perpetua link is fantastic. As was the recent exhibit of Searle’s work at the Forbes Building in nyc.

One more for the captioneers:
Pleez…let us out and we’ll collaborate!”

 
AdrianC says:
09/9/08  4:35pm

I wonder what the story is behind this meeting of the minds.

Did these two ever collaborate on anything?

 
ed says:
09/10/08  2:21pm

AdrianC: Searle was visiting Disney whilst working with Bill Melendez on a film called ‘Energetically Yours’ – created in Searle’s unique style. Apparently Searle ‘didn’t get on too well with Disney’ himself,
(maybe this is why he doesn’t look too happy?!) but got on well with the animators, especially Ward Kimball with whom he kept in touch with. Searle later returned to Disney and helped influence the look and art direction for 101 Dalmatians.

 
Matt Jones says:
09/10/08  5:56pm

This is fantastic! Where did you find it Amid?

 
amid says:
09/10/08  7:20pm

Matt: It’s a publicity pic. I’d scanned it in last year and forgot I had it.

Ed: What is your source that Searle returned to Disney to work on 101 Dalmatians? As far as I’m aware, he didn’t work on that film in any capacity, not even on a consulting basis. The look of the film is strongly influenced by his work, but that was the doing of the likes of Ken Anderson and Tom Oreb who admired Searle’s work.

 
ed says:
09/11/08  3:11am

Hey Amid
Sorry I wasn’t 100% clear – he didn’t specifically work on 101 Dalmatians but, according to the Russel Davies biography published by Chris Beetles;

“…most of effort went into persuading California-trained animators to step out of their tradition a little and adopt a looser, Searle-ish line. The resulting film, a history of energy called ‘Energetically Yours’, eventually won eleven assorted awards. Some of the wisdom Ronald aquired in negotiating a compromise Anglo-American ‘feel’ in the animation was later passed on by him, privately, to the Disney team who achieved their own version of the same effect in 101 Dalmatians.’

So whilst it isn’t listed anywhere, according to the offically endorsed biography of Ronald Searle, he did at some stage meet with the Disney artists – as you point out probably Anderson and Oreb – whilst 101 was in pre/production.

 
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