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Harman and Ising

 
Director: Rudolf Ising
  • Occupation: Director
  • Active: '30s-'40s
  • Major Genres: Children's/Family, Musical
  • Career Highlights: We're in the Money, Wake up the Gypsy in Me, Shuffle Off to Buffalo
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Booze Hangs High (1930)

Biography

Rudolf Ising and his partner Hugh Harman were pioneers of modern animation and were responsible for launching Warner Brother's classic Looney Tunes and Merry Melodies series. Ising got his start in 1922 as an inker with Disney's first cartoon studio, "Newman's Laugh-O-Grams" out of Kansas City, Missouri where he helped create brief animated advertisements. Harman came on board shortly thereafter. The two started their own studio in 1929 after Disney moved to California. Their first was a three-minute cartoon Bosko the Talkink Kid. Bosko was a young negro who spoke in a thick dialect and wore a derby. He bore more than a casual resemblance to Mickey Mouse as did his associates Honey (who looked like Minnie Mouse) and his dog Bruno (a relative of Pluto). The actual animation was done by Harman and Friz Freleng. Eventually the pilot short was picked by the president of Pacific Arts and Titles, Leon Schlesinger. He was closely affiliated with Warners and got the team a production contract to create more Bosko cartoons. Bosko made his big-screen debut in Sinkin' in the Bathtub. It was not only the first animated cartoon to feature synchronized sound dialogue but also the very first in the Looney Tunes series. Premiering in New York along with the Warners feature film Song of Flames, each of the early Bosko cartoons ended with the trademark "That's all folks!" Harman-Ising launched a second series, an early version of Merry Melodies, in 1931. Ising went on to become the series supervisor and director while Harman continued to focus on Looney Tunes and the Bosko series. This marked the unofficial split of Harman-Ising, though both of their names appeared on the cartoon credits. The two eventually left Warner's over money disputes and ended up working at MGM. There they attempted to bring back Bosko and also worked on a few new characters. While the cartoons they produced were lovely, they were nothing special. During this period, Ising created an important self-parody, Barney Bear, who later became the model for former MGM animators Hanna-Barbara's more famous Yogi Bear. Later Ising was involved with the very first Tom and Jerry cartoon. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Harman and Ising
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Hugh Harman
Born August 31, 1903(1903-08-31)
Pagosa Springs, Colorado, USA
Died 25 November 1982 (aged 79)
Chatsworth, California, USA
Rudolf Ising
Born August 7, 1903(1903-08-07)
Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Died 18 July 1992 (aged 88)
Newport Beach, California, USA

Hugh Harman (August 31, 1903November 25, 1982) and Rudolf "Rudy" Ising (August 7, 1903July 18, 1992) were an American animator/film director/film producer team best known for founding the Warner Bros. and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer animation studios. They are particularly celebrated for their 1939 antiwar MGM cartoon Peace on Earth and won an Oscar for the MGM cartoon The Milky Way in 1940.

Biography

Harman and Ising first worked in animation in the early 1920s at Walt Disney's studio in Kansas City. When Disney moved operations to California, Harman, Ising, and fellow animator Carmen Maxwell stayed behind to try to start their own studio. Their plans went nowhere, however, and the men soon joined Disney out West to work on his Alice Comedies and Oswald the Lucky Rabbit films. It was during this time, that Harman and Ising developed a style of cartoon drawing that would later be closely associated with Disney while Harman and Ising's contribution would become completely ignored. In 1925, Hugh Harman drew some sketches of mice around a photograph of Walt Disney which would later inspire Ub Iwerks to create a new character for Disney called Mickey Mouse.[1]

When producer Charles Mintz ended his association with Disney, Harman and Ising went to work for Mintz, whose brother-in-law, George Winkler, set up a new animation studio to make the Oswald cartoons. The Oswald cartoons which Harman and Ising produced in 1928 and 1929 already reveal their distinctive style which would later characterized their work on the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoon series for Warner Bros.[2] For example, in Sick Cylinders (1928)[3] there are sequences which were later remade very closely in such Harman and Ising Warner Bros. efforts as Sinkin' in the Bathtub (1930)[4] and Bosko's Holiday (1931).[5] The Oswald cartoons that Harman and Ising worked on are completely different from the Oswald cartoon made before and after and can easily be distinguished by anyone familiar with their work.[2] Late in 1929, Universal Pictures who owned the rights to Oswald, started its own animation studio headed by Walter Lantz, replacing Mintz and forcing Harman and Ising out of work.[6]

Even while still with Disney, Harman and Ising had aspired to start their own studio, and had created and copyrighted the cartoon character Bosko in 1928. After losing their jobs at the Winkler studio, Harman and Ising financed a short Bosko demonstration film called Bosko, the Talk-Ink Kid, notable for being the first sound cartoon of the late-1920s "talkie" era with dialogue. The sound cartoon, which featured Bosko at odds with his animator (portrayed in live-action by Rudy Ising) impressed Leon Schlesinger, who paired Harman and Ising with Warner Bros. Schlesinger wanted the Bosko character to star in a new series of "talkie" cartoons he dubbed Looney Tunes. The two animated Sinkin' in the Bathtub in 1930, and the cartoon did well. Harman took over direction of the Looney Tunes starring the character, while Ising took a sister series called Merrie Melodies that consisted of one-shot stories and characters.

The two animators broke off ties with Schlesinger later in 1933 over budget disputes with the miserly producer. They went to Van Beuren cartoon studio (who were making cartoon for RKO Radio Pictures), where they were offered a contract to produce the Cubby Bear cartoon series.[7] Harman and Ising produced two cartoons for this series which were actually released. These cartoons show their distinctive style and can easily be distinguished from the rest of that series which was poorly animated. Harman and Ising were in the midst of making a third cartoon when a contractual dispute arose. Harman and Ising left Van Beuren, but kept the completed cartoon and finally released it in the 1940s.[8]

Harman and Ising had maintained the rights to the Bosko character, and they signed a deal with MGM to start a new series of Bosko shorts in 1934. The two maintained the same sort of workload they had had at Warner Bros.: Harman worked on Bosko shorts, and Ising directed one-shots. They also tried unsuccessfully to create new cartoon stars for their new distributors. Their cartoons, though technically superior to those they had made for Schlesinger, were still music-driven shorts with little to no plot. When the new Happy Harmonies series ran significantly over-budget in 1937, MGM fired Harman and Ising and established its own in-house studio headed by Fred Quimby.

Harman and Ising still found some work as animation freelancers, directing, for example, the Silly Symphony Merbabies for Disney in 1938. When Disney later reneged on a deal he had made for two other Harman-Ising pictures, the animators sold the cartoons to Quimby at MGM. Quimby later agreed to hire the animators back to the studio. Ising created the character Barney Bear for MGM at this time, basing the sleepy-eyed character partially on himself. In 1939, Harman created his masterpiece, Peace on Earth, a downbeat morality tale about two squirrels discovering the evils of humanity, which was nominated for an Oscar. Despite the success of this and other cartoons, MGM's production under Harman and Ising remained low.

In 1941, Harman left MGM and started a new studio with Disney veteran Mel Shaw. The two took over Ub Iwerks' old studio in Beverly Hills, California, where they created training films for the Army. Ising quit the studio in 1942 to join the military.

In 1960, Harman-Ising produced a pilot episode for a made for TV cartoon series titled The Adventures of Sir Gee Whiz on the Other Side of the Moon.[9] The unsold pilot for the never produced series was profiled on episode 6 of Cartoon Dump. Rudy Ising was the voice of Sir Gee Whiz.[10]

Harman and Ising are little known, even among some animation fans. Although they contributed to much of what would later be known as the Disney style, they have been dismissed as mere copycats. In reality, Harman and Ising never attempted to imitate Disney; they were attempting to make refined polished cartoons whose quality would shine in comparison to the work of others.[11] Their repeated attempts to make quality cartoons and their refusal to be bound by budgets led to numerous disputes with their producers. Because of this, they were unable to create any enduring characters. Instead, they created studios that would later produce such characters.

References

  1. ^ Kenworthy, John The Hand Behind the Mouse, Disney Editions: New York, 2001. p.54.
  2. ^ a b Putterman, Barry, "Le origini: il periodo Harman-Ising (1930-1935)" Griffithiana Vol VII nr 16-17 (June 1984); p 10.
  3. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries: Motion Pictures: 1912-1939 Copyright Office: Library of Congress, 1951: 770.
  4. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries: Motion Pictures: 1912-1939 Copyright Office: Library of Congress, 1951: 755.
  5. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries: Motion Pictures: 1912-1939 Copyright Office: Library of Congress, 1951: 84.
  6. ^ Putterman, Barry, "Le origini: il periodo Harman-Ising (1930-1935)" Griffithiana Vol VII nr 16-17 (June 1984); p 11.
  7. ^ Putterman, Barry, "Le origini: il periodo Harman-Ising (1930-1935)" Griffithiana Vol VII nr 16-17 (June 1984); p 13.
  8. ^ Putterman, Barry, "Le origini: il periodo Harman-Ising (1930-1935)" Griffithiana Vol VII nr 16-17 (June 1984); p 14.
  9. ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1129366/
  10. ^ http://cartoonbrewfilms.com/cartoondump6
  11. ^ Hugh Harman interview, 1973

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