Just for fun, here's title cards for a few shorts which will be included in my forthcoming Chronicle book on 1950s animation design. It's a shame that industrial and educational films from that period are so difficult to see nowadays because many of those films feature terrific design and animation. Luckily, one of the films below - STOP DRIVING US CRAZY (1959) - is readily available for online viewing at Archive.org. Also, I should mention that the reason you'll be seeing images from these films in the book is because of film collectors like Mark Kausler and Mark Newgarden who generously allowed me to scan in their prints. Thanks guys!
[Earlier posts related to my 50s animation design book HERE and HERE.]
Jaime Weinman continues his analysis of Great Warner Bros. Animators on his Something Old, Nothing New blog. This time Emery Hawkins (pictured above) and Gerry Chiniquy. [related post: Great WB Animators, Part I]
Those wacky cartoonists at Meathaus.com have created a 218 page sketchbook featuring 31 artists - including several pages by animators Ralph Bakshi, John Kricfalusi and Katie Rice. Intriguing doodles, sketches and scribbles for $12.95, this book, entitled Go For The Gold, is not available in stores. It's printed-on-demand through lulu.com. I really appreciate that they sent me a review copy.
Norm Prescott, co-founder of FILMATION (pictured above at left with Hal Sutherland in the middle and Lou Scheimer at right), passed away on July 2nd according to close friend and business associate Fred Ladd.
Prescott was a popular Boston radio personality in the 1950s. He got involved in animation as a writer/producer (with Ladd) on two feature length projects, PINOCCHIO IN OUTER SPACE and JOURNEY BACK TO OZ. When Fred Silverman (at CBS) was looking for a low budget studio to produce SUPERMAN for Saturday morning in 1966, Prescott teamed with Lou Scheimer to form Filmation - and convinced Silverman to give their studio a shot. The rest is history.
Prescott appeared (as himself) in the movie DISC JOCKEY (Allied Artists, 1951) and later did occasional voices on his various cartoon series - such as the animated STAR TREK and SHAZAM!
If you are in Hollywood tonight and are looking for things to do - I highly recommend you spend an evening with Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys. I'll be there again with my "opening act": several 1930s musical shorts and cartoons projected in glorious 16mm, preceeding a wonderful evening of live 1920s/early 1930s jazz, rag-time, blues and novelty songs. The fun starts at 8pm tonight, Thursday night July 7th, at the Steve Allen Theatre, 4773 Hollywood Blvd., (two blocks west of Vermont, across from Barnsdall Park, in the Los Feliz area). We do this the first Thursday of every month. Please check Janet's website (under "Showtime") for more details.
JamesBaxterAnimation.com is up and running. The company's mission statement: "James Baxter Animation is a new studio where the focus is on great hand-drawn animation, storytelling and artistic freedom." Can't argue with that. Baxter also indicates on his site that he'll soon launch a lecture series teaching the finer points of hand-drawn animation.
You mention the "French Mary Blair"… Do you know the "Dutch Mary Blair", Fiep Westendorp? Perhaps Holland's greatest illustrator, her quirky, vibrant drawings spent half a century in the center of mainstream Dutch cultural life. She started out as a newspaper illustrator, but made her name drawing and painting a series of homespun books for young people (somewhere between picture books and chapter books) by Annie M.G. Schmidt. Schmidt's writing is sweet and folksy, but Fiep's illustrations make the stories come alive.Jip and Janneke, two of her silhouetted characters who live in a full color world are national treasures and as ubiquitous in Holland as Tintin is in Belgium. Check out one of many sites devoted to her stuff HERE.
I grew up with Fiep's work. I had stacks of her books written in indecipherable Dutch but filled with immediately recognizable, emotive drawings that made me want to draw, and to draw as I do. Fiep died a few years back just as Amsterdam mounted a series of retrospective exhibits. Americans will be able to see some cool originals this winter when the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art mounts a show on Dutch Picture Book Illustrators this winter (the show, I'm told, is going to travel to NYC in December as well). Her stuff is well worth checking out, and if you ever go to Holland you should be sure to check out her retrospective book collection "Getekend: Fiep Westendorp (Drawn: Fiep Westendorp)".
France's equivalent of Mary Blair is not one, but two artists. Lefor Openo is the pseudonym of French illustrators Marie-Claire Lefort and Marie-Francine Oppeneau. They produced lots of great posters and advertising art during the 1950s and 1960s, and THIS SITE is packed with examples of their work. (via PCL LinkDump)
Here's a fascinating piece on legendary Disney animator Ward Kimball's toy train collection and the recent auctions of the trains which grossed around $5 million. For those prices, I'd want real trains...
Andrew Young's PuppetVision Blog has pointed out this website listing dozens of vintage cartoon character hand puppets. Making three dimensional figures out of flat cartoon characters was not as refined an art back then as it is today - thus we mainly ended up with deformed versions of our favorite animated pals as puppets and dolls. This website provides a good overview. The two pictured above (TV's Koko the Clown and Katnip) are better than average - go to the website to see a very depressing Droopy, Little Roquefort and Mr. Jinks.
Last Saturday's "The Film Programme" on the BBC was a half-hour show devoted to anime, and includes interviews with a half-dozen people who either work in or write about anime. Listen to the show HERE. (link via Stone Bridge Press blog)
On Tuesday June 28th, cartoonist Rowland B. Wilson passed away.
Lucky Seven |
A service will be held at Mission San Luis Rey, 4050 Mission Avenue, Oceanside, California, on Wednesday July 6th at 11:30 am.
8:30-10:00pm - An Evening with J. J. Sedelmaier
I will be hosting a panel and screening with Comic-Con special guest J. J. Sedelmaier showcasing some of his best cartoons and commercials. Room 6A.
10:00-11:00pm - The Worst Cartoons Ever
If Ed Wood were an animator, these are the cartoons he would have made. I'll be presenting an all-new selection of some of the worst animated films ever made, including our regular favorites Super President (that one-man weapon of mass destruction), Mighty Mr. Titan (the limited animation physical fitness propaganda cartoon), Johnny Cypher in Dimension Zero (the lamest space cadet ever created), and Clutch Cargo (he with the live-action lips) along with (new this year) Rocket Robin Hood (and his band of "Merry Men"), Rankin-Bass's King Kong (move over Peter Jackson!), Spunky & Tadpole (a clueless kid and his retarded bear pal), and Bucky & Pepito (hands down, the worst cartoon series ever made), among many many other hilarious stinkers. Room 6A