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Friday, February 29, 2008
Leapin' Lizards!
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Monday, February 25, 2008
Oscar-Winning Birds
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Sunday, February 24, 2008
And The Oscar Went To…
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Saturday, February 23, 2008
Great Moments With The Lincoln Memorial
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Friday, February 22, 2008
A Class Act
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Monday, February 18, 2008
Happy Presidents’ Day, Mr. Lincoln
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In honor of Presidents’ Day, here is the spectacular cover for the Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln LP album, painted by acclaimed illustrator Neil Boyle, whose artistry has been commissioned by such disparate showcases as The Saturday Evening Post and the U.S. Postal Service. Originally released in 1964 to accompany the opening of Walt Disney’s Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln attraction at the State of Illinois pavilion at the 1964-1965 New York World’s Fair, this splendid recording, produced by James Algar, includes the soundtrack from the attraction, with narration written by Mr. Algar and a stirring score composed and conducted by Buddy Baker. The long-playing record also includes additional material not experienced in the attraction, including the Lincoln-Douglas Debate and the Gettysburg Address. With typical Disney showmanship, the LP was encased in the elaborate album cover pictured here, which included a booklet in the classic Disney Storyteller tradition. In addition to transcripts of some of the Lincoln material heard on the recording and more masterful illustrations by Neil Boyle, the booklet also incorporates the Gettysburg Address in nine languages, including Hebrew and Latin, with the English language version in Lincoln’s own hand. The Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln album in content, scope and scale is, while certainly child- friendly (or at least student-friendly), no kiddie album, and was very appropriately eventually released on Disney’s prestige label, Buena Vista. Also included on the inside cover of the album is an introduction by Walt Disney (most probably ghostwritten, perhaps by James Algar, but undoubtedly approved by Walt and reflective of his thoughts and feelings), featuring these words: “Most Americans will agree with me that no man has had more of a positive impact on a nation than Abraham Lincoln has on our country.... Yet I have always felt that too few people realize that Lincoln’s concepts and philosophies are as useful, as necessary, as applicable today as they were when he pronounced them [years] ago. His analysis of freedom and its true meaning, his approach to justice and equality, his own courage and strength—all are as vital [today] as they were in the mid-1800s.”
Thursday, February 14, 2008
St. Valentine's Day With Devilish Dennis
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Sunday, February 10, 2008
Award-Winning Canemaker
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Filmmaker, historian and author John Canemaker has won a lot of awards, including an Oscar and an Emmy. On Friday, February 8, at the 35th Annual Annie Awards, John received another award for which he will have to make room on his already crowded mantle: the prestigious Winsor McCay award from ASIFA Hollywood: International Animated Film Society. Awarded for career contributions to the art of animation, this esteemed honor is certainly deserved by John, who, among his many other accomplishments, has for years researched, documented and written (beautifully) about animators and the films and art they created, long before many others similarily toiled in these fields and certainly long before most considered animation an art. It's difficult to single out just one of the many Canemaker volumes published over the years but as I just posted about Mary Blair I’ve pictured his wonderful book on Ms. Blair (on whom John is certainly the authority), which you can get here
Mary Blair On Display
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On her always-interesting blog, story artist Jenny Lerew recently posted photos of the Mary Blair exhibit at the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco which runs through March 18, 2008. The exhibit not only celebrates Mary’s joyful use of color and exuberant imagination but also allows visitors to view the actual works of art (many of them created for Disney productions), a privilege few of us are blessed enough to have very often, if ever. If you are going to be in San Francisco before March 18 be sure to visit the Museum and be dazzled by the colorful work of Ms. Blair (in addition to the Museum’s other exhibits, of which Jenny also gives us a taste). And be sure to read Jenny’s insightful thoughts on Mary’s continuing influence.
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Saturday, February 9, 2008
More Turner Classic Movies, More Disney
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That indispensable paragon of cable channel excellence Turner Classic Movies (TCM) is at it again. Today at 3:00 pm (Pacific time) TCM presents Disney’s Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971). The Oscar-winning (for Special Visual Effects) musical fantasy is being showcased just as it should be, even though TCM is not a Disney venue. I might only wish that TCM was presenting the restored version to which over 20 minutes of footage excised before the film’s premiere was skillfully reinstated, and which was unveiled on September 27, 1996, by the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences. (You can get that extended version on DVD here
Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Party Gras!
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“Those models were used to create the balloon patterns by an amazing company called Aerostar in South Dakota which produced the final balloons,” reports Kevin. “The design for the Mickey balloon kept changing—notice the model of Mickey sitting on a Conga drum which was made by a talented young sculptor named Rich Collins, but never used. I especially like the push unit models which were constructed by Scott Sinclair and myself, even though everybody mainly remembers the big balloons.”
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Monday, February 4, 2008
Tut-Tut, It Looks Like Rain
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Friday, February 1, 2008
Pixilated
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As Cartoon Brew points out here, Turner Classic Movies is presenting the Oscar-nominated live-action short, Stop, Look and Listen (1967) in a couple of hours (Saturday morning, 1:15 am pacific time). This unusual film, featuring drivers zooming around city streets without cars (the actors playing the drivers sit directly on the pavement) employs pixilation—a sort of live-action cartoon technique using stop-motion animation to amusing and at times mind-bending effect—and was created by Chuck Menville and Len Janson (who also play the two main drivers). At the time, Chuck and Len were two young Disney animation artists who were encouraged by Disney animation legend and resident iconoclast Ward Kimball to produce this little film. Ward reportedly convinced Walt Disney to loan out editing facilities and the Disney Studios sound effects library for the film, even though it was not a Disney production.
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20,000 Leagues Q & A
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Question: What non-Disney cable channel that features classic films (shown uncut with no commercials in their original aspect ratio) is showcasing Walt Disney’s Academy Award-winning live-action epic 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954) as part of their annual 31 Days of Oscar tomorrow (Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 1:15 pm (pacific time)?
Answer: Turner Classic Movies (TCM).
Question: What Disney-owned-and-operated cable channel will not be showcasing Walt Disney’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea tomorrow or anytime in the foreseeable future?
Answer: Disney Channel.
There. Wasn’t that easy?
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