Tampilkan postingan dengan label les clark. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label les clark. Tampilkan semua postingan

Rabu, 01 Februari 2012

Les Clark - Disney's Nine Old Men

Les Clark (November 17, 1907 - September 12, 1979) joined the Disney Studio on February 23, 1927, working there for over six years before the next of the Nine Old Men, Wolfgang Reitherman, was to arrive.

Clark was also the only one of the nine that worked directly with Ub Iwerks, training under him and helping to develop the new character of Mickey Mouse after Oswald the Rabbit was no longer a Disney property. Les' first solo animation was on The Skeleton Dance (1929).




About five years later, in preparation for Snow White, Walt Disney knew his animators needed practice with creating believable human figures. By this time, Les was a pro when it came to drawing Mickey Mouse, but things proved more challenging with The Goddess of Spring. He was one of three that animated the human characters for this short. Unfortunately, Persephone ended up looking more rubbery than realistic.

Clark once said, " I had a hard time with the figure. Not that I didn't know how to draw it, but to animate it."

Personally, Goddess is still one of my favorite Silly Symphonies, but it wasn't up to the level of realism Walt was looking to achieve with Snow White.

The Goddess of Spring


Les working at his desk (far right) in cramped conditions at the Disney studio...

Disney Animators, left to right, David Hand, Dick Lundy, Norm Ferguson, Les Clark


No matter what troubles he might have experienced with The Goddess of Spring, Les was a dedicated artist. He attended the in-house art school at the studio long after the other "hard-core" animators felt they'd learned enough from the classes.

Clark's contributions to Snow White involved the all-important "Silly Song" dance sequence. There was the scene where Dopey slips the cymbal to Sleepy as he swats at the fly...




Doc and Happy before Sneezy's nasal explosion and afterwards...




The most challenging segment that Les worked on was the ...
...thankless task of co-animating (with Ham Luske and Marc Davis) a complex scene of Snow White dancing [with the dwarfs]. The full figures--moving toward and away from the viewer across the floor to a musical beat, each dancing in a way that expressed their character--were extremely difficult to organize and animate. There were problems in matching tight, traced-over live-action ("rotoscoped") footage of Snow White with the freehand caricatures of the dwarfs. Clark accepted the thankless high-wire act without a qualm and worked like hell to complete it successfully.
From John Canemaker's Nine Old Men book, p. 25




Les Clark, post-Snow White 1940s...

Les Clark photos via John Canemaker's Walt Disney's Nine Old Men and the Art of Animation, 2001.
Snow White image scans copyright Disney.


Les contributed to many of the classic animated features during his time at the studio and eventually moved into directing. In 1975, after 48 years, he retired from Disney. He passed away four years later.

Further reading:
  • Michael Barrier's A Day in the Life: Disney, January 1930, photos
  • Disney Legends: Bio
  • 50 Most Influential Disney Animators: Les Clark

Selasa, 31 Januari 2012

The Nine Old Men

1958 Photo: left to right, Kimball, Larson, Thomas, Davis, Johnston, Clark, Kahl, Lounsbery, Reitherman

Much has been written about the Nine Old Men and their larger-than-life animation achievements. These were not the first talented artists to work for the Disney Studio, yet they certainly became it's creative core for more than 40 years.

Probably the most definitive work on these 'conquistadors' of the Golden Age is John Canemaker's book, Walt Disney's Nine Old Men and the Art of Animation (Disney Editions, 2001, ISBN-10: 0786864966).

Front Cover

Canemaker recounts how Walt jokingly nicknamed this dream team after President Roosevelt's description of his contentious 1937 Supreme Court, "nine old men, all too aged to recognize a new idea."

Newspaper Cartoon, February 9, 1937, Brooklyn Citizen via New Deal Network.

Of course, the animators were neither old nor afraid of new ideas. Quite the opposite, they would be the leaders, taking the art of animation to new heights.

The Nine Old Men were:

1972 Photo: left to right, Kahl, Reitherman, Davis, Clark, Thomas, Kimball, Larson, Lounsbery, Johnston

Animator Les Clark was the first to be hired in early 1927. The rest of the group came in between 1933-35, just as things were heating up for the making of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. From 1935-37, all nine of the very young "old men" would be involved.

Throughout this month, we'll take a closer look at what each contributed to the film and in what capacity they served the animation factory that was the Disney Studio of the late 1930s.

Further reading: