Prod. 2003 - Seq. 4.2 - Apimyentogogardi!
This being a musical number, the sequence director is Wilfred "Jaxon" Jackson, assisted by Lou Debney. Layout by Terrell E. Stapp (1893-1979) and Thor Putnam (starting with a multiplane shot).
Pinoke masterfully animated by Frank Thomas and later Ollie Johnston, Jiminy Cricket by Bernie Wolf, Don Towsley and Ward Kimball, Stromboli by Bill Tytla, Dutch Puppet by Jack Campbell, French puppets by Art Babbitt (the "singer") and Eric Larson (the "dancers"), Russian "Bomb Throwers" by Woolie Reithermann.
As today's special treat, here is the entire Sequence.
Frank's animation in this sequence is some of my all-time favorite, as it is an amazing acting job, a complete analysis of this little shy boy, who happens to be a puppet, being "pushed in the pooblic's eye."
Jiminy Cricket is in a supporting role, cause "What does an actor want with a conscience, anyway!"
On a more technical note, see the background column - and the "choice" of using either a 5 Field or a 6 1/2 Field setup. This indicates which camera stand to use, and dictates the size of the paper. It isn't always that close-ups are 5F... You can see details of the setup in the very third posting I have made (and here), see the archive pages, and the paper and field sizes you can see on my separate page that is always linked to on the right...
The weather in Denmark: cold! I braved the snow on my bicycle today - there are still places where it wasn't cleared away, making me wonder where my tax money went...
4 Comments:
Oh, another oddity I noticed just after making that post. The note at the end says "cross dissolve to seq. 4.3". There is no such sequence. The next is 3.1, and after that it's 4.4. Is this just a mistake, or does it refer to a missing sequence?
In another copy of the draft I have, the 4.3 is whited out and 3.1 written in in pen...
The drafts for certain films at Disney seem to have been tampered with years later to reflect after-the-fact censorship. For example, the surviving STEAMBOAT WILLIE draft in the Walt Disney Archives is a version retyped at some later date, omitting the nipple-tweaking sequence that was cut out of the film in 1953.
In PINOCCHIO, big-lipped Ubangi puppets are seen hanging in Stromboli's trailer, and some publicity art for the film pictures them as individualized characters. At some point, could they have been intended to partake in a verse of "I've Got No Strings?" (I'd rather not create an urban legend that this was the case... I'm merely speculating, as for me, your drafts bear all the hallmarks of authentic 1939 production documents.)
Thank you, thank you, thank you! This is really interesting to me! I'm still learning about the different aspects of animation (I started out with 3D modeling and animation, and now am backpedaling to learn the basics as fast as I can), and these are very very helpful. I appreciate your taking the time to share them!
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