Disney, Walt
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Walt Disney
Walt Disney
Walt Disney in 1946.
Birth name: English Walter Elias Disney
Date of birth: December 5 1901(1901-12-05)[1][2]
Place of birth: Chicago, USA
Date of death: December 15 1966(1966-12-15)[3][2] (65 years)
Place of death: Burbank, Los Angeles, California, USA[3]
Citizenship: USA
Profession: animator, film director, screenwriter, producer, actor, voice actor, entrepreneur, public figure
Career: 1920-1966
Direction: family cinema
Awards:
Gold Medal of the US Congress
IMDb: ID 0000370
waltdisney.com Walt Disney on Wikimedia Commons
Walt Disney's autograph
Walter Elias Disney (also known as Walt Disney, MFA: [wwɔlt ˈdɪzni][4]; December 5, 1901, Chicago — December 15, 1966, Burbank) was an American cartoonist, film director, actor, screenwriter and producer, the founder of the company "Walt Disney Productions", which has now turned into a multimedia empire"The Walt Disney Company".
He is the creator of the first sound and musical cartoons in the history of cinema.
During his unusually busy life, Walt Disney as a director made 111 films and was the producer of another 576 films.
Disney's outstanding achievements in the field of cinema were marked by 26 Oscar statuettes (an absolute record)[5] and the Irving Thalberg Award, which has the status of an Oscar, as well as many other awards and prizes.
Content
1 Biography 1.1 Early years 1.2 Debut 1.3 Mickey Mouse and others 1.4 "Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs"," Pinocchio " 1.5 "Fantasy" 1.6 "Dumbo" and "Bambi" 1.7 "Cinderella" and other cartoons 1.8 Production activity 1.9 Death
2 Personal Life 3 Director's Style 4 Anti Semitism 5 Memory 6 Unrealized Projects 7 Selected Filmography 8 Films about Walt Disney 9 Awards and Prizes 9.1 Academy Awards 9.2 Golden Globe 9.3 BAFTA 9.4 Cannes Film Festival Awards 9.5 David di Donatello 9.6 Directors Guild of America 9.7 Golden Screen 9.8 Laurel Awards 9.9 Montreal World Film Festival 9.10 Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists Awards 9.11 New York Film Critics Circle Awards 9.12 Venice Film Festival 9.13 Emmy Awards 9.14 Annie Awards 9.15 Hollywood Walk of Fame 9.16 Other
10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 References
Biography[edit / edit wiki text]
Early years[edit / edit wiki text]
Play a media file
Newman Laugh O Gram (1921)
Walt Disney was born on December 5, 1901 in Chicago.
Among his ancestors were English, Irish and Germans.
In 1906, the family moved to a farm in Missouri, and in 1910 - to Kansas City.
At the age of 14, he worked part time as a newspaper delivery boy.
During the First World War, Disney served for a year at the wheel of an ambulance of the International Red Cross in France.
In 1920, Disney got a job as an artist at a film advertising studio, where he began to create his first advertising films — at the same time he had a desire to continue his experiments in the world of hand drawn animation.
Over time, Disney opened its first animation studio "Laugh O Gram" in Kansas City, where Ab Iverks became his companion and leading animator.
However, the company soon went bankrupt.
Debut[edit / edit wiki text]
In 1922-1937, he acted as a purely creative worker, and after the war he took up film production.
In 1923, Disney moved to Los Angeles, where he and his brother Roy created The Walt Disney Company in Hollywood as a small animation studio.
On March 1, 1924, Disney presented its first stunt film "Alice's Day at Sea", prompted by the characters of Lewis Carroll's book "Alice in Wonderland".
The director also named his series of films drawn in 1926-1927 in honor of the heroine of this book — "Alice in the Land of Animation" (in total, Disney made 56 films about Alice's adventures).
At the same time, the style of Disney films began to form.
Mickey Mouse and others[edit / edit wiki text]
In 1927, the film "Oswald the Rabbit" became very popular, and its hero opens a gallery of famous characters from Disney films.
The mouse Mickey Mouse, which was drawn by Ab Iverks, was first called Mortimer, but soon he received a name that is well known all over the world today.
For the first time, the mouse Mickey Mouse appeared in the silent film "Mad Airplane" (1928), and in the same year he became the hero of the first Disney sound film — "Steamboat Willie" (the first ever hand drawn film with synchronous sound).
In the first films, Disney himself voiced the mouse, and soon this film opened the way to success for the director.
In 1929, Disney began working on the cycle "Naive Symphonies", and by 1938 he had shot over 70 episodes, including " The Skeleton Dance "(1929)," The Ugly Duckling "(1932)," The Three Little Pigs " (1933).
Pluto the Dog (1930), Goofy the Dog (1932), and Donald Duck the drake (1934) appear in these films.
"Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs", "Pinocchio" [edit / edit wiki text]
Main articles: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (cartoon, 1937), Pinocchio (cartoon)
Disney and the Seven Dwarfs in 1937
When Disney was 14 years old and he worked part time selling newspapers, in Kansas City he saw a short silent cartoon about Snow White, which he remembered for a lifetime.
In the fall of 1934, Disney made the first draft of the script based on the fairy tale of the brothers Grimm.
Several people worked with Disney on the latest version of this script, including Otto Englander, Earl Hurd and Ted Sears.
On December 21, 1937, Disney's full length animated film "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" based on the fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm was shown on the screens of America for the first time.
"Snow White" brought Disney a huge success: popularity, $ 8 million in revenue and enthusiastic responses in the professional press.
Soon, new full length films appeared.
"Pinocchio" (1940) based on a fairy tale by the Italian writer Carlo Collodi was received by the audience with delight, which was shared by critics.
The success was the result of titanic work: in order to better draw the scene when Pinocchio tries to escape from the whale, the artists studied the habits and movements of real whales for a long time.
The music for this film, written by Lee Harline, Paul Smith and Ned Washington, was awarded an Oscar.
The song "When you wish upon a star" (music by Lee Harline to the words of Ned Washington) was also noted.
"Fantasy"[edit / edit wiki text]
Main article: Fantasy (cartoon)
Building your own fairy tale kingdom was a long standing dream of the founder of the animation studio Walt Disney.
In 1953, Walt Disney managed to persuade 17 families to sell him land 50 kilometers south of Los Angeles, and the construction of a park began, the like of which did not exist yet.
And on July 17, 1955, the grand opening of Disneyland took place.
A controversial opinion was caused by "Fantasy" (1940) directed by Walt Disney based on a script by Joe Grant and Dick Humar and under the musical direction of Edward Plumb.
The idea of the film originated from the time of working on "Naive Symphonies", in which the plot was closely intertwined with musical works.
"Fantasy" is a bold experiment with sound, color and image, an attempt to convey music in line and color, subordinating the drawing to the musical context.
For example, Johann Sebastian Bach's toccata and fugue are shown in the form of abstract forms, and the music from Tchaikovsky's ballet "The Nutcracker" is accompanied by a mushroom dance; a colorful plot of the creation of the world unfolds against the background of Igor Stravinsky's "Spring Festival".
Critics called the scene when centaurs appear on the screen to the sounds of Beethoven's "Pastoral Symphony" the most tasteless fragment of the film.
Only in the 60s of the last century, "Fantasy" received recognition when such works began to massively promote popular music.
"Dumbo" and "Bambi"[edit / edit wiki text]
Main articles: Dumbo, Bambi (cartoon)
Disney feature films are often called family films.
In particular, we are talking about the film "Dumbo" (1941) — a musical story based on the book by Helen Eberson and Harold about a small circus elephant who learned to fly (directed by Ben Sharpsteen).
Dynamic adventures, magnificent plasticity of hand drawn characters all this brought the film huge popularity.
Famous were the scenes of the parade of pink elephants, as well as the fantasies of a baby elephant who drank champagne from a barrel.
The fawn from the movie "Bambi" (1942) also won the sympathy of not only young viewers, but also their parents.
"Cinderella" and other cartoons[edit / edit wiki text]
In 1950, Disney created a hand drawn version about a modest girl who, with the help of a good fairy, becomes the bride of a handsome prince.
The film "Cinderella" was directed by Wilfred Jackson, Hamilton Lasky and Clyde Geronimi.
Among the notable scenes is the one when the mice pushing a huge pumpkin turn into magnificent horses harnessed to a carriage, and the good fairy turns Cinderella's rags into a ball gown.
The film was awarded the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival for its technical skill, and Cinderella appeared on T shirts, bed linen and shawls in many countries of the world.
The directors who shot " Cinderella "created in 1953 a full length cartoon" Peter Pan " based on the book by Sir James Barry.
It was followed by such famous films as" The Lady and the Tramp "(1955)," Sleeping Beauty "(1959) and" 101 Dalmatians " (1961), which became classics of animated films.
Production activity[edit / edit wiki text]
In 1948, Walt Disney began shooting his famous series of color educational films, mainly about nature — in particular, the pictures " The Living Desert "(1953) and" The Disappearing Prairie " (1954), directed by James Elgar.
These films have gained great popularity, revealing little known aspects of the life of animals and plants and causing the audience to want to preserve nature.
At the same time, they began to shoot game adventure films designed for young viewers — "Treasure Island" (1950) based on the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson (directed by Byron Haskin), "Robin Hood" (1952) (directed by Ken Annakin), as well as the musical film fantasy "Mary Poppins" (1964), which was awarded five Oscars (directed by Robert Stevenson).
In all these films, Disney acted as a producer, followed the course of filming and had a great influence on the artistic side of the films.
Death[edit / edit wiki text]
On December 15, 1966, Disney died in Los Angeles from lung cancer. [6]
After that, the company bearing his name made a strategic decision to abandon the display of cigarettes in its films[7].
After his death, the film studio continued to make animated and feature films for children of all ages.
In 1968, Disney was posthumously awarded the highest award of the United States — the Congressional Gold Medal.
There is a widespread version about freezing the multiplier in a cryogenic chamber, which he went to in the hope of finding a method for defrosting the human body in the distant future[8].
However, in fact, his remains rest in the Forest Lawn Cemetery[9].
Personal life[edit / edit wiki text]
In July 1925, he married his studio secretary Lillian Bounds (1899-1997).
In 1933, their daughter Diana Mary was born (the couple tried to have a child for 8 years, the previous two pregnancies ended in miscarriages, causing much suffering to Walt and Lilly).
Unable to give birth to a second child, in 1937 the couple adopted a little girl, giving her the name Sharon Mae Disney (1936-1993).
Diana Mary Disney (1933-2013[10]) is a mother of seven children, the author of a popular biography of Walt Disney, the organizer of several projects related to his name, one of the leaders of The Walt Disney Company, the founder of the Walt Disney Museum in San Francisco (opened in October 2009).
According to Diana, Walt Disney was an exemplary family man, devoted all his free time to his family, often walked with his daughters, and it was during these walks that he came up with the idea to create a place where it would be interesting for both adults and children.
Subsequently, Disneyland became such a place.
Disney was a staunch anti communist[11] and for many years collaborated with the FBI[12], on his own initiative, he wrote denunciations of colleagues in Hollywood to the bureau[13].
After the war, Walt Disney actively helped the Commission on Un American Activities to identify "hidden communists" in the world of cinema.
Disney was afraid of mice[14].
Director's style[edit / edit wiki text]
Main article: The Walt Disney Company
Starting with "Steamboat Willie", music begins to play an important role in the Disney films.
The sound in his films serves not only as a background for dialogues, but becomes an important part of them, a musical background, creating the harmony of the entire painted work.
Disney artists, before drawing animals, always carefully studied the habits of their living prototypes.
Therefore, all the movements on the screen are extremely plausible.
In Walt Disney's" Fantasy", stereo sound appears for the first time on a wide screen.
Everyone noted the high quality of the musical accompaniment of this film, which was recorded by the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Leopold Stokowski.
Disney was one of the first directors to use three film filming devices for the three color process "Technicolor" (Eng. Technicolor).
At the studio, Walt Disney introduced a system of awarding animators, later adopted by other studios, including Soyuzmultfilm.
The animator, having offered a trick to the director, received a small reward.
Anti Semitism[edit / edit wiki text]
Both during Disney's life and after his death, his possible anti Semitism was actively discussed.
The charges are based on a number of episodes.
Art Babbitt claimed that Disney attended meetings of the German American Union[15].
Another animator, David Swift, while resigning from the Disney studio, came across Walt's anti Semitic attack[16].
In 1938, after the society was shocked by Kristallnacht, Disney gave the Nazi propagandist Leni Riefenstahl a tour of his studio[17].
In the XXI century, it became known from declassified documents that Disney in 1940 rejected the request of the warring British for help.[source not specified 271 days]
The Churchill government secretly approached Disney with the idea of creating an anti Nazi cartoon based on the legend of St. George hitting the Dragon.
Disney biographer Mark Eliot believes that the reluctance to make a film against the Nazis was not caused by anti Semitism at all: "Disney was among the supporters of an influential movement against the involvement of the United States in the European war.
Fearing the Bolsheviks, they did not want to prevent Germany from defeating the Red Army in any way.
In addition, Disney did not want to lose the German market for its films."[source not specified 271 days]
Later, he still filmed this legend in the cartoon "The Reluctant Dragon" (1941).
Memory[edit / edit wiki text]
In honor of U. Disney named the asteroid (4017) Disneya, discovered by astronomer Lyudmila Karachkina at the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory on February 21, 1980.
The role of Disney in the biographical film " Save Mr. Banks "(2013) was performed by twice Oscar winner Tom Hanks.
In the documentary film from the series "Geniuses and Villains of the Passing Era" (Russia, 2003), the role of W. Disney was played by Russian actor Dmitry Filimonov.
Unrealized projects[edit / edit wiki text]
The cartoon "Destino" co authored with Salvador Dali.
The cartoon "Aristocratic Cats", which was published in 1971, after the death of Disney.
Selected filmography[edit / edit wiki text]
1922 Little Red Riding Hood 1922-1927 - "Alice's Adventures" :
1923 — Wonderland Alice (eng. Alice's Wonderland) 1924 — Spooky adventure Alice (eng. Alice's Spooky Adventure) 1924 — Wild West Show Alice (eng. Alice's Wild West Show) 1924 — the History of fishing Alice (eng. Alice's Fishy Story) 1924 — Alice and the dog Catcher (eng. Alice and the Dog Catcher) 1924 — Alice the peacemaker (eng. Alice the Peacemaker) 1924 — Alice goes to Denmark (eng. Alice Gets in Dutch) 1924 — Alice hunting in Africa (eng. Alice Hunting in Africa) 1924 — Alice and the three bears (eng. Alice and the Three Bears) 1924 — Alice Piper (eng. Alice the Piper) 1925 — Alice is fighting with cannibals (eng. Alice Cans the Cannibals) 1925 — Alice the Toreador (eng. Alice the Toreador) 1925 — Alice gets nervous (eng. Alice Gets Stung) 1925 — Alice solves the puzzle (eng. Alice Solves the Puzzle) 1925 — Alice the Factory for the production of eggs (eng. Alice's Egg Plant)
1925 — Alice fails (eng. Alice Loses Out) 1925 — Alice is a fan of theatre (eng. Alice Is Stage Struck) 1925 — Alice wins the Derby (eng. Alice Wins the Derby) 1925 — Alice picks the Champ (eng. Alice Picks the Champ) 1925 — Tin pony in Alice (eng. Alice's Tin Pony) 1925 — /Alice Chops the Suey 1925 — /Alice the Jail Bird 1925 — /Alice Plays Cupid 1925 — eng.
Alice Rattled by Rats 1925 — Alice in the jungle (eng. Alice in the Jungle)
1926 — Alice on the farm (eng. Alice on the Farm) 1926 — eng.
Alice's Balloon Race 1926 — Small parade of Alice (eng. Alice's Little Parade) 1926 — /Alice's Mysterious Mystery 1926 — Alice's orphan (eng. Alice's Orphan) 1926 — Alice charms the fish (eng. Alice Charms the Fish) 1926 — a Meaningless job Alice (eng. Alice's Monkey Business) 1926 — Alice in the land of dreams (eng. Alice in Slumberland) 1926 — Alice in the Wild West (eng. Alice in the Wooly West) 1926 — Alice the Fire (eng. Alice the Fire Fighter) 1926 — /Alice Cuts the Ice 1926 — /Alice Helps the Romance 1926 — Spanish guitar Alice (eng. Alice's Spanish Guitar) 1926 — /Alice's Brown Derby 1926 — Alice the lumberjack (eng. Alice the Lumberjack) 1927 — /Alice the Golf Bug 1927 — /Alice Foils the Pirates 1927 — Alice at the carnival (eng. Alice at the Carnival) 1927 — Alice at the Rodeo (eng. Alice at the Rodeo)
1927 — /Alice the Collegiate 1927 — Alice in the Alps (eng. Alice in the Alps) 1927, the race of Alice (eng. Alice's Auto Race) 1927 — /Alice's Circus Daze 1927 — /Alice's Three Bad Eggs 1927 — /Alice's Knaughty Knight 1927 picnic Alice/Alice's Picnic 1927 — /Alice's Channel Swim 1927 — Alice in the Klondike (eng. Alice in the Klondike) 1927 — /Alice's Medicine Show 1927 — /Alice the Whaler 1927 — /Alice the Beach Nut 1927 — eng.
Alice in the Big League
1927- Empty Socks (the first Christmas cartoon [18][19]) 1927 Oh Teacher 1927 Mechanical cow/The Mechanical Cow 1927 — The Banker's Daughter 1927 — Oswald the Lucky Rabbit 1928 — Crazy Airplane/Plane Crazy 1928 — Steamboat Willie 1929 — 1939 — Funny Symphonies (English Silly Symphonies) 1937 — Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (English Snow White & the 7 Dwarfs) 1940 — Pinocchio/Pinocchio 1940 — Fantasy (English Fantasia) 1941 — Dumbo/Dumbo 1942 — Bambi/Bambi 1944 — The Three Caballeros/The 3 Caballeros 1949 — The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Todd/The Adventures of Ichabod & Mr. Toad 1950 Cinderella 1951 Alice in Wonderland 1953 Peter Pan 1955 Lady and the Tramp 1959 Sleeping Beauty 1961 One Hundred and One Dalmatians (One Hundred and One Dalmatians) (eng.
One Hundred And One Dalmatians) 1963 The Sword in the Stone 1966 The Jungle Book (the last cartoon shot during Disney's lifetime)
Movies about Walt Disney[edit / edit wiki text]
2015 Walt Disney
Awards and prizes[edit / edit wiki text]
Film awards "Oscar"[edit / edit wiki text]
1932 — Honorary award for the creation of Mickey mouse 1933 — Best animated short Flowers and trees/Flowers and Trees (1932) 1934 — Best animated short — the Three little pigs/Three Little Pigs (1933) 1935 — Best animated short — The Tortoise & the Hare (1934) 1936 — Best animated short — Three Orphan Kittens (1935) 1937 — Best animated short — The Country Cousin (1936) 1938 — Best animated short — The Old Mill (1937) 1939 — the Best short cartoon — Ferdinand the Bull (1938) 1939 — Honorary award for Snow white and the seven dwarfs (1937 Disney receives one statuette complete Oscar and seven little Oscars — the number of the dwarves) 1940 — Best animated short — the Ugly duckling/The Ugly Duckling (1939) 1942 — Best animated short — Lend a Paw (1941) 1942 — Honorary award for contribution to improving the quality of the sound in the movie Fantasia (1940)
(with William Garrity and John Hawkins) 1942 — the Award is named for Irving Thalberg 1943 — Best animated short Der Fuehrer's Face (1942) 1949 — Best short film — Seal Island (1948) 1951 — Best short film — Beaver Valley (1950) 1952 — Best short film — Nature's Half Acre (1951) 1953 — Best short film — Water Birds (1952) 1954 — Best documentary — Living desert (1953) 1954 — Best documentary — The Alaskan Eskimo (1953) 1954 — Best short film — Toot Whistle Plunk and Boom (1953) 1954 — Best short film — Bear Country (1953) 1955 — Best documentary — the Vanishing Prairie (1954), 1956 — the Best documentary — Men Against the Arctic (1955) 1959 — Best short film — Grand Canyon (1958) 1969 — Best short film — Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day (1968) — posthumously
"Golden Globe" [edit / edit wiki text]
1948 Bambi — for the Hindi version of the film 1953 - Award.
Cecil de Mille 1954 The Living Desert 1955 Davy Crockett in the TV series "Disneyland" 1956 — The Mickey Mouse Club
"BAFTA"[edit / edit wiki text]
1955 Best Documentary - The Disappearing Prairie (1954) 1961 Best Animated Film One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961)
Awards of the Cannes Film Festival[edit / edit wiki text]
1946 Best Animated Film Make Mine Music (1946) 1953 - for contribution to the recognition of the festival
David di Donatello[edit / edit wiki text]
1956 The Lady and the Tramp (1955)
Directors Guild of America[edit / edit wiki text]
1955 — Honorary Life Member Award
Golden screen[edit / edit wiki text]
1969 The Jungle Book (1967) - posthumously
Laurel Awards[edit / edit wiki text]
1958 Golden Laurel — best producer (2nd place) 1959 — Golden Laurel — Best producer (3rd place) 1960 — Golden Laurel — Best producer (2nd place) 1961 — Golden Laurel — Best producer 1962 — Golden Laurel — Best producer 1963 — Golden Laurel — Best producer 1964 Golden Laurel — Best producer 1965 Golden Laurel — Best producer 1966 Golden Laurel — Best producer 1967 Golden Laurel special prize, posthumously
Montreal World Film Festival[edit / edit wiki text]
1999 Grand Prix Special des Amériques for exceptional contribution to cinema, posthumously
Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists Awards[edit / edit wiki text]
1987 special prize in honor of the 50th anniversary of "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs", posthumously
New York Film Critics Circle Awards[edit / edit wiki text]
1939 special prize for "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" 1940 special prize for "Fantasy"
Venice Film Festival[edit / edit wiki text]
1934 Best Animated Film Funny Little Bunnies (1934) 1935 Best Animated Film — The Band Concert (1935) 1936 — Best socio political Film Il cammino degli eroi (1936); also awarded the cartoon Who Killed Cock Robin? (1935)
1938 prize for "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" 1950 special prize for "Cinderella" and the documentary "In Beaver Valley"
Emmy Awards[edit / edit wiki text]
1956 best producer
Awards "Annie"[edit / edit wiki text]
1975 - award to them.
Windsor MacKay, posthumously
Hollywood Walk of Fame[edit / edit wiki text]
Walt Disney has 2 stars of the emblem on the Walk of Fame for his contribution to the cinema and for the development of television.
Other[edit / edit wiki text]
1940 Medal of Progress (Society of Film and Television Engineers) 1952 Medal of Progress (Photographic Society of America)
See also[edit / edit wiki text]
Roy Oliver Disney is the older brother of Walt Disney.
Together with him, Disney founded the company now known as The Walt Disney Company.
Roy held the post of general CEO (1929-1971) and president of the company (1945-1971).
The Walt Disney Company is one of the largest corporations in the entertainment industry in the world.
Founded on October 16, 1923 by brothers Walter and Roy Disney as a small animation studio, it is currently one of the largest Hollywood studios, owns 11 theme parks, two water parks, four cruise liners (operated by a subsidiary of Disney Cruises Line)[20], as well as several broadcasting networks including ABC.
Disneyland is a popular and highly profitable amusement park in Anaheim, California.
It opened in 1955, becoming the embodiment of Walt Disney's idea of a park in which the world of cartoons and fairy tales would be recreated, where everyone is interested - both adults and children.
Walt Disney Studios is the international headquarters of the Walt Disney Media conglomerate, which is located in Burbank, California.
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
Немец German National Library, Berlin State Library, Bavarian State Library, etc. Record #118526006 / / General regulatory Control — 2012-2016.
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↑ 1 2 data.bnf.fr: open data platform — 2011.
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Ути 1 2 3 Utilov V. A. Disney Walt / / The Great Soviet Encyclopedia: [in 30 volumes] / edited by A. M. Prokhorov 3rd ed. - Moscow: Soviet Encyclopedia, 1972.
- Vol. 8: Debitor Eucalyptus.
- p. 304.
<a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q16335620"></a><a href="https://wikidata.org/wiki/Track:Q17378135"></a>
Произнош The pronunciation of the surname in English is Dizni.
↑ The story of Oscar ↑ Walt Disney Biography (English) ↑ "The History of tobacco" on istorya.ru ↑ "The Visionary Walt Disney" on the RFI website ↑ Walt Disney (1901-1966) - Find A Grave Memorial ↑ Walt Disney's eldest daughter has died in the United States.
ITAR TASS (November 20, 2013).
Checked on November 20, 2013.
↑ Business.
Success stories.
Walt Disney ↑ Kommersant newspaper of May 8, 1993 ↑ Chronicles of Jerusalem ↑ Walt Disney Film Studio celebrates its eightieth anniversary Channel One.
Verified on March 28, 2013.
Archived from the original source on April 4, 2013.
↑ Gabler, Neal.
Walt Disney: The Triumph of American Imagination (2006).
New York, NY.
Random House.
ISBN 0-679-43822 X , p. 448 ↑ Gabler, Neal.
Walt Disney: The Triumph of American Imagination (2006).
New York, NY.
Random House.
ISBN 0-679-43822 X , p. 456 ↑ And Now a Word From the Director ↑ The lost Walt Disney Christmas cartoon, created by him in 1927, was accidentally found beyond the Arctic Circle ↑ Lost 1927 Disney Christmas film found in Norway ↑ Disney Cruises Line
Literature[edit / edit wiki text]
E. M. Arnoldi.
The life and fairy tales of Walt Disney.
- L.: Iskusstvo, 1968 — - 212 p. Barrier, Michael (1999).
Hollywood Cartoons: American Animation in Its Golden Age.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
ISBN 0-19-516729-5.
Mosley, Leonard.
Disney’s World: A Biography (1985, 2002).
Chelsea, MI: Scarborough House.
ISBN 0-8128-8514-7.
Schickel, Richard and Dee, Ivan R (1967, 1985, 1997).
The Disney Version: The Life, Times, Art and Commerce of Walt Disney.
Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, Publisher.
ISBN 1-56663-158-0.
Thomas, Bob (1991).
Disney’s Art of Animation: From Mickey Mouse to Beauty and the Beast.
New York: Hyperion.
ISBN 1-56282-899-1 Thomas, Bob (1976,1994).
Walt Disney: An American Original ISBN 0-7868-6027-8 Broggie, Michael (1997, 1998, 2005).
Walt Disney’s Railroad Story.
Virginia Beach, Virginia.
Donning Publishers.
ISBN 1-56342-009-0 Eliot, Marc (1993).
Walt Disney: Hollywood’s Dark Prince.
Carol.
ISBN 1-55972-174 X Gabler, Neal.
Walt Disney: The Triumph of American Imagination (2006).
New York, NY.
Random House.
ISBN 0-679-43822 X Sherman, Robert and Richard Sherman (1998) «Walt’s Time: From Before to Beyond» ISBN 0-9646059-3-7.
Links[edit / edit wiki text]
Walt Disney in Wikicitatnik?
Walt Disney on Wikimedia Commons?
Walt Disney Family Museum (English) Walt Disney's hobby: Miniature garden railroading (English) Time Magazine profile (English) Walt Disney at justdisney.com (English) Biography of Walt Disney
The predecessor:
- Chairman of the Walt Disney Company
1929-1964 (First Chairman)
Successor:
Roy Oliver Disney
Voicing of Mickey Mouse
Walt Disney (1928-1947 • * Jimmy McDonald (1947-1977 • * Wayne Allwine (1977-2009) • Bret Ivan (2009 present)
Irving Thalberg Academy Award
Darryl F. Zanuck (1938) · Hal B. Wallis (1939) · David O. Selznick (1940) · Walt Disney (1942) · Sidney Franklin (1943) · Hal B. Wallis (1944) · Darryl F. Zanuck (1945 · * Samuel Goldwyn (1947) · Jerry Wald (1949) · Darryl F. Zanuck (1951) · Arthur Fried (1952) · Cecil B. DeMille (1953) · George Stevens (1954) · Buddy Adler (1957) · Jack Warner (1959) · Stanley Kramer (1962) · Sam Spiegel (1964) · William Wyler (1966) · Robert Wise (1967) · Alfred Hitchcock (1968) · Ingmar Bergman (1971) · Lawrence Weingarten (1974) · Mervyn Leroy (1976) · Pandro S. Berman (1977) · Walter Mirish (1978) · Ray Stark (1980) · Albert R. Broccoli (1982) · Steven Spielberg (1987) · Billy Wilder (1988) · David Brown and Richard D. Zanuck (1991) · George Lucas (1992) · Clint Eastwood (1995) · Saul Zantz (1997) · Norman Jewison (1999) · Warren Beatty (2000) · Dino De Laurentiis (2001) · John Calley (2009)
· Francis Ford Coppola (2010)
Winnie the Pooh
Books
When We were Very Young (1924) * Winnie the Pooh and All Everything (1926) · Now We are six (1927) · The House on the Pooh Edge (1928) · Return to the Enchanted Forest (2009)
Characters
Winnie the Pooh (Disney) * Piglet · Tigger · Christopher Robin · Rabbit · Eeyore * Kanga · Baby Ru · Owl · Ground Squirrel · Relatives and Friends of the Rabbit · Heffalump · Beech and Byaka · Schasvirnus · Outsiders V. * Darby
Short films
Disney: Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree (1966 · * Winnie the Pooh and the Day of worries (1968) · Winnie the Pooh, and with it the Tiger! (1974)
· Winnie the Pooh and Eeyore's Birthday (1983)
Soyuzmultfilm: Winnie the Pooh (1969) * Winnie the Pooh goes to visit (1971) · Winnie the Pooh and the day of worries (1972)
Short films
Winnie the Pooh opens the season (1981)
Feature films
The Many adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977) · The Adventures of Tigger (2000) · A Big Movie about a Pig (2003) · Winnie and the Heffalump (2005) · Winnie the Bear and his Friends (2011)
Direct to video movies
The Great Journey of Pooh: In Search of Christopher Robin (1997 · * Winnie the Pooh: Time to Make Gifts (1999) · The Book of Pooh: Stories from the Heart (2001) · Winnie the Pooh: Christmas Pooh (2002) · Winnie the Pooh: Spring Days with Baby Roo (2004) · Winnie the Pooh and the Heffalump: Halloween (2005) · Super Pooh Movie (2007) · My Friends Tigger and Winnie: The Musical of the Magic Forest (2009)
Television
Welcome to Pooh's Edge (1983-86) · The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1988-91) · The Book of Pooh (2001-03) · My Friends Tigger and Winnie (2007-10)
Special
Cartoon Stars Rush to the Rescue (1990 · * Winnie the Pooh and Christmas too (1991) · Boo!
Winnie the Pooh (1996 · * Winnie the Pooh and Thanksgiving (1998) · Valentine in your Hands (1999)
Video games
Winnie the Pooh in the Hundred Acre Wood (1986 · * Tigger and Winnie (2000) · Adventures in the 100 Acre Forest[en] (2000) · Winnie.
Games with friends (2001 · * Vinnie.
Honey Feast (2003 · * Winnie the Pooh's Rumbly Tumbly Adventure (2005) · Disney Friends (2007)
Songs
"Vinnie, Our Friend" (1966) · "Up, Down and Touch the Ground" (1966) · "Rumbly in My Tumbly" (1966) · "Little Black Rain Cloud" (1966) · "Mind Over Matter" (1966) · "A Rather Blustery Day" (1968) · "The Wonderful Thing About Tiggers" (1968) · "Heffalumps and Woozles" (1968) · "When the Rain Rain Rain Came Down" (1968) · "Hip Hip Pooh Ray!" (1968)
· "House at Pooh Corner" (1970) · "I Hum to Myself" (1983) · "Just Say, 'Yes I Can'" (1983) · "The Right Side" (1983) · "You're the Only You" (1983) · "Try a Little Something New" (1983) · "Wherever You Are" (1997) · "Ev'ry Season Has a Reason" (1999) · "Just Like Me" (2000) · "Super Duper tigger Jumper joker poker Skip" (2000) · "Lullaby for Bees" (2000) · "Tigger Family" (2000) · "How to Become a Tigger" (2000) · "Round My Family Tree" (2000) · "Your Heart Will Lead You Home" (2000)
People
A. A. Milne · Christopher Robin Milne * E. H. Shepard · The Sherman Brothers · Harry Colborne · Jim Cummings · Peter Dennis · Walt Disney · Sterling Holloway · John Fiedler · Paul Winchell · Evgeny Leonov · Shirley Lasswell · Stephen Schlesinger · David Benedictus · Mark Burgess
Related articles
Disney's Winnie the Pooh · Les Ashdown · Bother!
Pooh's Brain · Enchanted Forest * Attraction "Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh" · Methuen & Co.
Ltd.
· More Songs from Pooh Corner · Vinnie is looking for myed · Trivia · Return to Pooh Corner · The Tao of Winnie the Pooh · De Piglet · Winnie the Pooh and the Philosophy of Everyday Language · The Bear Winnipeg · Winnie the Pooh Street
Category · Wikicitatnik · Wikimedia Commons · Vikinovosti
Thematic sites
Notable Names Database · AllMovie · AlloCiné · Discogs · Internet Movie Database · MusicBrainz · Rotten Tomatoes · RKDartists · Find a Grave
BIBSYS Regulatory Control: 90057066 * BNC: a11231014 · BNE: XX1163376 · BNF: 11994688k · GND: 118526006 · ISNI: 0000 0001 2128 0724 · LC CN: n78095660 · NDL: 00437974 · NKC: jn19990001791 · NLA: 35037590 · NLR: RUNLRAUTH77714, RUNLRAUTH77153 · NTA: 182955389, 068474202 · NUKAT: n93080776 · PTBNP: 27116 · LIBRIS: 273638 · SUDOC: 028028945 · VIAF: 36927108 · ULAN: 500025598
Source — "https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Disney, _Walt&oldid=82782975"
Categories: Personalities alphabetically Born on December 5 Born in 1901 Born in Chicago Died on December 15 Died in 1966 Died in Burbank Film Directors alphabetically Film Directors of the USA Film Directors of the XX century Screenwriters alphabetically Screenwriters of the USA Screenwriters of the XX century Actors alphabetically Actors of the USA Actors of the XX century Awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom Knights of the Legion of Honor Officers of the Order of the Aztec Eagle Who died of lung cancer Animation Directors Artists of the USA Animators of the USA Artists of the Walt Studio Disney Winners of the Congressional Gold Medal Winners of the Golden Globe Award Winners of the Cecil B. DeMille Award Winners of the Emmy Award Winners of the Oscar Award Winners of the David di Donatello Award Buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery Anti Communists of the United States
Hidden Categories: Pages using magic Links ISBN Wikipedia:Articles with redefinition of the value from Wikidata Wikipedia:Articles with sources from Wikidata Wikipedia:No sources since April 2016 Wikipedia:Articles without sources (type: person; occupation: screenwriter) Wikipedia:Articles with statements without sources for more than 14 days
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