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Launched a new animation studio
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- Perhaps the most important of the feature animators was Don Bluth, a former Disney animator who launched a new animation studio to carry on the Disney legacy and pose the first serious threat to Disney’s domination of feature animation.
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After The Secret of NIMH, Bluth began developing an animated feature film adaptation of Beauty and the Beast. While a few scenes were produced in 1984, the film's production was officially cancelled in 1989, when Don Bluth and the film's distributor Columbia Pictures heard the news of Disney beginning work on their own animated adaptation. [55]
Aug 21, 2022 · The legendary animator behind 'Anastasia,' 'The Secret of NIMH,' 'The Land Before Time' and others reflects on his life, career and the influence of his hero Walt Disney.
On September 13, 1979, Don Bluth, an animator and animation director at Walt Disney Productions, fellow animators John Pomeroy and Gary Goldman, and eight other animation staff left the studio during production on The Fox and the Hound. [1]
Jul 1, 2022 · Bluth first worked at Disney in 1955 as an assistant to John Lounsbery on Sleeping Beauty (1959), but returned for a much longer stretch starting in 1971 as an animation trainee and eventually...
- Jamie Lang
Feb 2, 2022 · It started as a small filmmaking project in the garage of his home in Culver City. The first iteration was The Piper, a short animation based on a limerick written by Bluth’s brother Toby.
Nov 23, 2020 · Bluth's Disney career began right out of high school, back in 1955 as an animation assistant on Sleeping Beauty, which was the final animated feature completely overseen by Uncle Walt before his death in 1966. After Sleeping Beauty, Bluth took a rest himself, stepping away from working in animation for a while.
Bluth had plans for an animated adaption of Beauty and the Beast. Concept artwork was completed in 1984 , but upon discovering that Walt Disney Pictures already had plans for their own adaptation , the project was cancelled by Columbia Pictures .