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Bill Plympton

 
Director: Bill Plympton
  • Born: Apr 30, 1946
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Mondo Plympton, Sex and Violence, The Tune
  • First Major Screen Credit: Your Face (1987)

Biography

An Oscar-nominated animator and cartoonist, Bill Plympton has been amusing and provoking audiences with his surrealist, off-kilter take on everyday life for years. Born in Portland, Oregon, on April 30, 1946, Plympton developed a fascination with animation as a child. Frequently trapped indoors due to Oregon's rainy climate, he spent hours nurturing both his drawing skills and animation. At the age of 14, he sent some of his cartoons to Disney, only to be told that he was too young to work as an animator, but that his drawings showed promise. After college and a stint in the National Guard to avoid the Vietnam War, Plympton moved to New York City, where he began serving a long tenure as an illustrator, cartoonist, and magazine designer. His illustrations graced the pages of such diverse publications as The New York Times, Vogue, House Beautiful, Penthouse, Rolling Stone, and Glamour. In 1975 he began the cartoon strip Plympton in the Soho Weekly News. By 1981, the strip was syndicated in over 20 newspapers throughout the country.

In 1983, Plympton was approached to animate his first film, a short for Android Sister Valeria Wasilewski's production of Jules Feiffer's song Boomtown. The finished product gave Plympton the motivation to make his own animated film, entitled Drawing Lesson #2 (1987). That same year, in collaboration with songwriter Maureen McElheron, Plympton made Your Face, a beautifully disturbing animated short that earned an Academy Award nomination. The success of the film increased his popularity, and Plympton's work began appearing with increasing frequency on MTV and at various animation festivals, and following a string of prize-winning shorts ("One of Those Days," "How to Kiss," "25 Ways to Quit Smoking," and "Plymptoons"), he decided to make his first feature-length film. The result was The Tune (1992), an animated musical comedy about a harried songwriter's desperate search for inspiration. Sections of the film were released as shorts to finance the production, and one of them, "Push Comes to Shove," won the Prix du Jury at the 1991 Cannes Festival. Meanwhile, Plympton was asked to make a few TV commercials and duly produced highly original work for such products as Trivial Pursuit and NutraSweet.

Deciding he wanted to try his hand at live action, Plympton first made J. Lyle and then, in 1996, Guns on the Clackamas. A behind-the-scenes look at the making of a fictional disastrous Western, it was a satirical poke at egomaniacal directors and was inspired by the 1937 movie Saratoga, in which star Jean Harlow died during the filming and a stand-in was used to finish the production.

Subsequently returning to animation, Plympton once again ventured into the realm of the bizarre with So I Married a Strange Person in 1997. The story of a newlywed couple's less than typical adventures on their wedding night, it was a politically incorrect, adults-only affair that invited such descriptions as "Akira with humor" and "an animated Pulp Fiction." It provided a nice predecessor for his Sex and Violence (1998), another delightfully warped addition to Plympton's famously bizarre resume. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
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Bill Plympton

Bill Plympton (born April 30, 1946) is an American animator best known for his 1987 Academy Award-nominated animated short Your Face.

Contents

Biography

Bill Plympton was born in Portland, Oregon, to Don and Wilda Plympton. From 1964 to 1968, he attended Portland State University, where he was a member of the film society and worked on the yearbook. In 1968, he transferred to the School of Visual Arts in New York City.

Plympton's illustrations and cartoons have been published in The New York Times and weekly newspaper The Village Voice, as well as in the magazines Vogue, Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair, Penthouse, and National Lampoon. His political cartoon strip Plympton, which began in 1975 in the Soho Weekly News, eventually was syndicated and appeared in over 20 newspapers. His distinctive style is easily recognized.

Plympton is considered the first animator to draw every frame for an animated feature film by himself.[citation needed] Signe Baumane, also a director and animator, has been inking and painting Plympton's cels for many years.[citation needed] As of 2006, Plympton had created 26 animated short films and five animated features. He has also published a comic book, The Sleazy Cartoons of Bill Plympton. Plympton usually publishes a graphic novel version during the production of each feature in order to raise money for the film itself.[citation needed]

Plympton, together with other independent, New York City animators, has released two DVDs of animated shorts, both titled Avoid Eye Contact. His work also appeared on the 1992–1993 Fox comedy series The Edge; on MTV during the late 1980s; and on MTV's animated series Liquid Television in the early 1990s. In 1995, he contributed animation and graphics to a computer game collection, Take Your Best Shot.[1]

From 2001 to 2003, he teamed with Don Hertzfeldt for the touring "The Don and Bill Show", which played throughout the United States.[citation needed] In 2005, Plympton animated a music video for Kanye West's "Heard 'Em Say". The following year, he created the music video for "Weird Al" Yankovic's "Don't Download This Song".

The actress Martha Plimpton, "a distant relative," of his,[2] served as associate producer on Plympton's animated feature Hair High (2004), doing much of the casting. The movie's voice cast included her father Keith Carradine and her uncle David Carradine. Plympton contributed animation in the History Channel series, 10 Days That Unexpectedly Changed America, to illustrate the events of Shay's Rebellion.

Plympton in early 2007 was in production on an 80-minute feature, Idiots and Angels, that would have no dialog.[3] The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on 26 April 2008,[4] and was nominated in the feature film category at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival 2008.[citation needed]

Awards

  • 2008 MoCCA (Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art) - Cartoonist of the Year, MoCCA Art Festival
  • 2006 Special Career Award - Fantasporto Film Festival
  • 2006 Winsor McCay Award; Annie Awards by ASIFA Hollywood
  • 2005 2nd Oscar Academy Award Nomination for Short Animation "Guard Dog"
  • 2005 Life Time Achievement (Time Machine Award) SITGES Film Festival
  • 2001 Grand Prize for Short Films, Cannes Film Festival Critics' Week
  • 1987 1st Oscar Nomination Academy Award for Short Animation "Your Face"

Filmography

Animated features

Plympton and guest at the 34th Annie Awards, in Glendale, California.

Live-action features

  • J. Lyle (1993)
  • Guns on the Clackamas (1995)
  • Walt Curtis, the Peckerneck Poet (1997)

Animated shorts

  • The Great Turn On (1968)
  • Lucas the Ear of Corn (1977)
  • Boomtown (1985)
  • Drawing Lesson #2 (1985)
  • Love in the Fast Lane (1985)
  • Your Face (1987)
  • One of Those Days (1988)
  • How to Kiss (1989)
  • 25 Ways to Quit Smoking (1989)
  • Plymptoons (1990)
  • Tango Schmango (1990)
  • Dig My Do (1990)
  • The Wise Man (1990)
  • Draw (1990)
  • Push Comes to Shove (1991)
  • Nosehair (1994)
  • Faded roads (1994)
  • How to Make Love to a Woman (1995)
  • Smell the Flowers (1996)
  • Boney D (1996)
  • Plympmania (1996)
  • Sex & Violence (1997)
  • The Exciting Life of a Tree (1998)
  • More Sex & Violence (1998)
  • Surprise Cinema (1999)
  • Can't Drag Race with Jesus (2000)
  • Eat (2001)
  • Parking (2001)
  • Twelve Tiny Christmas Tales (2001)
  • Guard Dog (2004)
  • The Fan & The Flower (2005)
  • Guide Dog (2006) (sequel to Guard Dog)
  • Shuteye Hotel (2007)
  • Gary Guitar (2008)
  • Hot Dog (2008) (third in the Guard Dog series)
  • Santa: The Fascist Years (2008)
  • Horn Dog (2009) (fourth in the Guard Dog series)

Compilations (DVD)

  • Avoid Eye Contact Vol. 1
  • Avoid Eye Contact Vol. 2
  • Bill Plympton's Dirty Shorts
  • Plymptoons: The Complete Early Works of Bill Plympton (1992)
  • Mondo Plympton (2007)
  • Bill Plympton's Dog Days (2009)

Music videos

Commercials

[citation needed]

  • The F-Word Documentary (2005)
  • United Airlines "Signature" (2005)
  • Geico Direct (6) (1999)
  • Microsoft Windows '95 (1995)
  • Taco Bell (1993)
  • Nik Naks (UK) (1993)
  • Soloflex (1992)
  • Trivial Pursuit (3) (1990-91)
  • Nutrasweet (1991)
  • MTV public service announcement "Acid Rain" (1989)

Footnotes

References

Interviews


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Director. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bill Plympton" Read more

 
TV Listings
Bill Plympton at LocateTV.com

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