lunedì 1 marzo 2010

Motormouse and Autocat

Motormouse and Autocat
1969
Hanna-Barbera Studios

Cartoon Characters:

 Autocat, Motormouse.


Vocal Talent:

 Marty Ingels (Autocat), Dick Curtis (Motormouse).


Directed By

 William Hanna, Joseph Barbera.


Animation Director: Charles A. Nichols.

Produced By

 William Hanna, Joseph Barbera.

Associate Producer: Lew Marshall.

Animated By

 Ray Abrams, Carl Alfonso, Vincente Bassols, Shannon Lee Dyer, Hugh Fraser, George Goepper, Fernando Gonzales, Terry Harrison, Volus Jones, Lou Kachivas, Casey Onaitis, Ed Parks, Jack Parr, Don Patterson.


Written By

 Neal Barbera, Larz Bourne, Ed Brandt, Tom Dagenais, Len Janson, Earl Klein, Bill Lutz, Mike Maltese, Chuck Menville, Bill Perez, Joe Ruby, Dalton Sandifer, Martin Smith, Ken Spears.
Story Direction: Jim Carmichael, Nick George, Earl Klein, Bill Perez, Paul Sommer, Howard Swift, Warren Tuf



  • Production Design: Iwao Takamoto.
  • Production Supervisor: Victor O. Scipek.
  • Layout: John Ahern, Dick Bickenbach, Brad Case, Walt Clinton, Jerry Eisenberg, Gary Hoffman, Willie Ito, Homer Jonas.
  • Background Styling: Walt Peregoy.
  • Backgrounds: Bob Inman, Gino Guidice, Richard Khim, Eric Semones, Don Watson.
  • Titles: Robert Sandifer.
  • Musical Director For "Cattanooga Cats": Mike Curb.
  • Background Musical Director: Ted Nichols.
  • Technical Supervisor: Frank Pakier.
  • Ink & Paint Supervisor: Roberta Greutert.
  • Xerography: Robert "Tiger" West.
  • Sound Direction: Richard Olson.
  • Film Editing: Earl Bennett, Milton Krear.
  • Camera: John Aardall, Dick Blundell, George Epperson, Charles Flekal, Roy Wade, Dennis Weaver.

It's the Wolf Orig Concept Drawings 1969 HB Studios



It's the Wolf Orig Concept Drawings 1969 HB Studios

Cartoon Synopsis: The vain and idiotic Mildew Wolf would endlessly chase cute little Lambsy, hoping to "have him over for dinner." Lambsy, determined that winding up the wolf's bill of faire would be entirely unfair, would yelp his famous tag-line: "It's the wool-uff! It's the wool-uff!"
Originally a segment on The Cattanooga Cats, it spun off into it's own show in 1970.
  • Production Design: Iwao Takamoto.
  • Production Supervisor: Victor O. Scipek.
  • Layout: John Ahern, Dick Bickenbach, Brad Case, Walt Clinton, Jerry Eisenberg, Gary Hoffman, Willie Ito, Homer Jonas.
  • Background Styling: Walt Peregoy.
  • Backgrounds: Bob Inman, Gino Guidice, Richard Khim, Eric Semones, Don Watson.
  • Titles: Robert Sandifer.
  • Musical Director For "Cattanooga Cats": Mike Curb.
  • Background Musical Director: Ted Nichols.
  • Technical Supervisor: Frank Pakier.
  • Ink & Paint Supervisor: Roberta Greutert.
  • Xerography: Robert "Tiger" West.
  • Sound Direction: Richard Olson.
  • Film Editing: Earl Bennett, Milton Krear.
  • Camera: John Aardall, Dick Blundell, George Epperson, Charles Flekal, Roy Wade, Dennis Weaver.




sabato 27 febbraio 2010

Merryweather Sleeping Beauty animation cel drawing


Merryweather Sleeping Beauty animation cel drawing
Sleeping Beauty is a 1959 American animated film produced by Walt Disney and based on the fairy tale "La Belle au bois dormant" by Charles Perrault. It was released to theatres on January 29, 1959 by Buena Vista Distribution. The sixteenth animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series, it was the last fairy tale produced by Walt Disney (after his death, the studio returned to the genre with 1989's The Little Mermaid) due to its box office disappointment.
The film was directed by Les Clark, Eric Larson, and Wolfgang Reitherman, under the supervision of Clyde Geronimi. The film was based on the fairy tale Sleeping Beauty by Charles Perrault, with additional story work by Joe Rinaldi, Winston Hibler, Bill Peet, Ted Sears, Ralph Wright, and Milt Banta. The film's musical score and songs, featuring the work of the Berlin Symphony Orchestra, are arrangements or adaptations of numbers from the 1890 Sleeping Beauty ballet by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
Sleeping Beauty was the first animated feature to be photographed in the Technirama widescreen process. The film was presented in Super Technirama 70 and 6-channel stereophonic sound in first-run engagements. Only one other animated film, Disney's The Black Cauldron, was shot in Technirama.

Iwao Takamoto '60s Gorilla Animation Prod Model Drawing

Iwao Takamoto '60s Gorilla Animation Prod Model Drawing
Hanna Barbera - IWAO TAKAMOTO
Original PENCIL MODEL PRODUCTION DRAWINGthe 1960s GIANT GORILLA - KING KONG
 
Item: SUPER RARE Original Animation Production Pencil MODEL Drawing
This piece is a TAKAMOTO original|

Featuring: KING KONG type GORILLA
12 field 12.5 x 10.5
Condition: EXCELLENT
Circa 1960s

 Notes:
Iwao Takamoto (April 29, 1925 – January 8, 2007) was a Japanese-American animatortelevision producer, and film director. He was most famous as being a production and character designer for Hanna-Barbera Productions shows such as Scooby-Doo.

Takamoto's father emigrated from Hiroshima to the United States for his health. He returned to Japan only once, to marry his wife. Takamoto was born on April 29, 1925 in Los Angeles,California. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor, Takamoto's family, like many Japanese Americans, was forced to move to an internment camp. They spent the rest of World War II in theManzanar internment camp. It was there that Takamoto received basic illustration training from a couple of friendly co-internees.
Takamoto first entered the cartoon world after the end of the war. He was hired as an assistant animator by Walt Disney Studios in 1945. Takamoto eventually became an assistant for the legendary Milt Kahl. He worked as an animator on such titles as CinderellaLady and the TrampSleeping Beauty, and One Hundred and One Dalmatians
Takamoto left Disney in 1961 and joined Hanna-Barbera Productions shortly thereafter. He worked in several positions there, but is arguably best known as a character designer. He was responsible for the original character design of such characters as Scooby-DooThe Jetsons' dog Astro, and Penelope Pitstop. He worked as a producer at Hanna-Barbera, supervising shows such as The Addams FamilyHong Kong Phooey, and Jabberjaw. He directed several feature length animated films, including Charlotte's Web (1973) andJetsons: The Movie (1990). The inspiration for Scooby-Doo's creation as a Great Dane came from an employee of the Hanna-Barbera company, who bred this dog.[1]
Takamoto was Vice-President of Creative Design at Hanna-Barbera, and was responsible for overseeing H-B's many product related merchandising. In 2005, he received the Golden Award from the Animation Guild, to honor his more than 50 years of service in the animation field

Wolf Orig Concept Drawings 1969 Hanna Barbera Studios



It's the Wolf Orig Concept Drawings 1969 HB Studios

It's the Wolf! followed the comic exploits of a wolf named Mildew (voiced by an uncredited yet easily recognizable Paul Lynde), who aspires to catch and eat a sure-footed little lamb named Lambsy (voiced by Daws Butler), but is always thwarted in this plan by the dog Bristle Hound (voiced by Allan Melvin). Bristle would apprehend Mildew (usually after hearing Lambsy's cries of, "It's the wool-uff!"), pound him, and toss him sailing into the air, with Mildew screaming a phrase such as "Spoil Sport!" as he flies into the horizon and lands with a thud. Showing modest responsibility, Lambsy never fails to recognize Mildew.


Episodes

  1. High Hopes
  2. When My Sheep Comes In
  3. A Sheep in the Deep
  4. Lambsy Divey in Winter Blunder Land
  5. Merry Go Round Up
  6. Super Scientific Sheep Sitting Service
  7. Any Sport in a Storm
  8. Magic Wanderer
  9. Runaway Home
  10. Smart Dummy
  11. Channel Chasers
  12. Mask Me No Questions
  13. Freeway Frenzy
  14. Slumber Jacks
  15. Pow Wow Wolf
  16. Ghost of a Chance
  17. Lambscout Cookout or Mildew
  18. Wolf in a Sheeps Clothing
  19. To Beach His Own
  20. Sheep Scene Stealer
  21. How to Cook a Lamb
  22. Train Tripped

martedì 9 febbraio 2010

DINO FLINTSTONES

DINO FLINTSTONES SIGNED PROTOTYPE PRODUCTION DRAWING
THIS IS A DINO FLINTSTONES SIGNED PROTOTYPE PRODUCTION DRAWING
DRAWING FOR THE DENNYS - DINO RACES GIVEAWAY IN 1990
SIGNED BY ARTIST - SCOTT SHAW

giovedì 4 febbraio 2010

Sleeping Beauty



King Hubert Sleeping Beauty original cel drawing signed
The drawing has been hand signed by animator Jack Ozark.

Here is a large production drawing of Fauna, one of the Fairies from the 1959 Disney feature film "Sleeping Beauty." This drawing is #71-F in the sequence.
Sleeping Beauty Sampson cel drawing Horse SignedThe drawing has been hand signed by animator Jack Ozark.