CA -- San Francisco -- Presidio -- Walt Disney Family Museum -- Gallery 03: New Horizons in the 1930s:
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Description of Pictures: 1928–1940
Gallery 3
Exploring New Horizons
The Development of Character:
Walt wanted to personify his characters. Starting with the 1933 Silly Symphony Three Little Pigs, he focused on giving them distinct personality traits through the way they moved. The art of personality animation would become one of the Studios’ most important innovations.
i
“By nature, I’m an experimenter.”
When Walt imagined cartoons, he set them to music in his mind. So he tested the idea on his first Silly Symphony, The Skeleton Dance. “We had to get beyond getting a laugh.” Throughout the 1930s, the innovative cartoon series served as his creative testing ground for the advancement of animation.
The Invention of the Storyboard:
As with the 1938 Academy AwardŽ-winning short Ferdinand the Bull, the storyboard allowed Walt to create a coherent and consistent story. Invented at The Walt Disney Studios, storyboards would allow the filmmakers to visualize the plot, shuffle story sketches, or swap them out until the story was just right.
“Mickey Mouse has a daughter.”
The Los Angeles Times made the announcement the day after Walt and Lilly became proud parents of their first child, Diane. “Wanting to have a larger family and for me not to be an only child, they decided to adopt a daughter. Shortly after my third birthday… my sister Sharon came into our home.”—Diane Disney Miller
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Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
WDFM03_180714_001.JPG: New horizons in the 1930's
"By nature, I'm an experimenter. So, with the success of Mickey, I was determined to diversify. I had another idea - the Silly Symphonies - a series without a central character, which would give me latitude to develop the animated cartoon medium."
"The first was The Skeleton Dance. The reaction was - why does Walt fool around with skeletons? Give us more mice. So, for a while, it looked like the first Silly Symphony would not get out of the graveyard. But once more, a showman came to the rescue. Fred Miller, who was managing director of the Carthay Circle Theater in Los Angeles, took a chance on the film. The Skeleton Dance got a wonderful reception, and wonderful reviews. Thus was the series launched." - Walt
"At first the cartoon medium was just a novelty, but it never really began to hit until we had more than tricks. We had to get beyond getting a laugh." - Walt
The 1930s witnessed a phenomenal creative explosion at the Walt Disney Studio. The Mickey Mouse series continued, building on Mickey's success in 1928 and '29 and producing new cartoons that were increasingly fresh, funny, and popular. At the same time, Walt launched a new series in 1929: the Silly Symphonies. These innovative cartoons, founded on the bond between animation and music, flourished during the 1930s and allowed Walt to explore new creative horizons. They brought a new level of prestige to the Disney studio and to animation itself.
WDFM03_180714_007.JPG: Art and Music
WDFM03_180714_008.JPG: Left to right: Walt, Webb Smith, Ted Sears, and Pinto Colvig, early 1930s
WDFM03_180714_014.JPG: Model sheet for Practical Pig (1939)
WDFM03_180714_056.JPG: The Silly Symphonies
WDFM03_180714_059.JPG: Mickey Mouse
WDFM03_180714_062.JPG: Walt and Mickey
WDFM03_180714_093.JPG: Mickey and Minnie
WDFM03_180714_095.JPG: Walt, ca. 1933
WDFM03_180714_096.JPG: Donald Duck
WDFM03_180714_097.JPG: Walt and Clarence Nash on sound stage, 1947
WDFM03_180714_098.JPG: Pluto
WDFM03_180714_101.JPG: Goofy
WDFM03_180714_129.JPG: Color
WDFM03_180714_137.JPG: Inking and Painting
WDFM03_180714_140.JPG: The Silly Symphonies
WDFM03_180714_142.JPG: Trouble
WDFM03_180714_151.JPG: Letter from Lilly to the studio group
January 30, 1930
WDFM03_180714_164.JPG: Walt at the top of the stars at his new home in Woking Way, ca 1932
WDFM03_180714_171.JPG: Depth
WDFM03_180714_174.JPG: Family Story
WDFM03_180714_180.JPG: Walt and Lilly with baby Diane, ca 1934
WDFM03_180714_184.JPG: Character
WDFM03_180714_186.JPG: Cel setup, Three Little Pigs (1933)
WDFM03_180714_193.JPG: Hamilton Luske
The Tortoise and the Hare (1935)
WDFM03_180714_198.JPG: Hamilton Luske
Clean-up animation drawing
The Tortoise and the Hare (1935)
WDFM03_180714_201.JPG: Comics
WDFM03_180714_204.JPG: Walt with Mickey Mouse Series No. 1, 1931
WDFM03_180714_207.JPG: Win Smith
Mickey Mouse daily strip, March 13, 1930
At the time of this installment, the Mickey Mouse strip was still written by Walt himself.
WDFM03_180714_211.JPG: Floyd Gottfredson
Mickey Mouse daily strip, July 24, 1933
WDFM03_180714_219.JPG: Storyboards
Storyboards were invested at the Walt Disney Studio in the early 1930s, and Webb Smith, a Disney storyman, is credited with the idea. ...
WDFM03_180714_262.JPG: Creative and Personal Success
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Wikipedia Description: The Walt Disney Family Museum
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Walt Disney Family Museum is an American museum that features the life and legacy of Walt Disney. The museum is located in The Presidio of San Francisco, part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area in San Francisco. The Museum retrofitted and expanded three existing historic buildings on the Presidio’s Main Post. The principal building, at 104 Montgomery Street, faces the Parade Ground, and opened on October 1, 2009.
The Walt Disney Family Museum, LLC is owned, operated and funded by the Walt Disney Family Foundation, a non-profit organization established by Disney's heirs (including Diane Marie Disney, co-founder of the Museum). It is not formally associated with The Walt Disney Company, the media and entertainment enterprise. Museum co-founders are Diane Disney Miller, Walter E.D. Miller, and Joanna Miller Runeare; executive director is Richard Benefield.
Exhibits:
Exhibits in the museum focus on Walt Disney's life and career. The lobby displays 248 awards that Disney won during his career, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom and many Academy Awards.
There are ten permanent galleries:
1. Beginnings -- Material on Disney's ancestors, childhood and early adulthood. Included are early cartoon drawings and a replica of the ambulance he drove in France after World War I. The beginnings of his animation career are explained.
2. Hollywood -- Disney's California partnership with his brother Roy led to the success of Mickey Mouse.
3. New Horizons in the 1930s. -- Disney's success led to fame and significant improvement in animation techniques.
4. The move to features -- Original art from the production of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is on diplay.
5. "We were in a new business" -- Additional animated features follow, including Pinocchio, Fantasia and Bambi. Disney builds a new studio in Burbank.
6. "The toughest period in my life" -- Labor unrest and Disn ...More...
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2018 photos: Equipment this year: I continued to use my Fuji XS-1 cameras but, depending on the event, I also used a Nikon D7000.
Trips this year:
Civil War Trust conferences in Greenville, NC, Newport News, VA, and my farewell event with them in Chicago, IL (via sites in Louisville, KY, St. Louis, MO, and Toledo, OH),
three trips to New York City (including New York Comic-Con), and
my 13th consecutive trip to San Diego Comic-Con (including sites in Reno, Sacramento, San Francisco, and Los Angeles).
Number of photos taken this year: about 535,000.
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