Creation of an Empire – Part 2

A successful business turns into a movie-making and entertainment dream

See Creation of an Empire – Part 1 for the first part of our series.

By 1934, Walt became unsatisfied by cartoon shorts and thought a full-length film would be more profitable. he studio began the four-year production of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, based on the fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm. When news leaked out about the project, many in the film industry predicted it would bankrupt the company; industry insiders nicknamed it “Disney’s Folly”.

Disney first got the idea to do a Snow White film when he was 15, while he was working as a newsboy in Kansas City. The budget for the film eventually grew to over $2 million -an astronomical figure for the time. To put this in perspective, Snow White had gone 400% over budget. It actually ended up costing more than the value of the entire Walt Disney studio. And Disney had never made a feature film of any kind before. Also, this was to be the first-ever animated feature film in color.

During this time, Disney animators invented the multiplane camera which allowed drawings on pieces of glass to be set at various distances from the camera, creating an illusion of depth. The glass could be moved to create the impression of a camera passing through the scene.

Snow White premiered in December 1937 to high praise from critics and audiences. The film became the most successful motion picture of 1938 and by May 1939 its total gross of $6.5 million made it the most successful sound film made to that date.

The success of Snow White heralded one of the most productive eras for the studio; the Walt Disney Family Museum calls the following years “the ‘Golden Age of Animation’ ”. With work on Snow White finished, the studio began producing Pinocchio in early 1938 and Fantasia in November of the same year. Both films were released in 1940, and neither performed well at the box office‍—‌partly because revenues from Europe had dropped following the start of World War II in 1939. The studio made a loss on both pictures and was deeply in debt by the end of February 1941.

In response to the financial crisis, Disney and his brother Roy started the company’s first public stock offering in 1940, and implemented heavy salary cuts, which caused the animator’s strike in 1941 which lasted 5 weeks. As a result of the strike‍ and the financial state of the company‍, several animators left the studio.The strike temporarily interrupted the studio’s next production, Dumbo (1941), which Disney produced in a simple and inexpensive manner.

Shortly after the release of Dumbo in October 1941, the U.S. entered World War II. Walt Disney met with Henry Morgenthau, Jr., the Secretary of the Treasury, and agreed to produce short Donald Duck cartoons to promote war bonds as well as other military films. The military films generated only enough revenue to cover costs, and the feature film Bambi‍—‌which had been in production since 1937‍—‌underperformed on its release in April 1942, and lost $200,000 at the box office.

Disney’s production of short films decreased in the late 1940s, coinciding with increasing competition in the animation market from Warner Bros. and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). In 1948, Disney initiated a series of popular live-action nature films, titled True-Life Adventures, with Seal Island the first winning the Academy Award.

In early 1950, Disney produced Cinderella, his studio’s first animated feature in eight years. Costing $2.2 million to produce, it earned nearly $8 million in its first year.

Disney was less involved than he had been with previous pictures because of his involvement in his first entirely live-action feature, Treasure Island (1950). Other all-live-action features followed, many of which had patriotic themes.

He continued to produce full-length animated features too, including Alice in Wonderland (1951) and Peter Pan (1953). From the early to mid-1950s, Disney began to devote less attention to the animation department, entrusting most of its operations to his key animators, the Nine Old Men, although he was always present at story meetings. Instead, he started concentrating on other ventures.

These films and innovations in movie-making, as well as, a successful business would allow him to continue his dream of entertainment and move into the realm of theme parks.

Stay tuned for the next part of this series looking at the life and career of Walt Disney!

Creation of an Empire – Part 1

Just how did Walt Disney develop a passion that would later change the world of entertainment

There have been companies show up on the main stage and flourish for awhile, but then, it seems, we see them die out or simply be surpassed by the competition. We see that they have had a great idea or product and that great idea/product pushes the company into rarified air only to watch the competitors come up with a better idea/product. We see companies all of the time, who are led by a charismatic visionary, but then, when that leader leaves, they falter under new leadership.

So how is the Walt Disney Company different than almost any other company in the history of business? Or is it?

This question has to be answered by going back to its origins. Into the mind of one man from Chicago, Illinois.

Walter Elias Disney, born in 1901 to Elias and Flora Disney, was the 4th son of 5 children. At an early age, he developed a passion for art and used it as a medium to show his creativity. He took art classes as a boy and when his family moved to Kansas City, Missouri, in 1911, he met Walter Pfeiffer. Pfeiffer’s family introduced Walt to the world of vaudeville and motion pictures.

During his time in Missouri, Walt attended weekend classes at the Kansas City Art Institute as well as a course in cartooning.

A Young Walt Disney

Elias moved his family back to Chicago in 1917, where Walt became the cartoonist for the high school newspaper. He continued his schooling be art schooling by attending the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.

Walt would draw patriotic pictures of World War I for the school newspaper, inspiring him to attempt to enroll in the U.S. Army. After being rejected for being too young, Walt forged the date of birth on his birth certificate and joined the Red Cross.

While serving as an ambulance driver for the Red Cross, he would paint cartoons on the side of his ambulance and had some of his pictures published in the army newspaper, Stars and Stripes.

At the age of 18, Walt returned to Kansas City where he got a job as a commercial illustrator at the Pesman-Rubin Commercial Art Studio. While drawing pictures for advertising, theater programs and catalogs, Walt met a man who, later, would help him change the entertainment industry…Ub Iwerks.

In 1920, Disney began to became interested in animation. With the help of a borrowed book on animation and a camera, he started experimenting at home.

Disney and Iwerks started a small studio of their own in 1922 and acquired a secondhand movie camera with which they made one and two-minute animated advertising films for distribution to local movie theaters. They also did a series of animated cartoon sketches called Laugh-O-grams and the pilot film for a series of seven-minute fairy tales that combined both live action and animation, Alice in Cartoonland.

A New York film distributor cheated the young producers, and Disney was forced to file for bankruptcy in 1923.

He moved to California to pursue a career as a cinematographer, but the surprise success of the first Alice film compelled Disney and his brother Roy—a lifelong business partner—to reopen shop in Hollywood.

Walt and Roy Disney

They, then, invented a character called Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, which was distributed for $1,500 each, and launched their small enterprise.

In 1927, just before the transition to sound in motion pictures, Disney and Iwerks experimented with a new character—a cheerful, energetic, and mischievous mouse called Mickey.

Recognizing the possibilities for sound in animated-cartoon films, Disney quickly produced a Mickey Mouse cartoon equipped with voices and music, entitled Steamboat Willie. When it appeared in 1928, Steamboat Willie was a sensation.  In the words of one Disney employee, “Ub designed Mickey’s physical appearance, but Walt gave him his soul.”

The growing popularity of Mickey Mouse and his girlfriend, Minnie, however, attested to the public’s taste for the fantasy of little creatures with the speech, skills, and personality traits of human beings. (Disney himself provided the voice for Mickey until 1947.) This popularity led to the invention of other animal characters, such as Donald Duck and the dogs Pluto and Goofy.

In the early 1930s, in the midst of the Great Depression, Disney fully endeared himself and his cartoons to audiences all over the world, and his operation began making money in spite of the hard economic times.

Disney hired the professional composer and arranger Carl Stalling, on whose suggestion the Silly Symphony series was developed, providing stories through the use of music. Also hired at this time were several local artists, some of whom stayed with the company as core animators; the group later became known as the Nine Old Men.

Co-creator of Mickey Mouse, Ub Iwerks left to start Iwerks Studio in 1930.

Color was introduced in the Academy Award-winning Silly Symphonies film Flowers and Trees (1932), while other animal characters came and went in films such as The Grasshopper and the Ants (1934) and The Tortoise and the Hare (1935).

In 1933, Disney produced The Three Little Pigs. The film won Disney another Academy Award in the Short Subject (Cartoon) category. The film’s success led to a further increase in the studio’s staff, which numbered nearly 200 by the end of the year.

Disney realized the importance of telling emotionally gripping stories that would interest the audience, and he invested in a “story department” separate from the animators, with storyboard artists who would detail the plots of Disney’s films.

A passion and creativity had been developed, a company had been formed. From art classes to a full fledged business, Walt Disney never stopped testing the limits of what was possible in animation and entertainment.

These early successes would lead to what would then be deemed to be the golden age of animation…..

Stay tuned for the second part of our series, Creation of an Empire.

Subscribe to our email updates and stories at www.awalkwiththemouse.com