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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:

Walter Elias Disney


Walt Disney
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(born Dec. 5, 1901, Chicago, Ill., U.S.died Dec. 15, 1966, Los Angeles, Calif.) U.S. animator and entertainment executive. In the 1920s he joined with his brother Roy and his friend Ub Iwerks (190171) to establish an animation studio. Together they created Mickey Mouse, the cheerful rodentcustomarily drawn by Iwerks, with Disney providing the voicethat starred in the first animated film with sound, Steamboat Willie (1928). The brothers formed Walt Disney Productions (later the Disney Co.) in 1929. Mickey Mouse's instant popularity led them to invent other characters such as Donald Duck, Pluto, and Goofy and to make several short cartoon films, including The Three Little Pigs (1933). Their first full-length animated film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937), was followed by classics such as Pinocchio (1940), Fantasia (1940), and Cinderella (1950). A perfectionist, an innovator, and a skilled businessman, Walt Disney maintained tight control over the company in both creative and business aspects. He oversaw the company's expansion into live-action films, television programming, theme parks, and mass merchandising. By his death in 1966, Disney had transformed the family entertainment industry and influenced more than one generation of American children.

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Oxford Grove Art:

Walter Elias Disney

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(b Chicago, IL, 5 Dec 1901; d Burbank, CA, 15 Dec 1966). American film maker, animator and entrepreneur. Much of his childhood was spent in rural Missouri, but during his adolescence the family moved to Kansas City, where he formed an interest in drawing and in Vaudeville theatre. He received little formal training, but by the age of 18 he was earning his living as a cartoonist, first in print and then in the fledgling field of animation. While still in Kansas City, Disney began, with his most important early associate Ubbe ('Ub') Iwerks, to produce animated shorts including Alice's Wonderland (1923), in which a young girl, filmed in live action, cavorted with cartoon characters. In 1923 Disney moved to Los Angeles, where Iwerks and other members of the Kansas City team joined him. They continued to produce similar comedies until 1927, when these were superseded by a fully animated series starring Oswald the Lucky Rabbit. By this time Disney himself had given up animation to concentrate on a supervisory role, but his ability to provide cartoon stories with dramatic structures and his flair for squeezing humour from visual jokes helped make Oswald a success. Disney lost the rights to the character to an unscrupulous distributor, however, precipitating the crisis that led to his greatest triumph. Urgently needing a new character, Disney created a mouse named Mickey (reputedly the name was chosen by Disney's wife after many others, such as Mortimer, had been considered). The prototype Mickey, based on circles for ease of animation, was drawn by Iwerks, and the first group of short films featuring the character was produced just as the public was responding enthusiastically to the first sound feature, The Jazz Singer, produced in 1927 by Warner Brothers. Recognizing that the future of the motion picture lay with sound, Disney devised a way of wedding sound to animated action, using sound effects and musical accents to underline visual jokes and to propel the film forward. Steamboat Willie (1928), the first film to employ this technique, was an immediate success, and soon Mickey Mouse was an international folk hero. At first the Mickey Mouse cartoons used boisterous, unsophisticated humour, but eventually Mickey was domesticated and transformed into an emblem of suburban, middle-class America and an essential part of the iconography of 20th-century American culture. The wilder humour was assigned to such new characters as Pluto, Goofy and especially Donald Duck. In 1929 Disney produced Skeleton Dance, the first of a series called Silly Symphonies, in which Donald Duck first appeared in 1934. These were cartoons whose basic structure was provided by the musical score, the finest examples being Music Land and Who Killed Cock Robin? (both 1935). Disney used the series to introduce many technical advances, from full Technicolor to the multiplane camera, but its chief importance lay in helping the studio prepare for the production of full-length feature films.

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Gale Encyclopedia of Biography:

Walter Elias Disney

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An American film maker and entrepreneur, Walter Elias Disney (1901-1966) created a new kind of popular culture in feature-length animated cartoons and live-action "family" films.

Walter Elias Disney was born in Chicago, IL, on December 5, 1901, the fourth of five children born to a Canadian farmer and a mother from Ohio. He was raised on a Midwestern farm in Marceline, Missouri, and in Kansas City, where he was able to acquire some rudimentary art instruction from correspondence courses and Saturday museum classes. He would later use many of the animals and characters that he knew from that Missouri farm in his cartoons.

He dropped out of high school at 17 to serve in World War I. After serving briefly overseas as an ambulance driver, Disney returned in 1919 to Kansas City for an apprenticeship as a commercial illustrator and later made primitive animated advertising cartoons. By 1922, he had set up his own shop in association with Ub Iwerks, whose drawing ability and technical inventiveness were prime factors in Disney's eventual success.

Initial failure sent Disney to Hollywood in 1923, where in partnership with his loyal elder brother Roy, he managed to resume cartoon production. His first success came with the creation of Mickey Mouse in Steamboat Willie. Steamboat Willie was the first fully synchronized sound cartoon and featured Disney as the voice of a character first called "Mortimer Mouse." Disney's wife, Lillian, suggested that Mickey sounded better and Disney agreed.

Living frugally, he reinvested profits to make better pictures. His insistence on technical perfection and his unsurpassed gifts as story editor quickly pushed his firm ahead. The invention of such cartoon characters as Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Minnie, and Goofy combined with the daring and innovative use of music, sound, and folk material (as in The Three Little Pigs) made the Disney shorts of the 1930s a phenomenon of worldwide success. This success led to the establishment of immensely profitable, Disney-controlled sidelines in advertising, publishing, and franchised goods, which helped shape popular taste for nearly 40 years.

Disney rapidly expanded his studio facilities to include a training school where a whole new generation of animators developed and made possible the production of the first feature-length cartoon, Snow White (1937). Other costly animated features followed, including Pinocchio, Bambi, and the celebrated musical experiment Fantasia. With Seal Island (1948), wildlife films became an additional source of income, and in 1950 his use of blocked funds in England to make pictures like Treasure Island led to what became the studio's major product, live-action films, which practically cornered the traditional "family" market. Eventually the Disney formula emphasized slick production techniques. It included, as in his biggest hit, Mary Poppins, occasional animation to project wholesome, exciting stories heavily laced with sentiment and, often, music.

In 1954, Disney successfully invaded television, and by the time of his death, the Disney studio's output amounted to 21 full-length animated films, 493 short subjects, 47 live-action films, seven True-Life Adventure features, 330 hours of Mickey Mouse Club television programs, 78 half-hour Zorro television adventures, and 280 other television shows.

On July 18, 1957, Disney opened Disneyland, a gigantic projection of his personal fantasies in Anaheim, CA, which has proved the most successful amusement park in history with 6.7 million people visiting it by 1966. The idea for the park came to him after taking his children to other amusement parks and watching them have fun on amusement rides. He decided to build a park where the entire family could have fun together. In 1971, Disney World, in Orlando, FL, opened. Since then, Disney theme parks have opened in Tokyo and Paris.

Disney had also dreamed of developing a city of the future, a dream realized in 1982 with the opening of EPCOT, which stands for Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow. EPCOT, which cost an initial $900 million, was conceived of as a real-life community of the future with the very latest in high technology. The two principle areas of EPCOT are Future World and World Showcase, both of which were designed to appeal to adults rather than children.

In addition to his theme parks, Disney created and endowed a new university, the California Institute of the Arts, known as Cal Arts. He thought of this as the ultimate in education for the arts, where people in many different disciplines could work together, dream and develop, and create the mixture of arts needed for the future. Disney once commented: "It's the principle thing I hope to leave when I move on to greener pastures. If I can help provide a place to develop the talent of the future, I think I will have accomplished something."

Disney's parks continue to grow with the creation of the Disney-MGM Studios, Animal Kingdom, and a extensive sports complex in Orlando. The Disney Corporation has also branched out into other types of films with the creation of Touchstone Films, into music with Hollywood Records, and even vacationing with its Disney Cruise Lines. In all, the Disney name now lends itself to a multi-billion dollar enterprise, with multiple undertakings all over the world.

In 1939, Disney received an honorary Academy Award and in 1954 he received four Academy Awards. In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson presented Disney with the Presidential Medal of Freedom and in the same year Disney was awarded the Freedom Foundation Award.

Happily married for 41 years, this moody, deliberately "ordinary" man was moving ahead with his plans for gigantic new outdoor recreational facilities when he died of circulatory problems on December 15, 1966, at St. Joseph's Hospital in Los Angeles, CA. At the time of his death, his enterprises had garnered him respect, admiration, and a business empire worth over $100 million-a-year, but Disney was still remembered primarily as the man who had created Mickey Mouse over two decades before.

Further Reading

The best book on Disney is Richard Schickel, The Disney Version: The Life, Times, Art, and Commerce of Walt Disney (1968). A useful source of technical information is Robert D. Feild, The Art of Walt Disney (1942). The most intimate portrait of Disney is by his daughter, Diane Disney Miller, The Story of Walt Disney (1957). Biographies of Disney appear in both the 1952 and 1967 issues of Current Biography. Disney's obituary appears in the December 16, 1966, issue of New York Times.

Disney, Walt (1901–66), pioneer American animator, producer, entrepreneur, and founder of a media conglomerate. Perhaps the single most influential figure in American children's literature of the 20th century, Walt Disney set his personal stamp upon almost every classic story for children, simultaneously determining what was to become a classic and the way in which that classic was to be read. In fairy tales Disney harnessed wonder through animation, using it to create visual effects notable for their ingenuity while at the same time maintaining a securely middle‐American sensibility (see film and fairy tales).

Walt Disney himself embodied the fairy tale of the American Dream he so successfully marketed. He was the fourth of five children born to a struggling lower middle‐class family. Disney moved frequently during his childhood, his father Elias Disney endlessly seeking the financial security that perpetually eluded his grasp. Born in Chicago, Disney spent his formative years on a Missouri farm, where he imbibed the vision of rural America he was later to mythologize, making friends with the animals who were subsequently transformed into chief actors in his cartoons: pigs, cows, dogs, and mice. After the farm failed, in part because the two eldest Disney boys fled their exacting father's demands, the family moved to Kansas City, where Elias became a newspaper route manager, giving each of his remaining sons, Roy and Walt, a share of the labour. In Missouri Walt was first paid for a drawing—of a horse. A casual student, in part because of his heavy workload, Walt still enjoyed reading adventure and romance stories by Mark Twain, Robert Louis Stevenson, Horatio Alger, Sir Walter Scott, and Charles Dickens, and watching the early silent movies of Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, and others.

In 1917 Disney moved back to Chicago, began high school and enrolled in classes at the Art Institute, but soon dropped out and enlisted in World War I as a Red Cross ambulance driver. At the war's end in 1919, Disney returned to Kansas City and took a position with a commercial art studio. The most momentous outcome of this job was his alliance with Ub Iwerks, another young artist who not only shared Disney's interest in cartoons, but had a genius for animating. Better and more efficient technically than Disney, Iwerks provided the nuts and bolts drawing while Disney generated the ideas. Over the years, this partnership would create Mickey Mouse and spawn one of the most powerful media giants in the world. Together, they began a company called ‘Laugh‐O‐Grams’, short animated features relying on fairy‐tale characters and sight‐gags for their interest. Some of Disney's best animated fairy‐tale films were made during this period: Little Red Riding Hood (1922), The Four Musicians of Bremen (1922), and Puss in Boots (1924). Although audiences responded well to the cartoons, the company soon went broke in 1924 because of distribution problems. After the bankruptcy, Disney and Iwerks moved to Hollywood to be closer to the movie industry, persuading Disney's brother Roy, whose business acumen provided another essential link in the formation of what would become the Disney Corporation, to invest in yet another business scheme. With Iwerks's help, Disney concocted another fairy‐tale venture. Combining live action and animation in the Alice in Cartoonland series (1924–7), they began to evolve the winning formulas that became the Disney‐brand fairy tale. Basing this series very loosely on Lewis Carroll's literary fairy tale—only the heroine's name and the concept of an adventure in a far‐fetched place remained the same—they altered the story to admit cute animal characters, slapstick gags, and ingenious visual effects while expressing safely middle‐American values and beliefs.

The late 1920s and 1930s saw the fledgling Disney company perpetually striving for increasing realism through technological innovation and artistic refinement. Disney soon gave up any attempt to draw cartoons himself; his genius lay in generating ideas and inspiring others to produce his vision. To increase efficiency, Disney divided cartoon production into hierarchized departments: from the élite cadre of animators (the Nine Old Men) who, together with Disney, created the characters, stories, and gags; to the ‘in‐betweeners’, less adept animators who filled in the sketches between the main actions of a story; to photography, sound, and music departments; down to the low‐status, mostly female, cel painters and inkers who coloured the slides and finished the product. In his devotion to efficiency and micro‐division of labour in the spirit of Frederick W. Taylor, Disney was a businessman of his time, even if his factory's product was artistic instead of technological.

With each cartoon, Disney pushed his employees to press against the boundaries of their medium, by synchronizing music and movement in Steamboat Willie (1928), by using Technicolor in Flowers and Trees (1932), and in general striving to increase animation's realism through studying movement and developing new ways of creating visual depth, such as the multi‐plane camera, developed by Iwerks and first used to make The Old Mill in 1937. Throughout the 1930s, the Disney Studio won Academy Awards almost as a matter of course because of the creativity and innovation of its cartoons. During this period the company also began to diversify, marketing not just cartoons, but the cartoon characters as well through books, music, and novelty items such as the Mickey Mouse watch. These marketing strategies generated cash during the expensive process of creating the cartoons that would satisfy Walt Disney's stringent vision and eventually became standard business practice for all family‐oriented media marketing.

The success of ‘Disney's Folly’, the feature‐length cartoon of Snow White in December 1937, paved the way for Disney's eventual domination of the children's fairy‐tale industry. A labour of love and artistic commitment, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs involved hundreds of Disney employees working overtime for months for little or no extra pay to create the two million images demanded by the project. Its astonishing success paved the way for further animated folk‐ and fairy‐tale adaptations: Pinocchio (1940), Fantasia (1940), Dumbo (1941), Cinderella (1950), Alice in Wonderland (1951), Peter Pan (1953), Sleeping Beauty (1959), and Mary Poppins (1963), to name the most significant fairy‐tale films produced during Disney's lifetime.

The euphoria induced by the success of Snow White did not, however, translate into fairy‐tale labour relations at the Disney Studio. Increasing bureaucratization and division among departments, along with the expanding staff necessary to implement the many new projects the studio had undertaken, created a less egalitarian, more factory‐like atmosphere than had prevailed earlier. Walt Disney's artistic autocracy and paternalism, however benevolent, was resented by some of his staff, and in May 1941 the Screen Cartoonists Guild struck in response to a series of lay‐offs. The resulting confrontation between labour and management cleared the studio of many talented and independent artists and precipitated a hiatus in the studio's fairy‐tale production, particularly since during this period Disney conducted a goodwill tour in Latin America and then began to help the US government produce propaganda films for the war effort. Dumbo (1941) was the last feature‐length animated film to issue from the studio for almost ten years. This, together with Disney's role as FBI informant about supposed communist activity in Hollywood, further expressed his political orientation—a fundamentally conservative allegiance—and cost him some of the critical support he had enjoyed in the 1930s.

In the 1950s and 1960s, Disney's considerable visionary energies were given over to other media—he embraced television and became deeply involved in the physical construction of fairylands rather than their animation through film. Disneyland, a theme park that embodied the same ideology of the Disney fairy‐tale cartoons in its emphasis on cleanliness, order, and innocence, opened in Orange County, California, in 1955. Disney also oversaw the purchase of land in Orlando, Florida, in 1965 for the Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow (EPCOT) and what would become Disney World. Here Disney's utopian bent had free rein as he attempted to enlist American industry and technology in the service of bourgeois community life. From almost nothing, Disney and his team of devoted supporters had created a multi‐million‐dollar commercial empire based on the fairy tale.

Disney's death on 15 December 1966 halted his personal involvement in the project of creating a fairy‐tale virtual reality, but Walt Disney Productions lived on. The corporation, like many other American companies, suffered during the recession of the 1970s but was revitalized in the 1980s as it reinvented itself, under the leadership of Michael Eisner, to correspond to a new vision of the bourgeois American fairy tale. After a long pause, Disney Productions brought out a new string of popular animated versions of fairy tales, starting with The Little Mermaid (1989), Beauty and the Beast (1991), Aladdin (1992), The Lion King (1994), Hercules (1997), and Mulan (1998). In addition to reworking traditional fairy‐tale material, the Disney corporation also attempted to work its magic upon history in Pocahontas (1995) and tragic romance in The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996). Although critical response to these last was ambivalent, the strategy of reworking recalcitrant material into fairy tale was successful enough to prompt other companies, such as 20th‐Century Fox, to issue their own fairy‐tale version of history in Anastasia (1998).

Characteristic Disney fairy‐tale formulas are apparent as early as Snow White. Because most of his sources were short and emblematic, more material needed to be added to lengthen the plot and sustain interest in the characters. For characterization Disney relied upon the formulas of early movies, which themselves drew from 19th‐century melodrama: the innocent heroine, the gallant hero, the evil villain, and comic relief in the form of the clown. Although the heroine and hero were often rather wooden, the antics of cute or grotesque sub‐characters, such as animals or dwarfs, fleshed out the action and created sympathy and comedy. Using familiar comic types (the Laurel‐and‐Hardyesque pairing of a tall, thin body with a short fat one was a frequent figure), Disney's artists gave their characters distinctive idiosyncrasies, which in turn drew out the plot enough to make a feature‐length presentation. A good portion of each story session was devoted to brainstorming the ‘gags’ (a good new gag earned its creator a bonus of $5) which were to become one of the trademarks of a Disney fairy tale. A further development, appearing first in Pinocchio, of the cute, usually miniature, sidekick of the protagonist also became a standard feature of a Disney fairy tale, allowing for comic relief from the romantic business of the fairy tale as well as offering endless marketing opportunities.

If a Disney fairy tale inflated the ridiculous, it also heightened the romantic aspects of the story. In contrast with the rather matter‐of‐fact treatment sex and marriage receives in traditional folk tales, Disney's versions always emphasized true love, with love‐at‐first‐sight the preferred type. Thus, in Snow White, Cinderella, and Sleeping Beauty, all three heroines fall in love with their princes before the identity of either is fully established, avoiding connotations of interested or self‐aggrandizing love. ‘Love's first kiss’ is the only spell‐breaker in the Disney version, in contrast to the rather clumsy awakening of Snow White, jostled out of her coffin, in the Grimms' version, or the wakening of the princess by a complete stranger in earlier versions of ‘Sleeping Beauty’. If portions of the fairy tale seemed arbitrary, inhumane, or irrational in his lights, Disney changed them; thus, in Snow White, the evil stepmother falls to her death in a semi‐natural catastrophe rather than being forced to dance in red‐hot iron shoes at her stepdaughter's wedding, and Cinderella leaves out any final reference to the antagonists at all, in stark contrast to the Grimms' version, in which the stepsisters' eyes are pecked out by the heroine's bird allies.

Other Americanizing aspects of the Disney version included demystifying royalty (in general they are depicted as well‐meaning comic types or utterly malevolent usurpers); portraying protagonists in voice and manner as all‐American teens with generation‐gap problems and romantic ideals; and mechanizing magic by emphasizing laboratories, magic wands, and other machines to suggest contemporary American technology. As Disney's critics began increasingly to complain, the attempts to improve animation by studying movement and striving for realistic effects paradoxically kept the company from exploring animation's unique potential for envisioning other dimensions.

Animation provided a perfect opportunity to create convincing magical effects, a fact not lost on Disney. Whole departments were devoted to special effects of bubbles, water drops, and other miracles of delicacy; menace and evil were effectively conveyed through colour, shape, and angle without any words at all. Animation allowed animals to talk and act like humans, for detailed transformations from beautiful queen to appalling hag in Snow White or from pumpkin to coach in Cinderella, for elephants to fly using their ears as wings in Dumbo, for household furniture to come alive in Beauty and the Beast, and for the dizzying physical morphing of Aladdin's Genie. Ultimately, however, the very smoothness and hard, clean finish of the Disney house style worked against the establishment of a truly magical atmosphere, and the very workers of magic became buffoons and bumblers, as in Sleeping Beauty's trio Flora, Fauna, and Merryweather. The Disney style relied more upon techniques of novelistic realism than on the suggestive power of symbol found in other fantasy works.

A study of Disney heroines and heroes over the course of the 20th century reveals the extent to which Disney Americanized his tales. Each fairy‐tale heroine embodies the characteristic beauty ideals of her decade: Snow White is as flat‐chested as a flapper, while Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty sport Monroe‐esque curves; Ariel is a Farrah Fawcett‐coiffed teeny‐bopper, and the heroines of the 1990s are ‘multicultural’ versions of Barbie. Initially oblivious embodiments of what Betty Friedan was to denounce as the Feminine Mystique, Disney's fairy‐tale heroines have a great affinity for housework and care‐giving. Although the Eisner‐era cartoons attempt to broaden heroines' spectrum to include other races and identities, the ‘good’ girl is still characterized as spirited, gently rebellious, but ultimately domesticated by love. Ariel, in The Little Mermaid, rejects the sexual power of Ursula the sea‐witch and supports her father and boyfriend in frustrating Ursula's attempt to rule. Jasmine defies her father only because he is old‐fashioned enough to want to arrange her marriage. Girls' attempts to create a liberated and independent role for themselves are frequently overshadowed by plots that foreground masculine struggle. After Mermaid, female characters, even in the ‘feminist’ Beauty and the Beast, are relegated to the sidelines of the climactic struggles, while the primary conflicts are between male combatants.

Beginning with Pinocchio, Disney fairy‐tale heroes are not calculating so much as they are innocents in search of happiness. Pinocchio, Dumbo, Mickey Mouse as the Sorcerer's Apprentice in Fantasia, Peter Pan, Arthur, Mowgli, Aladdin, the Beast, Simba, even Quasimodo and Hercules possess boyish high spirits and a propensity for mischief, a dislike of hard work, and a sweet attractiveness that draws other characters to them. Mentored by complementary yet competing role models driven on one side by conscience and on the other by pleasure, as with Mowgli's Bagheera and Baloo, young heroes learn to make their own way in the world. Like Tom Sawyer, a figure close to Walt Disney's Missouri roots, these heroes love the fun of male company but bow to the heterosexual imperative: ultimately, they learn that to be ‘real’, to be ‘a man’, an ‘adult’, they must accept the constraints of civilization and domestication and with it, usually, the hand of the beautiful maiden. While the Eisner‐era hero, notable in Pocahontas and The Hunchback of Notre Dame, might be already grown and ready to be lessoned in love by a dynamic woman, the most popular films, such as The Lion King, have featured boys' coming‐of‐age as struggle over women or kingship. Reproducing movie and cartoon convention in which it is not as important for men or boys to find true (heterosexual) love as it is for girls, there are exceptions to this generalization—Pinocchio, Dumbo, Peter Pan, and Hunchback conclude by highlighting male friendship, and indeed, the sidekick trope necessitates male bonding. Consistent throughout the Disney corporation's œuvre is the privileging of innocence, the valorization of sentiment, the belief in true love, the reliance upon the shorthand of stereotype combined with anti‐intellectualism, a jovial disdain for ugliness or deformity, and a luxuriant, infantilizing celebration of the cute. The combination has resulted in fairy‐tale wealth and power for a major world player in the entertainment industry.

Bibliography

  • Bell, Elizabeth, Haas, Lynda, and Sells, Laura, From Mouse to Mermaid: The Politics of Film, Gender, and Culture (1995).
  • Merritt, Russell and J. B. Kaufman, Walt in Wonderland: The Silent Films of Walt Disney (1993).
  • Schickel, Richard, The Disney Version: The Life, Times, Art, and Commerce of Walt Disney (1968; rev. edn., 1985).
  • Thomas, Frank, and Johnston, Ollie, Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life (1981).
  • Watts, Steven, The Magic Kingdom: Walt Disney and the American Way of Life (1998).
  • Zipes, Jack, ‘Breaking the Disney Spell’, Fairy Tale as Myth/Myth as Fairy Tale (1994).

— Naomi J. Wood

(1901-1966), filmmaker and show-business entrepreneur. Disney's phenomenal career exemplifies the way modern popular culture has affected many aspects of twentieth-century life, from entertainment to civic institutions to nationalism. Starting as the creator and producer of short cartoons in 1928, Disney turned ten years later to making feature-length animated films that became very successful with American audiences. In World War II his company served as an agent of defense mobilization, with the result that such cartoon characters as Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck became known around the world. At the end of his life he controlled his own studio, had expanded into television production, and had received thirty-one Academy Awards and several medals from Congress. His face has graced a postage stamp and civic groups all over the nation have named schools in his honor. By the 1970s vast amusement parks, like his original Disneyland constructed in 1955 in Anaheim, California, had spread to Florida, Japan, and France, testifying that the Disney touch appealed to the popular imagination in other nations as well.

Disney's father was a small contractor and farmer in Illinois who gave his family a strict Protestant upbringing. Like many others who would gain success in Hollywood, young Walt appears to have rebelled against a parental code that abjured play and leisure. As a teenager he turned to imitating Charlie Chaplin's tramp at vaudeville amateur hours and became an animator of cartoons in Kansas City. Shortly afterward he went to Hollywood and created his first film cartoon featuring Mickey Mouse. In the midst of the depression, Disney gained widespread fame with The Three Little Pigs, which proffered the theme of hard work to counter the threats embodied in the "Big Bad Wolf." In 1938 he began to make animated feature-length films that drew on characters from children's stories, such as Snow White and the seven dwarfs, Bambi, Cinderella, Pinocchio, Brer Rabbit, and Uncle Remus. The Disney characters appeared in World War II training films for American troops across the world.

After 1945 Disney's influence came to permeate popular culture. In the wake of the class conflicts of the 1930s and the war, he supported numerous conservative causes hostile to unions, the welfare state, and communism, and developed a series of products that reinforced a cultural vision of social harmony. The Disney studio, its business managed by his brother, Roy, expanded into television, documentaries, clothing, and amusement parks. In the 1950s they built Disneyland, a vastly profitable enterprise where patrons entered a spotlessly clean world and embarked on a journey that showed history less as a story of crisis and trials than as a continuous unfolding of the progressive dreams that had dominated national life since the nineteenth century. The first stop was Main Street, U.S.A., and the last was Tomorrow Land, U.S.A. On that excursion, children and adults were assured that the great fears of modern life--race relations, consumerism, technology, uncontrolled nature, internationalism--could be translated into an optimistic panorama of progress. Disney saw this utopian vision as the culmination of his lifework. Shortly before his death in 1966, he said, "I hate to see downbeat pictures.... I know life isn't that way, and I don't want anyone telling me it is." Clearly millions of his fans agreed, and their adulation made him one of the most popular figures in postwar American culture.

Bibliography:

Diane Disney Miller, as told to Pete Martin, The Story of Walt Disney (1957); Richard Schickel, The Disney Version (1968).

Author:

Lary May

See also Movies.


Columbia Encyclopedia:

Walt Disney

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Disney, Walt (Walter Elias Disney) (dĭz'), 1901-66, American movie producer and pioneer in animated cartoons, b. Chicago. He grew up in Missouri, in the small town of Marceline and in Kansas City. He moved to Chicago in 1917, where he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts and began (1920) his career as a cartoonist making animated film advertisements. In 1928 Disney created the character Mickey Mouse in the silent film Plane Crazy. That same year Mickey also appeared in Steamboat Willie, a short that initiated the concept of making a separate cartoon for each animated movement. Instantly famous, the film was also Disney's first attempt to use sound (his own voice for Mickey), and it was followed by many other shorts starring Mickey and his animal sidekicks. An international success, by 1935 Mickey Mouse cartoons had been viewed by some 500 million moviegoers. Disney also experimented with the use of music (The Skeleton Dance), the portrayal of speed (The Tortoise and the Hare), three-dimensional effects (The Old Mill), and the use of color (one of the earliest color shorts was 1933's Three Little Pigs).

Disney produced the first feature-length cartoon, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1938), which took three years to complete. Additional features included Pinocchio (1939), Fantasia (1940), Dumbo (1941), and Bambi (1942). In Song of the South (1946), he merged live actors and animated figures. During World War II, Disney's studio produced cartoons for the armed services as training tools and morale builders.

Beginning with Treasure Island in 1951, Disney added live-action movies to his output, while still producing such animated classics as Alice in Wonderland (1951) and Peter Pan (1953). Thereafter, his studio produced several animal stories (e.g., Greyfriars Bobby, 1960), musical fantasies (e.g., Mary Poppins, 1964), and television programs, beginning in the early 1950s with the weekly Disneyland and its famous Mouseketeers. Disney and his productions received numerous Academy and other awards during his lifetime. After his death, the Disney studios remained active, diversified, and ultimately became enormously successful. In the early 1980s, they began producing films for adults.

Disneyland, a huge theme park in Anaheim, Calif., which in part celebrates America's hometowns and small-town values, was opened by Disney in 1955. Disney's California Adventure, a second, smaller theme park in Anaheim, opened adjacent to Disneyland in 2001. An even bigger park, Walt Disney World, opened near Orlando, Fla., in 1971 as a theme park and resort, and Epcot Center, Disney-MGM Studios, and Animal Kingdom have since been added there. Disneyland parks have also opened near Tokyo (1983), in Marne-la-Vallée, near Paris (1992), and in Hong Kong (2005).

Bibliography

See biographies by D. D. Miller and P. Martin (1956), B. Thomas (1958), S. Watts (1998), and N. Gabler (2006); R. Schickel, The Disney Version (1968); C. Finch, The Art of Walt Disney (1973); M. Eliot, Walt Disney: Hollywood's Dark Prince (1993); R. Merritt and J. B. Kaufman, Walt in Wonderland: The Silent Films of Walt Disney (1994); H. A. Giroux, The Mouse That Roared: Disney and the End of Innocence (1999); D. Smith and S. Clark, Disney: The First 100 Years (1999).

A twentieth-century American filmmaker and showman. His studios are especially known for meticulous craftsmanship in animated (cartoon) films. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Cinderella, and Sleeping Beauty are some of Disney's best-known productions. Two giant amusement parks, Disneyland in California and Walt Disney World in Florida, are based on his characters and concepts.

Quotes By:

Walt Disney

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Quotes:

"You can dream, create, design and build the most wonderful place in the world, but it requires people to make the dream a reality."

"If you can dream it, you can do it. Always remember this whole thing was started by a mouse."

"I would rather entertain and hope that people learned something than educate people and hope they were entertained."

"You may not realize it when it happens, but a kick in the teeth may be the best thing in the world for you."

"It's kind of fun to do the impossible."

"I love Mickey Mouse more than any woman I have ever known."

See more famous quotes by Walt Disney

AMG AllMovie Guide:

Walt Disney

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Biography

Walt Disney has become a 20th century icon of Americana. Like many mythic American figures, he had a humble beginning, an ambitious entrepreneurial spirit, and a passion for modern technology. Born in Chicago, he enrolled at the Kansas City Art Institute at age 14. Toward the end of World War I, when he was 16, Disney volunteered to drive ambulances in France. Upon his return home, he worked for a commercial art studio in Kansas City; there he teamed up with artist Ub Iwerks, who would become his lifelong business partner. Together, they moved to the Kansas City Film Ad Company to make animated commercials; this spawned their first brief business venture, Laugh-O-Grams, which sold satirical cartoons to a local theater. The success of these cartoons inspired Disney to create his own animation studio, where he independently produced such shorts as Puss in Boots (1922) and The Musicians of Bremen (1923). As the cartoons cost more to make than they earned, this first studio was not financially successful. In 1923, Disney (who, legend has it, had only 40 dollars to his name), his brother Roy, and Iwerks, went to Hollywood to begin producing the Alice in Cartoonland series of shorts that combined animation with live-action.

In 1927, Disney and Iwerks created their first popular character, Oswald Rabbit. Unfortunately, a bitter dispute with the cartoon's distributor resulted in Disney losing the rights to Oswald. The distributor also hired away most of Disney's staff and produced more Oswald cartoons without him. Disney's next character was the beloved Mickey Mouse, whom he starred in two silent shorts, Plane Crazy and Gallopin' Gaucho. For his third Mickey cartoon, Steamboat Willie (1928), Disney used sound. The success of Willie led Disney to create the "Silly Symphony" series, in which the characters' antics were synchronized to prerecorded music. As most animators did it the other way around, this was an innovation. The best known of this series was The Three Little Pigs (1933), which contained the hit song "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf." During the 1930s, many of Disney's other beloved characters began to appear, including Minnie Mouse, Pluto (originally called Dippy Dawg), Goofy, and Donald Duck. And as they developed, so did his use of technology. Disney began using two-strip color in 1931; by the mid-'30s, he was using three-strip Technicolor, and he had exclusive use of the process for three years. At his growing studio -- which employed hundreds of people and included its own art school -- the revolutionary multiplane camera was developed, which allowed for more fluid, realistic animated movements with greater perspective and depth.

In 1934, Disney began working on his first feature-length animated film, a project he'd been dreaming of for years. No one in the industry supported his idea, believing that such extended exposure to animation would give the audience headaches. But Disney, driven to experiment further with his newfound technology, was not dissuaded; in 1937, he released Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, a film that went on to gross nearly eight million dollars in its first release. Soon, other such features followed. Audiences liked them for many reasons: the animation was spectacular, the tunes were hummable, and the stories -- ultra-sanitized versions of the originals -- were reassuringly upbeat during the troubled war years. The one exception was Disney's technical masterpiece, Fantasia (1940). Though it didn't initially do well, subsequent, more sophisticated audiences have come love it. During World War II, the Disney studios also churned out propaganda films for the government; the best-known was the documentary Victory Through Air Power (1943).

At one point during the early '40s, it looked as if all of Disney's dreams would disintegrate when most of his staff resigned over his authoritarianism and insistence upon absolute artistic control. Still, Disney continued turning out shorts and features, some of them, such as Song of the South (1946), combining live-action with animation. Beginning in the 1950s, Disney made live-action adaptations of classics and pseudo-documentaries, which, like his fictional features, presented a sanitized, anthropomorphic version of nature. Wanting complete control over his empire, he formed Buena Vista Distribution Company for his films. And, in 1954, he launched his long-running television anthology, Disneyland (later dubbed Walt Disney Presents), which was broadcast in various incarnations for 30 years and consisted of animated shorts, live-action serials, and movies. In 1955, he opened Disneyland, his 160-acre fantasy theme park in Anaheim, CA, which eventually spawned the massive Walt Disney World in Orlando, FL, a Disneyland in Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Euro Disney in France.

During his heyday, Disney was awarded 29 Oscars for his films, and, by the 1960s, he had become the king of American entertainment. But many felt the quality of his work was in decline; the animation was not as rich, and he did not produce as many shorts. His live-action films, with a few notable exceptions -- such as Mary Poppins (1965) -- were also becoming routine, and had a hastily made feel to them. Still, he remained a beloved figure. So when he died of acute circulatory collapse following the removal of a lung tumor on December 15, 1966, the world paused to mourn his passing. His legacy lives on in a whole new generation of Disney animated features, including The Little Mermaid (1989), Beauty and the Beast (1991), The Lion King (1994), and The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996). ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
Filmography:

Walt Disney

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Frank and Ollie

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Fun and Fancy Free

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Mickey and the Beanstalk

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Saludos Amigos

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The Reluctant Dragon

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Fantasia

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Hollywood Party

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Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar

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The Gnome-Mobile

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The Happiest Millionaire

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The Jungle Book

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The Fighting Prince of Donegal

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Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N.

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Monkeys, Go Home!

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The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin

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The Monkey's Uncle

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The Ugly Dachshund

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Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree

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Mary Poppins

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A Tiger Walks

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Emil and the Detectives

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The Incredible Journey

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Son of Flubber

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Summer Magic

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Big Red

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Bon Voyage!

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In Search of the Castaways

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Miracle of the White Stallions

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The Absent-Minded Professor

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Babes in Toyland

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Greyfriars Bobby: The True Story of a Dog

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Nikki: Wild Dog of the North

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101 Dalmatians

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Kidnapped

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Pollyanna

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The Sign of Zorro

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Ten Who Dared

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Darby O'Gill and the Little People

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The Shaggy Dog

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Sleeping Beauty

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Donald in Mathmagic Land

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The Light in the Forest

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Paul Bunyan

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Old Yeller

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Johnny Tremain

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Lady and the Tramp

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20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

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Peter Pan

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Alice in Wonderland

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Cinderella

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The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

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The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad

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So Dear to My Heart

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Melody Time

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Make Mine Music

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The Three Caballeros

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Bambi

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Dumbo

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Pinocchio

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The Importance of Being Donald

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Mickey Knows Best

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Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

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The Three Little Pigs

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Winter

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Walt Disney

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Walt Disney

Walt Disney on January 1, 1954
Born Walter Elias Disney
(1901-12-05)December 5, 1901[1]
Hermosa, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Died December 15, 1966(1966-12-15) (aged 65)
Burbank, California, U.S.
Cause of death Lung Cancer
Resting place Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California, U.S.
Residence Burbank, California
Nationality American
Education McKinley High School
Occupation Film producer,
Co-founder of The Walt Disney Company, formerly known as Walt Disney Productions
Years active 1920–1966
Home town Chicago, Illinois
Political party Republican
Board member of The Walt Disney Company
Religion Christian (Congregationalist)[2]
Spouse Lillian Bounds (1925–1966; his death)
Children Diane Marie Disney
Sharon Mae Disney
Parents Elias Disney
Flora Call Disney
Relatives Ronald William Miller (son-in-law)
Robert Borgfeldt Brown (son-in-law)
Roy Edward Disney (nephew)
Family Herbert Arthur Disney (brother)
Raymond Arnold Disney (brother)
Roy Oliver Disney (brother)
Ruth Flora Disney (sister)
Awards 7 Emmy Awards, 22 Academy Awards, Cecil B.DeMille Award
Signature

Walter Elias "Walt" Disney (December 5, 1901 – December 15, 1966) was an American film producer, director, screenwriter, voice actor, animator, entrepreneur, entertainer, international icon,[3] and philanthropist, well known for his influence in the field of entertainment during the 20th century. Along with his brother Roy O. Disney, he was co-founder of Walt Disney Productions, which later became one of the best-known motion picture producers in the world. The corporation is now known as The Walt Disney Company and had an annual revenue of approximately US$36 billion in the 2010 financial year.[4]

Disney is particularly noted as a film producer and a popular showman, as well as an innovator in animation and theme park design. He and his staff created some of the world's most well-known fictional characters including Mickey Mouse, for whom Disney himself provided the original voice. During his lifetime he received four honorary Academy Awards and won 22 Academy Awards from a total of 59 nominations, including a record four in one year,[5] giving him more awards and nominations than any other individual in history.[6] Disney also won seven Emmy Awards and gave his name to the Disneyland and Walt Disney World Resort theme parks in the U.S., as well as the international resorts Tokyo Disney Resort, Disneyland Paris, and Hong Kong Disneyland.

The year after his December 15, 1966 death from lung cancer in Burbank, California, construction began on Walt Disney World Resort in Florida. His brother Roy Disney inaugurated the Magic Kingdom on October 1, 1971.

Contents

1901–1937: Beginnings

Childhood

Walt’s parents, Elias and Flora (Call) Disney

Disney was born on December 5, 1901, at 2156 N. Tripp Avenue in Chicago's Hermosa community area to Irish-Canadian father Elias Disney and Flora Call Disney, who was of German and English descent.[7][8] His great-grandfather, Arundel Elias Disney, had emigrated from Gowran, County Kilkenny, Ireland where he was born in 1801. Arundel Disney was a descendant of Robert d'Isigny, a Frenchman who had travelled to England with William the Conqueror in 1066.[9] With the d'Isigny name anglicised as "Disney", the family settled in a village now known as Norton Disney, south of the city of Lincoln, in the county of Lincolnshire.

In 1878, Disney's father Elias had moved from Huron County, Ontario, Canada to the United States at first seeking gold in California before finally settling down to farm with his parents near Ellis, Kansas, until 1884. Elias worked for the Union Pacific Railroad and married Flora Call on January 1, 1888, in Acron, Florida. The family moved to Chicago, Illinois, in 1890,[10] hometown of his brother Robert[10] who helped Elias financially for most of his early life.[10] In 1906, when Walt was four, Elias and his family moved to a farm in Marceline, Missouri,[11] where his brother Roy had recently purchased farmland.[11] In Marceline, Disney developed his love for drawing[12] with one of the family's neighbors, a retired doctor named "Doc" Sherwood, paying him to draw pictures of Sherwood's horse, Rupert.[12] His interest in trains also developed in Marceline, a town that owed its existence to the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway which ran through it. Walt would put his ear to the tracks in anticipation of the coming train[8] then try and spot his uncle, engineer Michael Martin, conducting the train.

10-year old Walt Disney (center right) at a gathering of Kansas City newsboys in 1912.

The Disneys remained in Marceline for four years,[13] before moving to Kansas City in 1911[14] where Walt and his younger sister Ruth attended the Benton Grammar School. At school he met Walter Pfeiffer who came from a family of theatre aficionados, and introduced Walt to the world of vaudeville and motion pictures. Before long Walt was spending more time at the Pfeiffers' than at home.[15] As well as attending Saturday courses at the Kansas City Art Institute,[16] Walt often took Ruth to Electric Park, 15 blocks from their home, which Disney would later acknowledge as a major influence of his design of Disneyland.[citation needed]

Teenage years

In 1917, Elias acquired shares in the O-Zell jelly factory in Chicago and moved his family back to the city,[17] where in the fall Disney began his freshman year at McKinley High School and took night courses at the Chicago Art Institute.[18] He became the cartoonist for the school newspaper, drawing patriotic topics and focusing on World War I. Despite dropping out of high school at the age of sixteen to join the army, Disney was rejected for being underage.[19]

After his rejection by the army, Walt and a friend decided to join the Red Cross.[20] Soon after joining he was sent to France for a year, where he drove an ambulance, but only after the armistice was signed on November 11, 1918.[21]

Disney as an ambulance driver immediately after World War I

Hoping to find work outside the Chicago O-Zell factory,[22] in 1919 Walt moved back to Kansas City to begin his artistic career.[23] After considering whether to become an actor or a newspaper artist, he decided on a career as a newspaper artist, drawing political caricatures or comic strips. But when nobody wanted to hire him as either an artist or even as an ambulance driver, his brother Roy, then working in a local bank, got Walt a temporary job through a bank colleague at the Pesmen-Rubin Art Studio[23] where he created advertisements for newspapers, magazines, and movie theaters.[24] At Pesmen-Rubin he met cartoonist Ubbe Iwerks[25] and when their time at the studio expired, they decided to start their own commercial company together.[26]

In January 1920, Disney and Iwerks formed a short-lived company called, "Iwerks-Disney Commercial Artists". However, following a rough start, Disney left temporarily to earn money at the Kansas City Film Ad Company, and was soon joined by Iwerks who was not able to run their business alone.[27] While working for the Kansas City Film Ad Company, where he made commercials based on cutout animations, Disney became interested in animation, and decided to become an animator.[28] The owner of the Ad Company, A.V. Cauger, allowed him to borrow a camera from work to experiment with at home. After reading the Edwin G. Lutz book Animated Cartoons: How They Are Made, Their Origin and Development, Disney considered cel animation to be much more promising than the cutout animation he was doing for Cauger. Walt eventually decided to open his own animation business,[29] and recruited a fellow co-worker at the Kansas City Film Ad Company, Fred Harman, as his first employee.[29] Walt and Harman then secured a deal with local theater owner Frank L. Newman, arguably the most popular "showman" in the Kansas City area at the time,[30] to screen their cartoons at his local theater, which they titled Laugh-O-Grams.[30]

Laugh-O-Gram Studio

Presented as "Newman Laugh-O-Grams",[30] Disney's cartoons became widely popular in the Kansas City area[31] and through their success, he was able to acquire his own studio, also called Laugh-O-Gram,[32] for which he hired a vast number of additional animators, including Fred Harman's brother Hugh Harman, Rudolf Ising, and his close friend Ubbe Iwerks.[33] Unfortunately, studio profits were insufficient to cover the high salaries paid to employees. Unable to successfully manage money,[34] Disney's studio became loaded with debt[34] and wound up bankrupt[35] whereupon he decided to set up a studio in the movie industry's capital city, Hollywood, California.[36]

Hollywood

Disney and his brother Roy pooled their money and set up a cartoon studio in Hollywood[37] where they needed to find a distributor for Walt's new Alice Comedies, which he had started making while in Kansas City[35] but never got to distribute. Disney sent an unfinished print to New York distributor Margaret Winkler, who promptly wrote back to him that she was keen on a distribution deal for more live-action/animated shorts based upon Alice's Wonderland.[38]

Alice Comedies

Virginia Davis, the live-action star of Alice’s Wonderland and her family relocated from Kansas City to Hollywood at Disney's request, as did Iwerks and his family. This was the beginning of the Disney Brothers' Studio located on Hyperion Avenue in the Silver Lake district, where it remained until 1939. In 1925, Disney hired a young woman named Lillian Bounds to ink and paint celluloid. After a brief courtship, the pair married that same year.

The new series, Alice Comedies, proved reasonably successful, and featured both Dawn O'Day and Margie Gay as Alice with Lois Hardwick also briefly assuming the role. By the time the series ended in 1927, its focus was more on the animated characters and in particular a cat named Julius who resembled Felix the Cat, rather than the live-action Alice.

Oswald the Lucky Rabbit

By 1927, Charles Mintz had married Margaret Winkler and assumed control of her business. He then ordered a new all-animated series to be put into production for distribution through Universal Pictures. The new series, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, was an almost instant success, and the character, Oswald — drawn and created by Iwerks — became a popular figure. The Disney studio expanded and Walt re-hired Harman, Rudolph Ising, Carman Maxwell, and Friz Freleng from Kansas City.

Disney went to New York in February 1928 to negotiate a higher fee per short and was shocked when Mintz told him that not only did he want to reduce the fee he paid Disney per short but also that he had most of his main animators, including Harman, Ising, Maxwell, and Freleng—but not Iwerks, who refused to leave Disney—under contract and would start his own studio if Disney did not accept the reduced production budgets. Universal, not Disney, owned the Oswald trademark, and could make the films without Walt. Disney declined Mintz's offer and as a result lost most of his animation staff whereupon he found himself on his own again.[39]

It subsequently took his company 78 years to get back the rights to the Oswald character when in 2006 the Walt Disney Company reacquired the rights to Oswald the Lucky Rabbit from NBC Universal, through a trade for longtime ABC sports commentator Al Michaels.[40]

Mickey Mouse

After losing the rights to Oswald, Disney felt the need to develop a new character to replace him, which was based on a mouse he had adopted as a pet while working in his Laugh-O-Gram studio in Kansas City.[41] Ub Iwerks reworked the sketches made by Disney to make the character easier to animate although Mickey's voice and personality were provided by Disney himself until 1947. In the words of one Disney employee, "Ub designed Mickey's physical appearance, but Walt gave him his soul."[41] Besides Oswald and Mickey, a similar mouse-character is seen in the Alice Comedies, which featured "Ike the Mouse". Moreover, the first Flip the Frog cartoon called Fiddlesticks showed a Mickey Mouse look-alike playing fiddle. The initial films were animated by Iwerks with his name prominently featured on the title cards. Originally named "Mortimer", the mouse was later re-christened "Mickey" by Lillian Disney who thought that the name Mortimer did not fit. Mortimer later became the name of Mickey's rival for Minnie – taller than his renowned adversary and speaking with a Brooklyn accent.

The first animated short to feature Mickey, Plane Crazy was a silent film like all of Disney's previous works. After failing to find a distributor for the short and its follow-up, The Gallopin' Gaucho, Disney created a Mickey cartoon with sound called Steamboat Willie. A businessman named Pat Powers provided Disney with both distribution and Cinephone, a sound-synchronization process. Steamboat Willie became an instant success,[42] and Plane Crazy, The Galloping Gaucho, and all future Mickey cartoons were released with soundtracks. After the release of Steamboat Willie, Disney successfully used sound in all of his subsequent cartoons, and Cinephone also became the new distributor for Disney's early sound cartoons.[43] Mickey soon eclipsed Felix the Cat as the world's most popular cartoon character[41] and by 1930, despite their having sound, cartoons featuring Felix had faded from the screen after failing to gain attention.[44] Mickey's popularity would subsequently skyrocket in the early 1930s.[41]

Silly Symphonies

Following in the footsteps of Mickey Mouse series, a series of musical shorts titled, Silly Symphonies were released in 1929. The first, The Skeleton Dance was entirely drawn and animated by Iwerks, who was also responsible for drawing the majority of cartoons released by Disney in 1928 and 1929. Although both series were successful, the Disney studio thought it was not receiving its rightful share of profits from Pat Powers,[45] and in 1930, Disney signed a new distribution deal with Columbia Pictures. The original basis of the cartoons was their musical novelty with the first Silly Symphony cartoons featuring scores by Carl Stalling.[46]

Iwerks was soon lured by Powers into opening his own studio with an exclusive contract, while Stalling would also later leave Disney to join Iwerks.[47] Iwerks launched his Flip the Frog series with the first voiced color cartoon Fiddlesticks, filmed in two-strip Technicolor. Iwerks also created two other cartoon series, Willie Whopper and the Comicolor. In 1936, Iwerks shut down his studio in order to work on various projects dealing with animation technology. He would return to Disney in 1940 and go on to pioneer a number of film processes and specialized animation technologies in the studio's research and development department.

By 1932, although Mickey Mouse had become a relatively popular cinema character, Silly Symphonies was not as successful. The same year also saw competition increase as Max Fleischer's flapper cartoon character, Betty Boop, gained popularity among theater audiences.[48] Fleischer, considered Disney's main rival in the 1930s,[49] was also the father of Richard Fleischer, whom Disney would later hire to direct his 1954 film 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. Meanwhile, Columbia Pictures dropped the distribution of Disney cartoons to be replaced by United Artists.[50] In late 1932, Herbert Kalmus, who had just completed work on the first three-strip technicolor camera,[51] approached Walt and convinced him to reshoot the black and white Flowers and Trees in three-strip Technicolor.[52] Flowers and Trees would go on to be a phenomenal success and would also win the first 1932 Academy Award for Best Short Subject: Cartoons. After the release of Flowers and Trees, all subsequent Silly Symphony cartoons were in color while Disney was also able to negotiate a two-year deal with Technicolor, giving him the sole right to use their three-strip process,[53][54] a period eventually extended to five years.[46] Through Silly Symphonies, Disney also created his most successful cartoon short of all time, The Three Little Pigs (1933).[55] The cartoon ran in theaters for many months, featuring the hit song that became the anthem of the Great Depression, "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf".[56]

One of two stars dedicated to Walt Disney on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

First Academy Award

In 1932, Disney received a special Academy Award for the creation of "Mickey Mouse", a series which switched to color in 1935 and soon launched spin-offs for supporting characters such as Donald Duck, Goofy, and Pluto. Pluto and Donald became standalone cartoons in 1937,[57] with Goofy following in 1939.[58] Of all Mickey's partners, Donald Duck, who first teamed up with Mickey in the 1934 cartoon, Orphan's Benefit, was arguably the most popular, going on to become Disney's second most successful cartoon character of all time.[59]

Children

The Disneys' first attempt at pregnancy ended in miscarriage. Lillian became pregnant again and gave birth to a daughter, Diane Marie Disney, on December 18, 1933.[60] Later, the Disneys adopted Sharon Mae Disney (December 31, 1936 – February 16, 1993).[61]

Diane married Ron Miller at the age of 20 and is known as Diane Disney Miller. The Millers established and own a winery called Silverado Vineyards in California.[62] Diane and Ron Miller have seven children: Christopher, Joanna, Tamara, Jennifer, Walter, Ronald and Patrick.[63] Years later, Diane went on to become the cofounder of The Walt Disney Family Museum, with the aid of her children.[60] The museum was created to preserve her father's image and reach out to millions of Disney fans worldwide.[64] The museum displays a chronological view of Walt Disney's life through personal artifacts, interactive kiosks and various animations.[64]

Sharon Mae Disney was born December 31, 1936, in Los Angeles, California and was later adopted by the Disneys, due to Lillian's several birth complications.[63][65] In 1950, Sharon went on to star as herself in the Walt Disney Studios special One Hour in Wonderland.[66] Sharon married Robert Brown in 1958, with whom she had one child, and they remained married until his death in 1967.[65] Sharon married William Lund in 1969 and had two children with him, but six years later they divorced.[65][67] Sharon was a philanthropist and had contributed to charities such as the Marianne Frostig Center of Educational Therapy and the Curtis School foundation.[68] In 1993 at the age of 57, Sharon died from cancer at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, California.[65] After Sharon's death, her estate donated $11 million to the California School of Performing Arts, where she was a member of the board of trustees for almost two decades. Sharon's donation was commemorated by renaming the School of Dance the Sharon D. Lund School of Dance.[60][69]

1937–1941: Golden age of animation

"Disney's Folly": Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

Walt Disney introduces each of the Seven Dwarfs in a scene from the original 1937 Snow White theatrical trailer.

Following the creation of two cartoon series, in 1934 Disney began planning a full-length feature. The following year, opinion polls showed that another cartoon series, Popeye the Sailor, produced by Max Fleischer, was more popular than Mickey Mouse.[70] Nevertheless, Disney was able to put Mickey back on top as well as increase his popularity by colorizing and partially redesigning the character to become what was considered his most appealing design to date.[41] When the film industry learned of Disney's plans to produce an animated feature-length version of Snow White, they were certain that the endeavor would destroy the Disney Studio and dubbed the project "Disney's Folly". Both Lillian and Roy tried to talk Disney out of the project, but he continued plans for the feature, employing Chouinard Art Institute professor Don Graham to start a training operation for the studio staff. Disney then used the Silly Symphonies as a platform for experiments in realistic human animation, distinctive character animation, special effects, and the use of specialized processes and apparatus such as the multiplane camera – a new technique first used by Disney in the 1937 Silly Symphonies short The Old Mill.[71]

All of this development and training was used to increase quality at the studio and to ensure that the feature film would match Disney's quality expectations. Entitled Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the feature went into full production in 1934 and continued until mid-1937, when the studio ran out of money. To obtain the funding to complete Snow White, Disney had to show a rough cut of the motion picture to loan officers. The film premiered at the Carthay Circle Theater on December 21, 1937 and at its conclusion the audience gave Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs a standing ovation. Snow White, the first animated feature in America made in Technicolor, was released in February 1938 under a new distribution deal with RKO Radio Pictures. RKO had been the distributor for Disney cartoons in 1936, after it closed down the Van Beuren Studios in exchange for distribution.[72] The film became the most successful motion picture of 1938 and earned over $8 million on its initial release. These initial release earnings for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs would be the equivalent of $122,487,945 in 2010.[73]

Golden age of animation

Following the success of Snow White, for which Disney received one full-size, and seven miniature Oscar statuettes, he was able to build a new campus for the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, which opened for business on December 24, 1939. Snow White was not only the peak of Disney's success, but also ushered in a period that would later be known as the Golden Age of Animation for the studio.[74][75] Feature animation staff, having just completed Pinocchio, continued work on Fantasia and Bambi as well as the early production stages of Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan and Wind in the Willows while the shorts staff carried on working on the Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Goofy, and Pluto cartoon series, ending the Silly Symphonies at this time.[clarification needed More info needed on end of the Silly Symphonies to make a new and separate sentence.] Animator Fred Moore had redesigned Mickey Mouse in the late 1930s after Donald Duck overtook him in popularity among theater audiences.[76]

Pinocchio and Fantasia followed Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs into the movie theaters in 1940, but both proved financial disappointments. The inexpensive Dumbo was then planned as an income generator, but during production most of the animation staff went on strike, permanently straining relations between Disney and his artists.

1941–1945: World War II era

In 1941, the U.S. State Department sent Disney and a group of animators to South America as part of its Good Neighbor policy, at the same time guaranteeing financing for the resultant movie, Saludos Amigos.[77]

Shortly after the release of Dumbo in October 1941, the US entered World War II. The U.S. Army and Navy Bureau of Aeronautics[78] contracted most of the Disney studio's facilities where the staff created training and instruction films for the military, home-front morale-boosting shorts such as Der Fuehrer's Face and the 1943 feature film Victory Through Air Power. However, military films did not generate income, and the feature film Bambi underperformed on its release in April 1942. Disney successfully re-issued Snow White in 1944, establishing a seven-year re-release tradition for his features. In 1945, The Three Caballeros was the last animated feature released by the studio during the war.

In 1944, Encyclopædia Britannica publisher William Benton, entered into unsuccessful negotiations with Disney to make six to twelve educational films per annum. Disney was asked by the US Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs, Office of Inter-American Affairs (OIAA), to make an educational film about the Amazon Basin, which resulted in the 1944 animated short, The Amazon Awakens.[79][80][81][82][83]

1945–1955: Post-war period

Disney studios also created inexpensive package films, containing collections of cartoon shorts, and issued them to theaters during this period. These included Make Mine Music (1946), Melody Time (1948), Fun and Fancy Free (1947) and The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949). The latter had only two sections, the first based on The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame, and the second on The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving. During this period, Disney also ventured into full-length dramatic films that mixed live action and animated scenes, including Song of the South and So Dear to My Heart. After the war ended, Mickey's popularity would also fade.[84]

By the late 1940s, the studio had recovered enough to continue production on the full-length features Alice in Wonderland and Peter Pan, both of which had been shelved during the war years. Work also began on Cinderella, which became Disney's most successful film since Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. In 1948 the studio also initiated a series of live-action nature films, titled True-Life Adventures, with On Seal Island the first. Despite its resounding success with feature films, the studio's animation shorts were no longer as popular as they once were, with people paying more attention to Warner Bros. and their animation star Bugs Bunny. By 1942, Leon Schlesinger Productions, which produced the Warner Bros. cartoons, had become the country's most popular animation studio.[85] However, while Bugs Bunny's popularity rose in the 1940s, so did Donald Duck's,[86] a character who would replace Mickey Mouse as Disney's star character by 1949.[87]

During the mid-1950s, Disney produced a number of educational films on the space program in collaboration with NASA rocket designer Wernher von Braun: Man in Space and Man and the Moon in 1955, and Mars and Beyond in 1957.

Walt Disney meets Wernher von Braun in 1954.

Disney and the Second Red Scare

Disney was a founding member of the anti-communist group Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals.  In 1947, during the Second Red Scare,[88] Disney testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), where he branded Herbert Sorrell, David Hilberman and William Pomerance, former animators and labor union organizers, Communist agitators. All three men denied the allegations and Sorrell went on to testify before the HUAC in 1946 when insufficient evidence was found to link him to the Communist Party.[89][90]

Disney also accused the Screen Cartoonists Guild of being a Communist front, and charged that the 1941 strike was part of an organized Communist effort to gain influence in Hollywood.[88]

1955–1966: Theme parks and beyond

Planning Disneyland

Disneyland: aerial view, August 1963, looking SE. New Melodyland Theater at top. Santa Ana Freeway (US 101 at the time, now I-5) upper left corner.

On a business trip to Chicago in the late-1940s, Disney drew sketches of his ideas for an amusement park where he envisioned his employees spending time with their children. The idea for a children's theme park came after a visit to Children's Fairyland in Oakland, California. It also said that Disney may have been inspired to create Disneyland in the park Republic of the Children located in Manuel B. Gonnet, La Plata, Argentina, and opened in 1951.[91] This plan was originally intended to be built on a plot located across the street to the south of the studio. These original ideas developed into a concept for a larger enterprise that would become Disneyland. Disney spent five years developing Disneyland and created a new subsidiary company, WED Enterprises, to carry out planning and production of the park. A small group of Disney studio employees joined the Disneyland development project as engineers and planners, and were dubbed Imagineers.[citation needed]

As Disney explained one of his earliest plans to Herb Ryman, who created the first aerial drawing of Disneyland presented to the Bank of America during fund raising for the project, he said, "Herbie, I just want it to look like nothing else in the world. And it should be surrounded by a train."[92] Entertaining his daughters and their friends in his backyard and taking them for rides on his Carolwood Pacific Railroad had inspired Disney to include a railroad in the plans for Disneyland.

Disneyland grand opening

Walt Disney giving the dedication day speech July 17, 1955

Disneyland officially opened on July 18, 1955. On Sunday, July 17, 1955, Disneyland hosted a live TV preview, among the thousands of people in attendance were Ronald Reagan, Bob Cummings and Art Linkletter, who shared cohosting duties, as well as the mayor of Anaheim. Walt gave the following dedication day speech:

To all who come to this happy place; welcome. Disneyland is your land. Here age relives fond memories of the past .... and here youth may savor the challenge and promise of the future. Disneyland is dedicated to the ideals, the dreams and the hard facts that have created America ... with the hope that it will be a source of joy and inspiration to all the world.

Carolwood Pacific Railroad

The Lilly Belle on display at Disneyland Main Station in 1993. The caboose's woodwork was done entirely by Walt himself.

During 1949, Disney and his family moved to a new home on a large piece of land in the Holmby Hills district of Los Angeles, California. With the help of his friends Ward and Betty Kimball, who already had their own backyard railroad, Disney developed blueprints and immediately set to work on creating a miniature live steam railroad for his backyard. The name of the railroad, Carolwood Pacific Railroad, came from his home's location on Carolwood Drive. The railroad's half-mile long layout included a 46-foot (14 m) long trestle bridge, loops, overpasses, gradients, an elevated berm, and a 90-foot (27 m) tunnel underneath his wife's flowerbed. He named the miniature working steam locomotive built by Disney Studios engineer Roger E. Broggie Lilly Belle in his wife's honor and had his attorney draw up right-of-way papers giving the railroad a permanent, legal easement through the garden areas, which his wife dutifully signed; however, there is no evidence of the documents ever recorded as a restriction on the property's title.[clarification needed]

Expansion into new areas

As Walt Disney Productions began work on Disneyland, it also began expanding its other entertainment operations. In 1950, Treasure Island became the studio's first all-live-action feature, soon followed by 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (in CinemaScope, 1954), Old Yeller (1957), The Shaggy Dog (1959), Pollyanna (1960), Swiss Family Robinson (1960), The Absent-Minded Professor (1961), and The Parent Trap (1961). The studio produced its first TV special, One Hour in Wonderland, in 1950. Disney began hosting a weekly anthology series on ABC entitled Disneyland, after the park, on which he aired clips of past Disney productions, gave tours of his studio, and familiarized the public with Disneyland as it was being constructed in Anaheim. The show also featured a Davy Crockett miniseries, which started the "Davy Crockett craze" among American youth, during which millions of coonskin caps and other Crockett memorabilia were sold across the country.[93] In 1955, the studio's first daily television show, Mickey Mouse Club debuted on ABC. It was a groundbreaking comedy/variety show aimed specifically for children. Disney took a strong personal interest in the show and even returned to the animation studio to voice Mickey Mouse in its animated segments during its original 1955-59 production run. The Mickey Mouse Club would continue in various incarnations in syndication and on the Disney Channel into the 1990s.

As the studio expanded and diversified into other media, Disney devoted less of his attention to the animation department, entrusting most of its operations to his key animators, whom he dubbed the Nine Old Men. Although he was spending less time supervising the production of the animated films, he was always present at story meetings.[94] During Disney's lifetime, the animation department created the successful Lady and the Tramp ( the first animated film in CinemaScope) in 1955, Sleeping Beauty ( the first animated film in Super Technirama 70mm) in 1959, One Hundred and One Dalmatians (the first animated feature film to use Xerox cels) in 1961, and The Sword in the Stone in 1963.

Production of short cartoons kept pace until 1956, when Disney shut down the responsible division although special shorts projects would continue for the remainder of the studio's duration on an irregular basis. These productions were all distributed by Disney's new subsidiary, Buena Vista Distribution, which had taken over all distribution duties for Disney films from RKO by 1955. Disneyland, one of the world's first theme parks, finally opened on July 17, 1955, and was immediately successful. Visitors from around the world came to visit Disneyland, which contained attractions based on a number of successful Disney characters and films.

After 1955, the Disneyland TV show was renamed Walt Disney Presents. It switched from black-and-white to color in 1961 and changed its name to Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, at the same time moving from ABC to NBC,[95] and eventually evolving into its current form as The Wonderful World of Disney. The series continued to air on NBC until 1981, when it was picked up by CBS.[96] Since then, it has aired on ABC, NBC, the Hallmark Channel and the Cartoon Network via separate broadcast rights deals. During its run, the Disney series offered some recurring characters, such as the newspaper reporter and sleuth "Gallegher" played by Roger Mobley with a plot based on the writings of Richard Harding Davis.

Disney had already formed his own music publishing division in 1949 and in 1956, partly inspired by the huge success of the television theme song The Ballad of Davy Crockett, he created a company-owned record production and distribution entity called Disneyland Records.

Early 1960s successes

(Left to right) Robert B. Sherman, Richard M. Sherman and Walt Disney sing "There's a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow" (1964)

By the early 1960s, the Disney empire had become a major success, and Walt Disney Productions had established itself as the world's leading producer of family entertainment. Walt Disney was the Head of Pageantry for the 1960 Winter Olympics.

After decades of pursuit, Disney finally acquired the rights to P.L. Travers' books about a magical nanny. Mary Poppins, released in 1964, was the most successful Disney film of the 1960s and featured a memorable song score written by Disney favorites, the Sherman Brothers. The same year, Disney debuted a number of exhibits at the 1964 New York World's Fair, including Audio-Animatronic figures, all of which were later integrated into attractions at Disneyland and a new theme park project which was to be established on the East Coast.

Although the studio would probably have proved major competition for Hanna-Barbera, Disney decided not to enter the race and mimic Hanna-Barbera by producing Saturday morning TV cartoon series. With the expansion of Disney's empire and constant production of feature films, the financial burden involved in such a move would have proven too great.

Plans for Disney World and EPCOT

In early 1964, Disney announced plans to develop another theme park to be called Disney World a few miles southwest of Orlando, Florida. Disney World was to include "the Magic Kingdom", a larger, more elaborate version of Disneyland. It would also feature a number of golf courses and resort hotels. The heart of Disney World, however, was to be the Experimental Prototype City (or Community) of Tomorrow, known as EPCOT for short.

Mineral King Ski Resort

During the early-to-mid 1960s, Walt Disney developed plans for a ski resort in Mineral King, a glacial valley in California's Sierra Nevada mountain range. He brought in experts such as the renowned Olympic ski coach and ski-area designer Willy Schaeffler, who helped plan a visitor village, ski runs and ski lifts among the several bowls surrounding the valley. Plans finally moved into action in the mid 1960s, but Walt died before the actual work started. Disney's death and opposition from conservationists ensured that the resort was never built.

Death

Like many people of the time, Walt Disney was a chain smoker his entire adult life, although he made sure he was not seen smoking around children.[97] In 1966, Disney was scheduled to undergo surgery to repair an old neck injury[98] caused by many years of playing polo at the Riviera Club in Hollywood.[99] On November 2, during pre-operative X-rays, doctors at Providence St. Joseph Medical Center, across the street from the Disney Studio, discovered a tumor in his left lung.[100] Five days later a biopsy showed the tumor to be malignant and to have spread throughout the entire left lung.[100] After removal of the lung, doctors informed Disney that his life expectancy was six months to two years.[100] After several chemotherapy sessions, Disney and his wife spent a short amount of time in Palm Springs, California.[98] On November 30, Disney collapsed at his home. He was revived by fire department personnel and rushed to St. Joseph's where on December 15, 1966, at 9:30 a.m., ten days after his 65th birthday, Disney died of acute circulatory collapse, caused by lung cancer.[98] The last thing he reportedly wrote before his death was the name of actor Kurt Russell, the significance of which remains a mystery, even to Russell.[101]

Roy O. Disney continued out with the Florida project, insisting that the name be changed to Walt Disney World in honor of his brother.

The final productions in which Disney played an active role were the animated feature The Jungle Book and the animated short Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day, as well as the live-action musical feature The Happiest Millionaire, all released in 1967. Songwriter Robert B. Sherman recalled of the last time he saw Disney:

He was up in the third floor of the animation building after a run-through of The Happiest Millionaire. He usually held court in the hallway afterward for the people involved with the picture. And he started talking to them, telling them what he liked and what they should change, and then, when they were through, he turned to us and with a big smile, he said, 'Keep up the good work, boys.' And he walked to his office. It was the last we ever saw of him.[102]

Hibernation Urban Legend

A long-standing urban legend maintains that Disney was cryogenically frozen, and his frozen corpse stored beneath the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland.[103] In fact, Disney was cremated on December 17, 1966, and his ashes interred at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California. The first known human cryogenic freezing did not occur until January 1967, more than a month after Disney's death.[103]

According to "at least one Disney publicist", as reported in the French magazine Ici Paris in 1969, the source of the rumor was a group of Disney Studio animators with "a bizarre sense of humor" who were playing a final prank on their late boss.[104]

Although the rumor is acknowledged as false by most historians, Robert Mosley (in Disney’s World (1986)) and Marc Eliot (in Walt Disney – Hollywood’s Dark Prince (1993)) argue that Disney may have known of cryonics and may have had an interest in the science.[105] However his daughter Diane wrote in 1972, "There is absolutely no truth to the rumor that my father, Walt Disney, wished to be frozen. I doubt that my father had ever heard of cryonics."[104]

Legacy: 1967–present

Continuing Disney Productions

Plaque at the entrance that embodies the intended spirit of Disneyland by Walt Disney: to leave reality and enter fantasy

After Walt Disney's death, Roy Disney returned from retirement to take full control of Walt Disney Productions and WED Enterprises. In October 1971, the families of Walt and Roy met in front of Cinderella Castle at the Magic Kingdom to officially open the Walt Disney World Resort.

After giving his dedication for Walt Disney World, Roy asked Lillian Disney to join him. As the orchestra played "When You Wish upon a Star", she stepped up to the podium accompanied by Mickey Mouse. He then said, "Lilly, you knew all of Walt's ideas and hopes as well as anybody; what would Walt think of it [Walt Disney World]?". "I think Walt would have approved," she replied.[106] Roy died from a cerebral hemorrhage on December 20, 1971, the day he was due to open the Disneyland Christmas parade.

1968 US postage stamp

During the second phase of the "Walt Disney World" theme park, EPCOT was translated by Disney's successors into EPCOT Center, which opened in 1982. As it currently exists, EPCOT is essentially a living world's fair, different from the actual functional city that Disney had envisioned. In 1992, Walt Disney Imagineering took the step closer to Disney's original ideas and dedicated Celebration, Florida, a town built by the Walt Disney Company adjacent to Walt Disney World, that hearkens back to the spirit of EPCOT. EPCOT was also originally intended to be devoid of Disney characters which initially limited the appeal of the park to young children. However, the company later changed this policy and Disney characters can now be found throughout the park, often dressed in costumes reflecting the different pavilions.

The Disney entertainment empire

Today, Walt Disney's animation/motion picture studios and theme parks have developed into a multi-billion dollar television, motion picture, vacation destination and media corporation that carry his name. Among other assets The Walt Disney Company owns five vacation resorts, eleven theme parks, two water parks, thirty-nine hotels, eight motion picture studios, six record labels, eleven cable television networks, and one terrestrial television network. As of 2007, the company had annual revenues of over U.S. $35 billion.[107]

Disney Animation

Walt Disney was a pioneer in character animation. He was one of the first people to move away from basic cartoons with just "impossible outlandish gags" and crudely drawn characters to an art form with heartwarming stories and characters the audience can connect to on an emotional level. The personality displayed in the characters of his films and the technological advancements remain influential when animating today. He was also considered by many of his colleagues to be a master storyteller and the animation department did not fully recover from his demise until the late 1980s in a period known as the Disney Renaissance. The most financially and critically successful films produced during this time include Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), The Little Mermaid (1989), Beauty and the Beast (1991), Aladdin (1992) and The Lion King (1994). In 1995, Walt Disney Pictures distributed Pixar's Toy Story, the first computer animated feature film. Walt Disney's nephew Roy E. Disney claimed that Walt would have loved Toy Story and that it was "his kind of movie".[108] With the rise of computer animated films a stream of financially unsuccessful Traditional hand-drawn animated features in the early years of the 2000s (decade) emerged. This led to the company's controversial decision to close the traditional animation department. The two satellite studios in Paris and Orlando were closed, and the main studio in Burbank was converted to a computer animation production facility, firing hundreds of people in the process. In 2004, Disney released what was announced as their final "traditionally animated" feature film, Home on the Range. However, since the 2006 acquisition of Pixar, and the resulting rise of John Lasseter to Chief Creative Officer, that position has changed with the largely successful 2009 film The Princess and the Frog. This marked Disney's return to traditional hand-drawn animation and the studio hired back staff who had been laid-off in the past. Today, Disney produces both traditional and computer animation.

CalArts

In his later years, Disney devoted substantial time to funding The California Institute of the Arts (CalArts). Formed in 1961 through a merger of the Los Angeles Conservatory of Music and the Chouinard Art Institute, which had helped in the training of the animation staff during the 1930s, when Disney died, one-fourth of his estate went to CalArts, which helped in building its campus. In his will, Disney paved the way for the creation of several charitable trusts which included one for the California Institute of the Arts and other for the Disney Foundation.[109] He also donated 38 acres (0.154 km2) of the Golden Oaks ranch in Valencia for construction of the school. CalArts moved onto the Valencia campus in 1972.

In an early admissions bulletin, Disney explained: "A hundred years ago, Wagner conceived of a perfect and all-embracing art, combining music, drama, painting, and the dance, but in his wildest imagination he had no hint what infinite possibilities were to become commonplace through the invention of recording, radio, cinema and television. There already have been geniuses combining the arts in the mass-communications media, and they have already given us powerful new art forms. The future holds bright promise for those who imaginations are trained to play on the vast orchestra of the art-in-combination. Such supermen will appear most certainly in those environments which provide contact with all the arts, but even those who devote themselves to a single phase of art will benefit from broadened horizons."[110]

Walt Disney Family Museum

In 2009, The Walt Disney Family Museum opened in the Presidio of San Francisco. Thousands of artifacts from Disney's life and career are on display, including 248 awards that he received.[111]

Antisemitism accusations

Disney was long rumored to be antisemitic during his lifetime, and such rumors have persisted after his death. Indeed, in the 1930s he welcomed German filmmaker and Nazi propagandist Leni Riefenstahl to Hollywood.[112] Disney biographer Neal Gabler, the first writer to gain unrestricted access to the Disney archives, concluded in 2006 that available evidence does not support such accusations. In a CBS interview Gabler summarized his findings:

That's one of the questions everybody asks me... My answer to that is, not in the conventional sense that we think of someone as being an antisemite. But he got the reputation because, in the 1940s, he got himself allied with a group called the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals, which was an anti-Communist and antisemitic organization. And though Walt himself, in my estimation, was not antisemitic, nevertheless, he willingly allied himself with people who were antisemitic, and that reputation stuck. He was never really able to expunge it throughout his life.[113]

Disney eventually distanced himself from the Motion Picture Alliance in the 1950s.[114]

The Walt Disney Family Museum acknowledges that Disney did have "difficult relationships" with some Jewish individuals, and that ethnic stereotypes common to films of the 1930s were included in some early cartoons, such as Three Little Pigs and The Opry House. However, the museum points out that Disney employed Jews throughout his career, donated to several Jewish charities (The Hebrew Orphan Asylum, Yeshiva College[disambiguation needed ], Jewish Home for the Aged, The American League for a Free Palestine)[114] and was named "1955 Man of the Year" by the B'nai B'rith chapter in Beverly Hills.[114][115]

Academy Awards

This display case in the lobby of the Walt Disney Family Museum in San Francisco shows many of the Academy Awards he won, including the distinctive special award at the bottom for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

Walt Disney holds the record for both the most Academy Award nominations (59) and the number of Oscars awarded (22). He also earned four honorary Oscars. His last competitive Academy Award was posthumous.[116]

  • 1932: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: Flowers and Trees (1932)
  • 1932: Honorary Award for creation of Mickey Mouse.
  • 1934: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: Three Little Pigs (1933)
  • 1935: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: The Tortoise and the Hare (1934)
  • 1936: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: Three Orphan Kittens (1935)
  • 1937: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: The Country Cousin (1936)
  • 1938: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: The Old Mill (1937)
  • 1939: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: Ferdinand the Bull (1938)
  • 1939: Honorary Award for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) The citation read, "For Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, recognized as a significant screen innovation which has charmed millions and pioneered a great new entertainment field." (The award, unique in the history of the Oscars, is one large statuette and seven miniature statuettes.)[5]
  • 1940: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: Ugly Duckling (1939)
  • 1941: Honorary Award for Fantasia (1940), shared with: William E. Garity and J.N.A. Hawkins. The citation for the certificate of merit read, "For their outstanding contribution to the advancement of the use of sound in motion pictures through the production of Fantasia."[5]
  • 1942: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: Lend a Paw (1941)
  • 1943: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: Der Fuehrer's Face (1942)
  • 1949: Best Short Subject, Two-reel: Seal Island (1948)
  • 1949: Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award (Honorary Award)
  • 1951: Best Short Subject, Two-reel: Beaver Valley (1950)
  • 1952: Best Short Subject, Two-reel: Nature's Half Acre (1951)
  • 1953: Best Short Subject, Two-reel: Water Birds (1952)
  • 1954: Best Documentary, Features: The Living Desert (1953)
  • 1954: Best Documentary, Short Subjects: The Alaskan Eskimo (1953)
  • 1954: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: Toot Whistle Plunk and Boom (1953)
  • 1954: Best Short Subject, Two-reel: Bear Country (1953)
  • 1955: Best Documentary, Features: The Vanishing Prairie (1954)
  • 1956: Best Documentary, Short Subjects: Men Against the Arctic
  • 1959: Best Short Subject, Live Action Subjects: Grand Canyon
  • 1969: Best Short Subject, Cartoons: Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day

Other honors

Walt Disney was the inaugural recipient of a star on the Anaheim walk of stars awarded in recognition of his significant contribution to the city of Anaheim and specifically Disneyland, which is now the Disneyland Resort. The star is located at the pedestrian entrance to the Disneyland Resort on Harbor Boulevard. Disney has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one for motion pictures and the other for his television work.

Walt Disney received the Congressional Gold Medal on May 24, 1968 (P.L. 90-316, 82 Stat. 130–131) and the Légion d'Honneur awarded by France in 1935.[117] In 1935, Walt received a special medal from the League of Nations for creation of Mickey Mouse, held to be Mickey Mouse award.[118] He also received the Presidential Medal of Freedom on September 14, 1964.[119] On December 6, 2006, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and First Lady Maria Shriver inducted Walt Disney into the California Hall of Fame located at The California Museum for History, Women, and the Arts.

A minor planet, 4017 Disneya, discovered in 1980 by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Karachkina, is named after him.[120]

The Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, California, opened in 2003, was named in his honor.

Waltograph, a freeware typeface, is based on his signature and handwriting.

In 1993, HBO began development of a Walt Disney biopic, directed by Frank Pierson and produced by Lawrence Turman, but the project never materialized and was soon abandoned.[121] However, Walt - The Man Behind the Myth, a biographical documentary about Disney, was later made.[122]

Preceded by
None
Voice of Mickey Mouse
1928–1947, 1955-1959
Succeeded by
Jimmy MacDonald

See also

Notes

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  2. ^ http://www.disneydreamer.com/Waltfaith.htm
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  4. ^ "2010 Form 10-K, Walt Disney Company". United States Securities and Exchange Commission. http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1001039/000119312510268910/d10k.htm. 
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  6. ^ "Results Page - Academy Awards Database". http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ampas_awards/help/helpMain.jsp?helpContentURL=statistics/indexStats.html. Retrieved 16 February 2012. 
  7. ^ "Walt Disney, the man behind the mouse". Chicago Sun-Times. 2009-09-27. http://www.suntimes.com/lifestyles/1790811,disney-walt-museum-san-francisco-092709.article. Retrieved 2010-10-21. [dead link]
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  9. ^ Disneyland Paris. Michelin. 2002-08-07. p. 38. ISBN 2-06-048002-7. 
  10. ^ a b c Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 7.
  11. ^ a b Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 9-10.
  12. ^ a b Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 15.
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  14. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 18.
  15. ^ Thomas 1991, pp. 33–41
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  25. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 46.
  26. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 48.
  27. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 51.
  28. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 52.
  29. ^ a b Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 56.
  30. ^ a b c Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 57.
  31. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 58.
  32. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 64.
  33. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 64-71.
  34. ^ a b Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 68.
  35. ^ a b Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 72.
  36. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 75.
  37. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 78.
  38. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 80.
  39. ^ Neal Gabler, "Walt Disney:The Triumph of the American Imagination" (2006), p. 109.
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