Archive for the ‘biography’ Category

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

Biography: Willard Mullin

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Birth/Death

Birth:September 14, 1902
Death: December 20, 1978

Occupation/Title

American Sport Cartoonist

Bio Summary

Willard Mullin was born in Ohio, but raised in LA. He began his life as a cartoonist, moving from place to place drawing sport illustrations for variety of newspapers. Soon he became a freelance cartoonist and started doing pieces for sport publications, books, and magazines
Mullin greatly defined the modern sports cartoon, now a dying art form, by combining representative portraiture, cartoonish doodlery, and editorial commentary — part news account, part personal observation, Willard Mullin’s cartoons celebrated sport for its entertainment, cultural and artistic values.

Early Life/Family

Mullin, Willard was born near Columbus, Ohio, but grew up in Los Angeles, California. He began his professional career as a cartoonist

Education/Training

Career Outline

– 1923 working for the Los Angeles Herald first doing sport illustrations
– 1934 he then moved to New York, replacing Pete Llanuza as sports cartoonist for the New York World-Telegram.
– 1951 cover of the Brooklyn Dodger Yearbook.
– 1954 -1955 New York Rangers program cover.
– 1955 College Football Program (Minnesota vs. Iowa).
– 1963 cover for the Harlem Globetrotters Yearbook.
– 1966, Mullin began doing work as a freelance cartoonist — illustrating pieces for sports publications, books, and such magazines as The Saturday Evening Post, TIME, and LIFE.

Comments On Style

-His work always conveys a delightfully playful sense of spontaneity and his uncommon ability to gesturally capture the poetry of sports
– Cartooning critic Maurice Horn stated that “Mullin’s love of his craft and of his subjects shone through in all of his cartoons: under the surface roughness lurked a strong undercurrent of affection and optimism.”

Influences

Mullin is generally regarded as the ‘Dean of Sports Cartooning’, an undeniable titan who inspired many a cartoonist — including Karl Hubenthal, Gene Basset, Jim Dobbins, Lou Darvas and Len Hollreiser. Hubenthal long considered Mullin his mentor (referring to him always — and affectionately — as ‘Uncle Will’). Indeed, Mullin used to kiddingly joke that Hubenthal’s work “looked like me on a good day”.

Personality

Always holding a heroic view of sports

Anecdotes

He once told an interviewer “I’m not an artist. I’m a cartoonist.”

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Honors

He received the Reuben Award for 1954 for his work, as well as the National Cartoonist Society Sports Cartoon Award for each year from 1957 through 1962, and again in 1964 and 1965.

Related Links

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willard_Mullin
http://www.bobstaake.com/willardmullin/home.html

Bibliographic References

Wikipedia
Williard Mullin’s Website
BIO-AAA-341

Contributors To This Listing

Quoc Nguyen
Bob Staake
Karl Hubenthal

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

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Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

Biography: Bob Givens

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Birth/Death

Occupation/Title

Layout artist, writer, production designer, animator, and character designer.

Bio Summary

“I went to Chouinard, mostly nights, and then I went to Bistram School, New York Art Students League and Jepson in Los Angeles. Quite a bit of art training then and over the years…Drawing is the basis of all this business. You can’t get too much of it.”

Early Life/Family

Education/Training

Career Outline

Givens got his start when Hardie Gramatky and Don Graham got him a job at Disney. This was when they were hiring for Snow White. He started as a checker on The Old Mill, after that he started to work on Snow White. While working at Disney he mostly worked on pieces concerning Donald Duck.

After leaving Disney, Givens went to work at Schlesinger’s/Warner Bros. It was here that he worked with Chuck Jones and Tex Avery. Givens boasts that in his time at Warner Bros he boarded some 500 features. “The boards were pretty close to the finished product, at least in the expressions. Mel Blanc recorded from those damn things!”

Givens has also worked with many other studios, including Hanna-Barbera and UPA.

Comments On Style

Givens may be best known for his designs done on Bugs Bunny. His early ideas for the rabbit have him with a fairly oblong head. One might say that this take is actually more life like than the character designs that came later.

That being said, Givens’ style is one of adaptation. He can draw anything basically, depending on what is required of the layout. He uses reference material but is also capable of “winging it,” when appropriate.

Chuck Jones on Bob Givens and their art styles: “I didn’t draw terribly well at that time. Bob Givens had come over, and he drew beautifully; he was about nineteen years old, and he was fantastic.”

Influences

Givens worked along side the greats at a young age, and if anything he could be thought of as an influence on later character designers, though his early work is along the lines of Charlie Thorson Disney type work.

Personality

Anecdotes

Givens worked on the first batch of Raid bug commercials in the 1950s. “We sent them into the agency and figured that’s the end of it. They loved it and we did them for 17 years.”

Miscellaneous

Filmography

The Old Mill (1937)
Snow White (1937)
Tom Thumb in Trouble (1940) (character designer) Mighty Hunters (1940) (character designer)
A Wild Hare (1940) (character designer)
Ghost Wanted (1940) (character designer)
Stage Fright (1940) (character designer)
Tortoise Beats Hare (1941) (character designer)
Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt (1941) (character designer)
Rhapsody in Rivets (1941) (character designer)
The Draft Horse (1942) (character designer)
Hoppy-Go-Lucky (1952) (layout artist)
The EGGcited Rooster (1952) (layout artist)
The Super Snooper (1952) (layout artist)
Rabbit’s Kin (1952) (layout artist)
Fool Coverage (1952) (layout artist)
Upswept Hare (1953) (layout artist)
Muscle Tussle (1953) (layout artist)
A Peck o’ Trouble (1953) (layout artist)
There Auto Be a Law (1953) (layout artist)
Plop Goes the Weasel (1953) (layout artist)
Cat-Tails for Two (1953) (layout artist)
Easy Peckin’s (1953) (layout artist)
Of Rice and Hen (1953) (layout artist)
Cats A-Weigh! (1953) (layout artist)
Wild Wife (1954) (layout artist)
Design for Leaving (1954) (layout artist)
Bell Hoppy (1954) (layout artist)
No Parking Hare (1954) (layout artist)
Little Boy Boo (1954) (layout artist)
Devil May Hare (1954) (layout artist)
The Oily American (1954) (layout artist)
Gone Batty (1954) (layout artist)
Quack Shot (1954) (layout artist)
Feather Dusted (1955) (layout artist)
Beanstalk Bunny (1955) (layout artist)
All Fowled Up (1955) (layout artist)
Lighthouse Mouse (1955) (layout artist)
Past Perfumance (1955) (layout artist)
Jumpin’ Jupiter (1955) (layout artist)
Dime to Retire (1955) (layout artist)
West of the Pesos (1960) (layout artist)
Crockett-Doodle-Do (1960) (layout artist)
The Dixie Fryer (1960) (layout artist)
“The Bugs Bunny Show” (1960) TV Series (layout artist)
I Was a Teenage Thumb (1963) (animator) (layout artist)
Transylvania 6-5000 (1963) (layout artist)
Dumb Patrol (1964) (layout artist)
Bartholomew Versus the Wheel (1964) (layout artist)
The Iceman Ducketh (1964) (layout artist)
False Hare (1964) (layout artist)
Love Me, Love My Mouse (1966) (layout artist)
Filet Meow (1966) (layout artist)
The A-Tom-inable Snowman (1966) (layout artist)
“The Super 6” (1966) TV Series (layout artist)
Merlin the Magic Mouse (1967) (layout artist)
Fiesta Fiasco (1967) (layout artist)
Hocus Pocus Powwow (1968) (layout artist)
Big Game Haunt (1968) (layout artist)
Skyscraper Caper (1968) (layout artist)
Feud with a Dude (1968) (layout artist)
See Ya Later Gladiator (1968) (layout artist)
Flying Circus (1968) (layout artist)
“The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour” (1968) TV Series (layout artist)
Chimp & Zee (1968) (layout artist) (as Bob Givens)
Bunny and Claude: We Rob Carrot Patches (1968) (layout artist)
The Great Carrot-Train Robbery (1969) (layout artist)
Fistic Mystic (1969) (layout artist)
Rabbit Stew and Rabbits Too! (1969) (layout artist)
Shamrock and Roll (1969) (layout artist)
Bugged by a Bee (1969) (layout artist)
“Here Comes the Grump” (1969) TV Series (layout artist)
Injun Trouble (1969) (layout artist)
“Doctor Dolittle” (1970) TV Series (layout artist)
The Cat in the Hat (1971) (TV) (layout artist)
The Egg and Ay-Yi-Yi! (1971) (layout artist)
Fastest Tongue in the West (1971) (layout artist)
Pink Tuba-Dore (1971) (layout artist)
Cattle Battle (1971) (layout artist)
Pink Pranks (1971) (layout artist)
“Help!… It’s the Hair Bear Bunch!” (1971) TV Series (layout artist)
“The Pink Panther Laugh and the Half Hour and Half Show” (1976)(animator)
Bugs Bunny’s Easter Special (1977) (TV) (layout artist)
“Baggy Pants & the Nitwits” (1977) TV Series (design)
The Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie (1981) (layout artist)
Daffy Duck’s Movie: Fantastic Island (1983) (layout artist)
“The Bugs Bunny/Looney Tunes Comedy Hour” (1985) TV Series (layout artist)
“The Bugs Bunny and Tweety Show” (1986) TV Series (layout artist)
The Duxorcist (1987) (layout artist)
The Night of the Living Duck (1988) (layout artist)
Daffy Duck’s Quackbusters (1988) (layout artist)
“Merrie Melodies: Starring Bugs Bunny and Friends” (1990) TV Series (layout artist)

Honors

Annie Award: Winsor McCay Award 2001

Related Links

IMDB(http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0321454/)
John Cawly’s Cataroo.com Interview(http://www.cataroo.com/hgivens.html)
Michael Barrier.com Chuck Jones interview (http://www.michaelbarrier.com/Funnyworld/jones/interview_chuck_jones.htm)

Bibliographic References

All direct quotes were taken from interviews provided in the above links.

Contributors To This Listing

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

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Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

Biography: Chuck Jones

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: 1912, Spokane, WA
Death: 2002

Occupation/Title

Animator, Director

Bio Summary

Early Life/Family

Jones moved to Hollywood with his family, finding work there as a child ?extra in Mac Sennett comedies.

Education/Training

Chuck graduated ?from Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles (now California Institute of the Arts). In ?1932, he got his first job in the animation industry as a cel washer for the former Disney ?animator Ubbe Iwerks.

Career Outline

In 1936, he was an animator for Leon Schlesinger Studio (later sold to ?Warner Bros). There, he animated with Tex Avery. He headed his own unit at WB. He ?remained at Warner Bros. Animation until it closed in 1962. The first Road Runner ?cartoon was conceived as a parody of the mindless chase cartoons popular at the time, but ?audiences around the world embraced the series. Had a brief stint at Disney in ?1955 during a hiatus at WB. Went on to MGM to create new episodes of Tom and Jerry.?While there, he produced, co-directed, and co-wrote the screenplay for the critically ?acclaimed full-length feature THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH, and directed the ?Academy Award-winning film THE DOT AND THE LINE. For a year in 1972, he ?worked as vice president of the American Broadcasting Company to improve children’s ?programming. There, he made many animated specials for television.

Comments On Style

Jones is considered by many to be a master of characterization and ?timing

Influences

Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Mark Twain, Tex Avery ,Friz Ferleng, His cat Johnson.

Personality

Anecdotes

“While at the breakfast table, Chuck would eat silently while reading a ?novel, and expected everyone at the table to do the same” (Linda Jones)

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Honors

Oscar: The Dot and the Line: A Romance in Lower Mathematics 1966
Cannes Film Festival: Golden Palm 1966

Oscar for lifetime achievement: 2002

Annie Award: Winsor McCay Award 1974

Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists Award: Golden Award 1984

Chicago International Film Festival: Special Jury Prize: The Magical World of Chuck Jones (1992)

Denver International Film Festival: Special Jury Prize: The Magical World of Chuck Jones (1992)

Directors Guild of America DGA Honorary Life Member Award 1996

World Fest Houston: Grand Award: Peter and the Wolf (1996)

Danta Clarita International Film Festival: Lifetime Achievement Award 1999

Honorary Doctorates

Related Links
http://www.chuckjones.com/bio.php?

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