'Say You, Say Me' from the movie White Nights won the Golden Globe for Best Original Song - Motion Picture in 1986.
James Algar animator Samuel Armstrong background artist Art Babbitt animator Jack Campbell animator Les Clark animator Claude Coats background artist Merle Cox background artist Shamus Culhane animator Phil Dike background artist Ugo D'Orsi animator Al Eugster animator Norman Ferguson supervising animator Bernard Garbutt animator Milt Kahl animator Ward Kimball animator Eric Larson animator Ray Lockrem background artist Dick Lundy animator Hamilton Luske supervising animator Robert Martsch animator Joshua Meador animator Fred Moore supervising animator Grim Natwick animator Mique Nelson background artist Maurice Noble background artist Stan Quackenbush animator Wolfgang Reitherman animator Bill Roberts animator George Rowley animator Fred Spencer animator Robert Stokes animator Frank Thomas animator Bill Tytla supervising animator Marvin Woodward animator Cy Young animator
Good Night & Good Luck
you go and white on it
Black picture frames will provide a great contrast to the white walls and draw attention to the picture.
Nope. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs have that honor. The first motion picture they ever made was a Mickey mouse cartoon.
In 1878 Eadweard Muybridge produced a series of stereoscopic images of a galloping horse using 24 cameras. This is likely the first "motion picture" ever made.
No
Griflon is a Motion Picture film-making term. It is a large reinforced poly-film fabric, used to bounce light or create shade. Most often black on one side and white on the other.
Monochrome generally indicates a black and white picture.
The first animated standard feature film is widely considered to be "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," released by Walt Disney Productions in 1937. This groundbreaking film was the first full-length cel-animated feature in motion picture history and set the standard for future animated films. Its success demonstrated the potential of animation as a serious storytelling medium, paving the way for numerous animated classics to follow.
You can find a picture of her by getting a Disney book of her.