Archive for the ‘biography’ Category

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

Biography: Alberto Vargas

This posting is a stub. You can contribute to this entry by providing information through the comments link at the bottom of this post. Please organize your information following the main category headers below….

Birth/Death

Occupation/Title

Bio Summary

Early Life/Family

Education/Training

Career Outline

Comments On Style

Influences

Personality

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Honors

Related Links

Bibliographic References

BIO-AAA-342

Contributors To This Listing

To make additions or corrections to this listing, please click on COMMENTS below…

FacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

Biography: Dan Gordon

This posting is a stub. You can contribute to this entry by providing information through the comments link at the bottom of this post. Please organize your information following the main category headers below….

Birth/Death

Death: 1969

Occupation/Title

Director,Producer,Storyboard Artist, Writer,Sketch Artist,Layout Artist

Bio Summary

Daniel Gordon is best known for being a Storyboard Artist, director, and producer. His most well known work is with Famous Studios and Hanna-Barbara Productions. While working with famous in the 1930’s and 40’s, he wrote and directed many stories for such animations as “Popeye the Sailor” and the “Superman” serials. While working on ‘Popeye,’, instead of having Bluto and Olive Oyl, Popeye dealing with his nephews, a suicidal sailor, and the hungry goat. In the Gordon cartoons, the characters were more manic, energetic and frenzied, with Popeye usually being the bad guy instead of the protagonist in the Gordon cartoons.
Dan Gordon was also an illustrator/comic book artist. He produced many titles for the ACG that included ‘Anglepuss,’ ‘Blunderbunny,’ ‘Bungle of the Jungle,’ ‘Jitterbuck,’ ‘Hep,’ ‘Snooper,’ and the more famous works, ‘SuperKatt,’ and ‘Cookie.’ Gordon worked on these titles until 1953, which is perhaps the explanation for gaps in the timeline of his animation career, where he did not work for any major companies or on any popular titles for a few years.
Dan Gordon’s career had him work for Terrytoons, Fleischer, Van Beuren, Famous, and MGM in the 1930’s and early 1940’s. Then, in the 1950’s and 1960’s, Gordon moved on to work for Hanna-Barbara Productions, where he worked on Storyboards and as a story director for the first Flintstones Episodes, and worked on other titles, such as ‘Hey There Yogi Bear,’ ‘The Adventures of Johnny Quest,’ and ‘The Huckleberry Hound Show.’
Dan Gordon also worked on stories for two live action movies, ‘The Showdown,’ and ‘The Mutineers.’

Early Life/Family

Education/Training

Career Outline

Writer (Famous Studios, Hanna-Barbara, Fleischer Studios)
Producer (Famous Studios)
Director (Famous Studios, Van Beuren Studios)
Story Director (Hanna-Barbara Productions)
Sketch Artist (Hanna-Barbara Productions)
Storyboard artist (Hanna-Barbara Productions)
Layout Artist (Hanna-Barbara Productions)
Character Designer (Van Beuren Studios)

Comments On Style

He has a very loose, cartoony style. This is something you do not see very often amongst new artists today. He makes his drawings fun, and loose, while maintaining an excellent understanding of perspective (in regards to his comic serials). His poses are full of mayhem and very lively, not stiff. His exaggeration and understanding of the human figure is unique, rare, and something that may reside only in the golden age of animation.

Influences

Personality

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Gordon developed stories for two live action movies, one western, ‘The Showdown’ and a Pirate Adventure ‘The Mutineers.’

Filmography

Writer:

Gulliver’s Travels (1939) (writer)
Way Back When a Razzberry Was a Fruit (1940) (writer)
Springtime in the Rock Age (1940) (writer)
Popeye Meets William Tell (1940) (story)
The Dandy Lion (1940) (writer)
The Constable (1940) (writer)
Popeye Meets Rip Van Winkle (1941) (story)
Mr. Bug Goes to Town (1941) (adaptation) (story)
… aka Bugville (USA: alternative title)
… aka Hoppity Goes to Town (UK)
Fleets of Stren’th (1942) (story)
The Magnetic Telescope (1942) (writer)
Terror on the Midway (1942) (writer)
The Mutineers (1949) (story)
… aka Pirate Ship
The Showdown (1950) (story)
“Pixie and Dixie and Mr. Jinks” (1958) TV series (writer)
“The Huckleberry Hound Show” (1958) TV series (unknown episodes)
“The Yogi Bear Show” (1961) TV series (unknown episodes)

Producer:

You’re a Sap, Mr. Jap (1942) (producer) (uncredited)
Alona on the Sarong Seas (1942) (producer) (uncredited)
Japoteurs (1942) (producer)
Showdown (1942) (producer) (uncredited)
A Hull of a Mess (1942) (producer) (uncredited)
Scrap the Japs (1942) (producer) (uncredited)
Eleventh Hour (1942) (producer) (uncredited)
Me Musical Nephews (1942) (producer) (uncredited)
Destruction Inc. (1942) (producer) (uncredited)
Seein’ Red, White ‘n’ Blue (1943) (producer) (uncredited)
Too Weak to Work (1943) (producer) (uncredited)
Jungle Drums (1943) (producer) (uncredited)
The Underground World (1943) (producer) (uncredited)
The Hungry Goat (1943) (producer) (uncredited)
Happy Birthdaze (1943) (producer) (uncredited)
Secret Agent (1943) (producer) (uncredited)
The New Casper Cartoon Show(1963) TV series (producer) (1940’s theatrical cartoons)

Director:

It’s a Greek Life (1936)
You’re a Sap, Mr. Jap (1942)
Eleventh Hour (1942)
Seein’ Red, White ‘n’ Blue (1943)
Jungle Drums (1943)
A Jolly Good Furlough (1943)
The Hungry Goat (1943)
Happy Birthdaze (1943)
Moving Aweigh (1944) (uncredited)
“The New Casper Cartoon Show” (1963) TV series

“The Flintstones” (story director) (4 episodes, 1960-1961)
– The Flintstone Flyer (1960) TV episode (story director)
– Hot Lips Hannigan (1960) TV episode (story director)
– Love Letters on the Rocks (1961) TV episode (story director)
– Fred Flintstone: Before and After (1961) TV episode (story director)

“Jonny Quest” (story director) (2 episodes, 1964-1965)
… aka The Adventures of Jonny Quest
– The Invisible Monster (1965) TV episode (story director)
– Turu the Terrible (1964) TV episode (story director)

Art Department:

Cupid Gets his Man (1936) (character designer) (uncredited)
Little Bo Bopped (1959) (story sketches)
The Flintstone Flyer (1960) TV episode (storyboard artist)
Two Faced Wolf (1961) (story sketches)
“The Flintstones” (storyboard artist) (1 episode, 1960)
Hey There, It’s Yogi Bear (1964) (story sketches)

Animation Department:

Whatcha Watchin’ (1963) (layout artist)

Honors

Related Links

To make additions or corrections to this listing, please click on COMMENTS below…
FacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

Biography: Lotte Reiniger

This posting is a stub. You can contribute to this entry by providing information through the comments link at the bottom of this post. Please organize your information following the main category headers below….

Birth/Death

Birth: 2 June 1899 Berlin

Occupation/Title

Animator, Film Director, Writer, Filmmaker.

Bio Summary

Lotte Reinger spent much of her life creating unique and often amazing silhouette animation. Between 1923 and 1926, Rieniger and Koch, with assistance from animators Walter Rutmann, Bertolt Bartosch, and Alex Kardan, created The Adventures of Prince Achmed. One of the world’s first feature-length animated films, The Adventures of Prince Achmed displayed Reiniger’s ability to create captivating characters through intricate design and an amazingly graceful sense of movement. The film remains unsurpassed as a demonstration of animated art.

Early Life/Family

Lotte Reiniger was born in Berlin-Charlottenburg, German Empire, on June 2, 1899. As a child, she was fascinated with the Chinese art of silhouette puppetry, even building her own puppet theater so she could put on shows for her family and friends.The only daughter of a banker and a homemaker, Reiniger set great stock by her birth in the last year of the nineteenth century. Except for the fact that she worked in film, her techniques and sensibilities reflected the earlier century more than her own. She described her childhood as “extraordinarily” happy, her artistic interests celebrated and encouraged by both her parents. Theater captured her imagination early on, but after her first film, she was hooked; she had in the meantime discovered her “unsettling gift” for making silhouettes. In 1921, Reiniger married Carl Koch, who served as her producer and camera operator for the next 40 years.

Education/Training

1916–17—attended Max Reinhardt theater school, Berlin. After a short period of at Max Rienhardt’s studio, Reiniger began working on intertitle design for Paul Wegener’s films at the age of sixteen. Her titles were made of hand-cut silhouettes, and in 1919 she developed this technique to create a complete animated silhouette film.

Career Outline

Although she worked with some of the pioneers of German experimental abstract film, her work was strongly narrative, taking its stories from fairy tales, opera, and A Thousand and One Nights. Her films are characterised by a mannered style that combines subtle acting with a rather frozen bloodless quality, and realism with elements of cartoon. The look developed out of a childhood enthusiasm for shadow puppets, and is usually designed in shades of grey and black on a white background. Her feature film, The Adventures of Prince Achmed (Germany, 1926), made between 1923 and 1926, was a huge popular and critical success.

Comments On Style

Lotte Reiniger developed a distinctive method of animating with cut-out paper silhouettes. She was also a pioneer of the multiplane, where layers of glass under the camera allow the animator to add depth and complexity to two-dimensional animation.Prominent among Reiniger’s talents was her transcendence of the inherent flatness and awkwardness of silhouette animation through her dramatic mise en scène and her balletic movements. Her female characters are especially lively and original, displaying wit, sensuousness, and self-awareness rarely found in animated cartoons.

Influences

Personality

Lotte Reiniger loved kids. She has rewarded her youthful audience with challenging interpretations of classic fairy tales, new stories and some operatic motifs–all of which played successfully in cinemas and on television in the early years before ratings and commercial demands made children’s TV a branch of the toy industry. Lotte also performed with live shadow-puppet performances in England, and wrote a definitive book about Silhouettes. Lotte Reiniger herself is the prime genius behind all of her films. She had an astonishing facility with cutting.

Anecdotes

If you ask the average person what the first feature-length animated film was, just about everyone will answer Walt Disney’s “Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs”. But Disney’s film wasn’t the first animated feature by a longshot. Arguably, that honor belongs to Lotte Reiniger’s “Adventures of Prince Achmed”

Miscellaneous

Interview quotes:
Reiniger: “I love working for children, because they are a very critical and very thankful public.”
Reiniger: “I believe in the truth of fairy-tales more than I believe in the truth in the newspaper.”
“Film is movement,” she noted, often comparing filmmaking to ballet. “It’s the combination of curves and diagonals that gives ballet and animation their sweet tenderness and their striking directness.”
She rather modestly noted that, “even with primitive materials, one can work small wonders.”
” Paul Wegener saw me cutting silhouettes behind the stage in Reinhardts’s theater, and he became interested. He liked my silhouettes; he thought they showed a rare sense of movement. He therefore introduced me to a group of young artists who had started a new trick (animation) film studio. Here, I first began to photograph my silhouette figures, just as drawings are photographed for the cartoon film, and I was successful in making a film with my shadow figures.
This was in 1919, and the work was so interesting that from that time I have rarely done anything else. In the meantime I married one of the artists and we started working together as we have continued to do till the present time. That is my story.”

Filmography

1916
Rübezahls Hochzeit (Rumpelstilskin’s Wedding). Live-action feature directed by Paul Wegener. LR does silhouette cut-outs for the dialogue-titles.

Die schöne Prinzessin von China (The Beautiful Chinese Princess). Live-action silhouette film, actors only seen as shadows on screen, directed by Rochus Gliese. LR does costumes, sets, special effects, etc.

1918
Apokalypse (Apocalypse). Live-action short directed by Rochus Gliese. LR’s silhouettes depict the horrors of war.

Der Rattenfänger von Hameln (The Pied Piper of Hamelin). Live-action feature directed by Paul Wegener. LR made silhouettes for dialogue titles, and animated model rats.

1919
Das Ornament des verliebten Herzens (The Ornament of the Heart in Love). First animated silhouette short by Reiniger.

1920
Der verlorene Schatten (The Lost Shadow). Live-action feature directed by Rochus Gliese. LR animated a sequence in which the musician has no shadow, but the shadow of his violin is seen moving on the wall as he plays his instrument.

Amor und das standhafte Liebespaar (Cupid and the steadfast lovers). Silhouette animation short with one live actor who interacts with the cutouts.

Several advertising films for Julius Pinschewer agency, including: Das Geheimnis der Marquise (The Marquise’s Secret) for Nivea skin cream and Die Barcarole (The Barcarole) for Pralinés Mauxion dessert. Also a commercial for ink.

1921
Der fliegende Koffer (The Flying Trunk), based on the Hans Christian Andersen tale.

Der Stern von Bethlehem (The Star of Bethlehem).

1922
Aschenputtel (Cinderella), from the Brothers Grimm.

Dornröschen (Sleeping Beauty), advertising film.

1923
Lotte Reiniger makes a complex silhouette figure of a falcon for a dream sequence in Fritz Lang’s feature Die Niebelungen. Walter Ruttmann (who is working on Reiniger’s Prince Achmed at the time) completes the dream with various painted images, and it becomes known as Ruttmann’s sequence.

1923-25
Die Abenteuer des Prinzen Achmed (The Adventures of Prince Achmed), 90-minute silhouette feature, from episodes in The Arabian Nights. Completed film submitted to censorship board January 15, 1926, press screening May 2, 1926, Paris premiere July 1926, Berlin first run September 1926. Original musical score by Wolfgang Zeller.

1926
Der scheintote Chinese (The Seemingly-Dead Chinaman). Originally a 13-minute episode in Prince Achmed, cut by the German censor, as well as French and German distributors in the interest of keeping the film within the attention span of children. Released as a short in 1928.

1927
Heut’ tanzt Mariette (Today Marietta Dances). Live-action feature directed by Friedrich Zelnik. Silhouette effects by LR.

1928
Doktor Dolittle und seine Tiere (Dr. Dolittle and His Animals), 65-minute feature after Hugh Loftings novel. At the Berlin premiere, December 15, 1928, Paul Dessau conducted a score with music by Kurt Weill, Paul Hindemith and himself.

1929
Die Jagd nach dem Glück (The Pursuit of Happiness), live-action feature co-directed by Rochus Gliese and Lotte Reiniger. Tale of people who run a shadow-puppet theater in a carnival. Includes a 20-minute silhouette animation by Reiniger to represent one of the theater performances. Stars Jean Renoir, Catherine Hessling and Bertold Bartosch. Premiere (with voices added by other actors): May 1930.

1930
Zehn Minuten Mozart (10 Minutes of Mozart).

1931
Harlekin (Harlequin), 24 minutes, to baroque music.

1932
Sissi, 10 minute silhouette animation prepared to be shown during a scene change of the Fritz Kreisler operetta Sissi.

1933
Don Quixote. Live-action feature directed by G.W. Pabst. LR animated silhouettes for opening sequence in which Don Quixote reads a book about knights’ adventures.

Carmen, based on the Bizet opera.

1934
Das rollende Rad (The Rolling Wheel). Traces society through the changing role of wheels from antiquity to the present.

Der Graf von Carabas (Puss-in-Boots), from the Brothers Grimm.

Das gestohlene Herz (The Stolen Heart), from a fable by Ernst Keienburg.

1935
Der Kleine Schornsteinfeger (The Little Chimneysweep), from a tale by Eric Walter White

Galathea, from the classic fable.

Galathea

Galathea, 1935
Courtesy of William Mortiz

Papageno, scenes from Mozart’s opera, The Magic Flute.

1936
The King’s Breakfast, from the poem by A.A.Milne.

1937
The Tocher (Scottish dialect for “The Dowry”), advertising film for the General Post Office.

La Marseillaise Live-action feature directed by Jean Renoir. LR prepared a sequence of a shadow-puppet theatre performance depicting the need for the French Revolution.

1939
Dream Circus, after Stravinsky’s Pulcinella (unfinished by the beginning of the war).

L’Elisir D’Amore, after Donizetti’s opera.

1944
Die goldene Gans (The Goose that Laid the Golden Eggs), after the Brothers Grimm. (Unfinished.)

1949
Greetings Telegram. Ad for General Post Office.

Post Early for Christmas, ad for G.P.O.

Radio License, ad for G.P.O.

1950
Several advertising films for Crown Film Unit in London, including Wool Ballet.

1951
Mary’s Birthday Black silhouettes over colored backgrounds.

1953
Aladdin

The Magic Horse, from Arabian Nights. (Much of the footage from this film and Aladdin seem to have been culled from Prince Achmed.)

Snow White and Rose Red, from the Brothers Grimm.

1954
The Three Wishes, from the Brothers Grimm.

The Grasshopper and the Ant, from LaFontaine’s fable.

The Gallant Little Tailor, from the Brothers Grimm.

The Sleeping Beauty, from the Brothers Grimm.

The Frog Prince, from the Brothers Grimms.

Caliph Stork, from the fairy tale by Wilhelm Hauff.

Cinderella, from the Brothers Grimms.

1955
Hansel and Gretel, from the Brothers Grimms.

Thumbelina, from Hans Christian Andersen.

Jack and the Beanstalk, from the Brothers Grimm. Color backgrounds.

1956
The Star of Bethlehem. Color backgrounds.

1957
Helen La Belle, after Offenbach’s operetta, La Belle Hélène. Color figures and backgrounds.

1958
The Seraglio, after Mozart’s opera, Die Entführung aus dem Serail. Color figures and backgrounds.

1960
The Pied Piper of Hamelim. Made for the Christmas Pantomime at the Coventry Theatre, where it played between acts. Figures and backgrounds in color.

1961
The Frog Prince, for Coventry Theatre Christmas Pantomime. Figures and backgrounds in color.

1962
Wee Sandy Intermission piece for Glasgow Theatre production.

1963
Cinderella Made for the Coventry Theatre Christmas Pantomime. Figures and backgrounds in color.

1975
Aucassin and Nicolette, after the medieval cantefable. Produced at the National Film Board of Canada, with black figures and color backgrounds.

1979
The Rose and the Ring, after W.M. Thackery’s tale. In color.

Honors

Silver Dolphin, Venice Biennale, for Gallant Little Tailor, 1955; Filmband in Gold, West Germany, for service to German cinema, 1972; Verdienst Kreuz, West Germany, 1978.

Related Links


http://www.lottereiniger.de/

Bibliographic References

http://www.artonpaper.com/bi/janfeb_06/reiniger.php
http://www.filmreference.com/Writers-and-Production-Artists-Po-Ro/Reiniger-Lotte.html
http://www.awn.com/mag/issue1.3/articles/moritz1.3.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lotte_Reiniger
http://www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/528134/
http://motiondesign.wordpress.com/2008/01/03/lotte-reiniger-the-marquises-secret/

BIO-AAA-517

Contributors To This Listing

Karina Gazizova

To make additions or corrections to this listing, please click on COMMENTS below…

FacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailFacebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather