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Walt
Disney, Part I
Brian
Trumbore
President/Editor, StocksandNews.com
In the book "1,000 Years, 1,000 People,"
the authors rank Walt Disney #494.
"Disney's
Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck appeal to children of
all ages. He mixed sound and animation to introduce
the world's most famous mouse in the 1928 cartoon
phenomenon 'Steamboat Willie.' Next, he mastered color
with his premier full-length cartoon, 'Snow White
and the Seven Dwarfs.' Disney immortalized on film
such childhood classics as 'Cinderella,' 'Sleeping
Beauty,' and 'Winnie the Pooh.' He then turned his
Midas touch to live-action films. Perhaps most spectacular
was Disney's transformation of the ideal family vacation
from a week at the beach into total immersion in his
fantasy worlds. When Disneyland opened in California
in 1955 to a never-ending stream of oh-so-happy patrons,
Walt planned a bigger and better theme park in Orlando,
Florida. After he died, rumors spread that he had
his body frozen until medicine advanced enough to
thaw him out. We still don't know if that's true,
but we think that's a Goofy idea."
For
those of us of a certain age, can you believe it's
been 40 years since Walt Disney died in 1966? Sometimes
it seems like yesterday, but then I remember the other
programs that were on when I was watching "The Wonderful
World of Disney" on television, now incredibly dated
programs like "Lost in Space," "Time Tunnel" and "Voyage
to the Bottom of the Sea," and so, yes, it does seem
like 40 years.
Then
again, the beauty of Walt Disney is that his work
was timeless.
I
admit to knowing little of Walt Disney's life until
picking up Harold Evans's book "They Made America,"
which focuses on the great innovators of the past
two centuries. He has an extensive segment on Disney
from which the following is largely based. The other
sources listed have more to do with part II of this
tale.
Walter
Elias Disney was born on Dec. 5, 1901, the fourth
of five children produced by his father, Elias, and
mother, Flora. Walt was preceded by Herbert (1888),
Raymond (1890) and Roy O. (1893), but Herbert and
Raymond would run away when Walt was growing up so
they have zero to do with the story. Roy O., on the
other hand, ends up being the financial mastermind.
The last sibling was Walt's sister, Ruth (1903).
Elias
Disney (1859-1941) participated in the building of
the Union Pacific rail line through Colorado. The
bulk of his life, though, he wandered between Florida
and the Midwest, holding jobs from mail carrier to
schoolteacher to cabinetmaker, and all manner of other
things in between. As for Walt's mother, Flora, Roy
E., son of Roy O. and a source of much of the material
for Walt's biographers, remembers Flora as a "dream
grandmother, very warm with a great sense of fun."
Elias,
though, was stern and humorless and took to beating
Walt with his belt. While not unusual for the time,
Walt didn't take it real well.
At
the same time Elias did have his kids' best interests
at heart and he was always looking to better their
lives, so he moved the family from Chicago to a 40-acre
farm in the community of Marceline, Missouri.
The
older boys were stuck with the hard chores as Walt
was too young for much of the work, so as Roy E. told
a writer once, "Because Walt didn't have to work with
animals the way the older boys did, he became friends
with the animals instead."
Walt
was intrigued by animal behavior, whether it was a
bird or squirrel, and all their characteristics would
later find their way into his animated movies.
But
as noted earlier the two oldest boys ran away and
Elias moved the remainder of the family to Kansas
City where he distributed the Kansas City Star.
Walt,
now in grammar school, spent his free time doodling,
sketching flowers and trees. Later, the restless Elias
moved the family back to Chicago where Walt attended
night classes at the Illinois Institute of Art. It's
now 1917-18; Walt tried to enter the Army a year earlier
than allowed by falsifying his birthday but he didn't
get to Europe until after the armistice because he
suffered from influenza. He ended up driving Red Cross
trucks and chauffeuring officers in Paris.
Walt
was becoming an adult and he deserves major kudos
for winning $300 (a huge sum for the times) at an
all-night poker game.
Now
back in the States, in 1919 Walt returned to Kansas
City to look for a job at the Star as an artist. When
he was turned down for that he applied for every job
imaginable at the paper, but he came up empty.
So
he walked into Pesmen-Rubin Commercial Art Studio
and was hired to prepare advertisements. Walt only
lasted six weeks here but in that time he made a critical
connection, Ubbe ("Ub") Iwerks (1901-1971), who taught
Walt the tricks of the trade. Ub was amused that Walt
kept playing around with his name - Walter, W.E.,
Walt, Walter Elias - and finally Ub convinced him
he should call himself Walt Disney. As Harold Evans
observes, even then "Walt was into branding."
After
being released from Pesmen-Rubin following the Christmas
rush, Walt got a job as a mail carrier. But when Iwerks
was fired a few weeks later, the two decided to form
Iwerks-Disney Commercial Artists in January 1920.
They picked up a few contracts but they were bankrupt
a few months later and both ended up at the Kansas
City Film Ad Company.
Disney
and Iwerks hung out at the public library and pored
over the latest in animation. At the Kansas City Film
Ad Company the work was crude but the two smoothed
it out.
Harold
Evans:
"The
method was to cut human and animal figures out of
paper, film them in one position, move them slightly
and film them again to create the illusion of movement.
This required the concentration of the two of them,
one to crank the camera and the other to move the
drawings. To make this easier, Ub rigged up a telegraph-key
switch to activate the camera so that one of them
could do everything while just sitting at the animation
table. It was a classic Iwerks solution."
Disney
wasn't half the artist that Iwerks was, but Walt was
the storyteller. Outside of their formal job the two
then began to work on one-minute animated jokes called
Laugh-O-grams.
In
May 1922, Walt left his buddy Iwerks to set up Laugh-O-gram
Films, backed by $15,000 from Kansas City professionals.
He hired a dozen young people to work on a series
of animated stories that included 'Little Red Riding
Hood' and 'Jack and the Beanstalk.'
Walt
signed a distribution deal with a New York company
called Pictorial Clubs and Laugh-O-gram films was
to be paid $1,800 for each of the first half-dozen
cartoons. Iwerks came back at this time and they put
together a slew of Laugh-O-grams for Pictorial.
But
Pictorial had paid only a $100 deposit and never came
through with the $11,000 they owed Walt and Ub so
both Laugh- O-gram and Pictorial went bankrupt by
the middle of 1923.
Walt
Disney was so broke he slept in his office and showered
at Union Station. "It was probably the blackest time
of my life," he later told an interviewer. No kidding.
But
then a local dentist signed Walt for $500 to produce
a little film on dental hygience, 'Tommy Tucker's
Tooth,' which was enough to allow Walt to work on
his next big idea, 'Alice's Wonderland.'
So
around now you might be thinking, hey, where's brother
Roy? Wasn't he supposed to be part of the story?
Roy
was back in California, flat on his back in a sanatorium,
a victim of tuberculosis acquired while in World War
I. Roy told Walt to file for bankruptcy, again, and
move to Hollywood. Walt was down to his last $40,
but as Roy would later say, "Tomorrow was always going
to be the answer to all his problems."
The
Hollywood of 1923 was one of Rudolph Valentino, Clara
Bow, Tom Mix, Cecil B. DeMille, D.W. Griffith, and
the likes of Louis B. Mayer and Irving Thalberg; the
latter two going on to form Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
But
as hard as Walt tried to find a job, any job, he came
up empty and was forced to go back to cartooning.
It's here that Harold Evans makes an important point.
"The
idea that it was his life's dedication from day one
is moonshine. Had he been given any job in Hollywood,
he would have cheerfully abandoned animation in light
of the intense competition from New York's cartoon
factories."
Walt
set up shop in his father's brother's garage and he
set to sketching out some one-minute gags. Then, out
of nowhere, a woman by the name of Margaret Winkler
offered $1,500 for six 'Alice Comedies' for national
distribution. Upon hearing this, Roy, ignoring his
doctor's orders, got out of bed and invested $285
he had saved and rounded up another $2,500 from a
mortgage on his parents' home and $500 from the uncle
who was letting Walt use his garage.
Walt
and Roy then rented a storefront in Hollywood and
stenciled a sign in the window: DISNEY BROTHERS STUDIO.
Walt
was newly married and when he returned from his honeymoon,
Roy suggested the name be changed to Walt Disney Studios.
That was Roy. The two recognized each other's strengths
and weaknesses and in the case of Walt, he knew his
animation just wasn't that great.
So
he sought out old friend Ubbe Iwerks and got Ub to
leave Kansas City and head to Hollywood. Walt wrote
him "Go West, young man?.Hooray for Hollywood!"
Iwerks
was amazing. It's said he could finish as many as
700 rough drawings a day, filled in by others.
But
while the Alice Comedies were a success, Walt Disney
Studios still wasn't turning a profit. And then Walt
learned a powerful lesson.
Margaret
Winkler had handed over her business to a new husband,
Charlie Mintz, whom Evans describes as "a natural
predator."
It's
kind of complicated but the bottom line is Mintz asked
Walt and Ub to come up with a new cartoon series.
The two created a rabbit (at the suggestion of Carl
Laemmle, head of Universal Pictures), and Mintz then
called it Oswald the Lucky Rabbit. Laemmle agreed
to pay a $2,000 advance for the first film, but then
Laemmle wasn't excited by the initial effort.
So
Walt and Iwerks came up with a sleeker "Ozzie" and
the second effort, 'Trolley Troubles,' got rave reviews.
But
then the two got a big surprise when their contract
with Mintz came up for renewal. He had secretly stolen
Walt's entire staff of animators to join a proposed
Charles Mintz Studios, and all but Iwerks and two
apprentices agreed to join him. To make matters worse,
Mintz demanded to be a partner of Disney brothers.
Heck, he owned all his animators. Then Mintz pointed
out that Walt didn't own the copyright to Oswald,
he did. [Poor Walt hadn't read the fine print.]
Harold
Evans:
"Mintz
had Walt in a vise. Walking away from the deal would
leave the Disney company with no characters, no contracts,
no cash flowing in and virtually no animators. When
Walt phoned Roy to confirm the wounding defections
[ed. Walt was in New York with Mintz], Roy urged him
to make the best settlement he could. Walt went back
to Mintz's office with a different purpose in mind.
'Here. You can have the little bastard!' he reportedly
told Mintz, 'He's all yours and good look to you.'
His rejection of Mintz was the turning point in the
history of the Walt Disney Studios. 'Never again will
I work for anyone else,' Walt told his wife, Lillian.
Taking the gamble of starting all over again was reckless,
but cleaving to his independence became central to
all of Disney's subsequent successes."
Walt
needed a new character, but cartoonists had "emptied
the menagerie." "About the only thing they hadn't
featured," wrote Walt, "was the mouse."
Ah
yes, the mouse, and so on the long train ride back
to California with Lillian, he sketched out a little
mouse that had once been bold enough to cross his
desk in his old Kansas City studio.
"He
seemed to have a personality of his own," recalled
Walt. He then dressed him up in red velvet pants and
called him Mortimer Mouse?for all of five minutes
until Lillian said it sounded stuffy. "Why not Mickey
Mouse?"
Ub
Iwerks recalls the genesis of Mickey a little differently,
later saying Hugh Harman had sketched out a mouse
around photographs of Walt, but who is right really
doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things; though
Harold Evans weighs in that Walt's story makes more
sense and, regardless, the partnership was about Ub's
drawings and Walt's ideas anyway.
But
Walt couldn't find a distributor for the first two
Mickey Mouse cartoons, 'Plane Crazy' and 'The Gallopin,''
while he had to keep raising money for a third, 'Steamboat
Willie.'
And
that's where we'll leave off for now.
Sources:
"The
Oxford Companion to United States History," edited
by Paul S. Boyer
"They Made America," Harold Evans, with Gail Buckland
and David Lefer
"1,000 Years, 1,000 People: Ranking the Men and Women
Who Shaped the Millennium," Agnes Hooper Gottlieb,
Henry Gottlieb, Barbara Bowers, Brent Bowers
"The Century," Peter Jennings and Todd Brewster
Part
II next week.
Brian
Trumbore
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