The Disney animators went on strike for five weeks beginning on May 29, 1941.
1 answer
Disney's animators went on strike because they worked overtime to complete Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, and weren't given higher salaries for the work they did. Instead, the animators were met with a series of layoffs, and some of the animators weren't featured in the credits of the cartoons and films they worked on.
1 answer
I don't know about Animators, but I do know that many of the older Disney tales were taken from the Brothers Grimm and their stories.
1 answer
Because the Disney animators thought it would look cute.
1 answer
Fantasia
1 answer
Actual Disney animators did that scene. If you're asking for specific names, that information is unknown.
1 answer
Hard to say .In the Mickey Mouse never really ventured into politics, even though Donald Duck did have a dream about being a Nazi against his will.One thing to note , however, is that Walt Disney was a very Conservative person.During the Strike that happened at the studio in 1941, there were many animators who associated with the Democratic Party. Following the strike many former Disney animators went to studio called UPA, which was located down the river from Disney. As a result, Walt called UPA "the Commes down river."Also after the strike Walt Disney testified in front of Cngress claiming that Communist started the workers to go on strike. To make things more complex Walt Disney worked as an agent for the CIA, and was tasked with keeping an eye out for Communists.
Many people claim that Mickey Mouse was Walt's alter-ego, but there is no clear evidence in the cartoons to indicate what Mickey Mouse's political alignment would be. We do know that Mickey Mouse was a conservative acting middle American character, but there is once again no explicit allusion to whether Mickey Mouse was a Democrat or a Republican.
1 answer
Michael Broggie has written:
'Walt Disney's railroad story' -- subject(s): Walt Disney Enterprises, Steam locomotives, Biography, Animators
1 answer
The Walt Disney studio set a standard with is classic hand drawn cartoons. When presented with a layout of new character pictures most people can pick the ones drawn by Disney animators as they have a very distinct style that is only Disney.
1 answer
Walt Disney was working at his animation studio (The Walt Disney Studio) in Los Angeles, CA when he created Mickey Mouse with help from fellow animators Ub Iwerks and Les Clark.
1 answer
Peter Pan (1953) was the last Disney animated film on which all Nine Old Men worked together as supervising animators.
1 answer
Uh, I'm pretty sure that Disney World is safe from an Iraqi strike.
1 answer
"A113" is the room number of many of the Disney Pixar animators' classroom at CalState while they were learning. "A113" appears in every Disney Pixar movie. Look carefully!
3 answers
A scab is a worker who chooses to continue to work during a strike (not join the strike), thus making the strike less effective. The Disney movie Newsies features the story of a newsboy strike.
2 answers
Although not modeled on Walt Disney, Mickey Mouse was the closest associated with him because Walt provided the voice from 1928 to 1947.
The head matador in Ferdinand the Bull was said to have been based on Walt Disney, while the other matadors were based on Disney animators such as Bill Tytla, Fred Moore, Art Babbit, Ham Luske, and Jack Campbell.
1 answer
Animators have two computers when they are animating as controls.
2 answers
Animators wear usually a tshirt with a cartoon on it or design with blue jeans. Be creative about it though!
1 answer
"Pluto the Pup" was named for the (now dwarf) planet discovered in 1930, the same year Disney animators gave Mickey Mouse his pet canine. (The dog depiction was used for two bloodhounds in a previous cartoon.)
2 answers
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, for Special Effects Artists and Animators, the median annual wage for special effects artists and animators was $77,700 in May 2020.
1 answer
No, it does not. It was meant to spell "SFX" (abbreviation for special effects) according to the animators as a shout-out to the animation special effects division working on the film.
1 answer
The Animators - 1982 TV was released on:
USA: 1 February 1982
1 answer
animators are a team of event planners, MAXWOOZ, JENNYWOOZ, JAYWOOZ,MYAWOOZ,PLUSH ,STYLAZ. Are all animators. They just plan events and competions. They can be located with the green bubble type text :)
1 answer
An animator is the person who draws the anime. Animators get paid from $700-800 without experience. Animators with 1-3 years of experience get $2,000-4,000. Animators get $20,000-70,000 a year.
I LOVE ANIME!!!!
1 answer
In most cases, animators usually just make the sprites and 3D models for the team/company they work for but in some cases, especially in small teams, the animators will do some programming as well.
1 answer
animators are a team of event planners, MAXWOOZ, JENNYWOOZ, JAYWOOZ,MYAWOOZ,PLUSH ,STYLAZ. Are all animators. They just plan events and competions. They can be located with the green bubble type text :)
1 answer
In my opinion best animators are Hayao Miyazaki and Katsuhiro Otomo,and best mangaka Katsuhiro Otomo
They are great filmmakers but certainly not the best "animators". I would have to say James Baxter (Belle in Beauty and the Beast, Quasimodo in Hunchback among many) is one of the best. Glen Keane (Ariel, Little Mermaid and Beast, Beauty and the Beast, etc.) Sergio Pablos, Mark Henn, Andreas Deja are some of the others. In the past you have the Nine Old Men of Disney that are the pioneers of great animation.
1 answer
The cast of The Animators - 1982 includes: Sally Cruikshank as herself Bud Luckey as himself
1 answer
Well, you can't. There are four animators, MyaWooz, JayWooz, JennyWooz, and MaxWooz. They are the only animators. You, as a woozen, cannot become an animator.
1 answer
Walt Disney, Henry Ford, and the first political strike in a major us city.
1 answer
Um if you refer to the beta team... They started during the opening of Club Penguin in 2006. They were distributing free party hats that if you accept them you become a beta member... If you refer to the team of animators they work for Disney....
1 answer
Actually they don't technically make the characters. Character designers design the characters,and animators make the characters move.
1 answer
The Lion King is an animated movie. It was not filmed, But produced in South Africa by an American team of animators, music composers, script writers etc.
The Lion King was not filmed anywhere as it is not a live-action film. Animation done on The Lion King was at the Walt Disney Feature Animation studio in Glendale, California and at the Disney-MGM Studios, a satellite Disney animation studio in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.
1 answer
it started out as walt disney didnt give animators credit in short films so animators would sneak in their names in the backround or name a character after themselves then when a law was created you had to give animators credit the animators found another way to have fun by sneaking sexaul messages in their movies disney didnt notice to the late sixties these messages most movies you can only find them in oringinal copies but some disney still hasnt noticed
5 answers
Woozens can't become an animator. MyaWooz and MaxWooz and all the other woozbands are animators because they are real people and their job is to be animators on Woozworld.
1 answer