Børge Ring is 90 today!
As film maker, Børge created (among numerous other things) the short films "Oh My Darling," "Anna & Bella" and "Run of the Mill" as well as the animated series "Anton." As jazz musician he played guitar and bass with famous bands like Leo Mathisen and Svend Asmussen, just to name a few. A little paragraph like this cannot do Børge justice in either field, as he has filled them both since the late 1930s! In 1952 he moved to Holland to work for the Marten Toonder Studios; after 20 years there he went freelance. Now turning 90, Børge slowed down, but his mind is still one of the sharpest around!
Above picture I took a few days ago, to be precise last Sunday, when I visited Børge in his and his wife Joanika's home in Holland, chewing the fat for too few hours. Børge told me the great news that he currently has the Academy Award "on loan," won for his film "Anna & Bella," on which I, too, wore many hats, including as editor, assistant director, cel painter and doing some animation, as well.
Of course it was Børge who first introduced me to the Valhalla studio, which was the reason I moved to Denmark in the first place...
Labels: Børge_Ring, News
8 Comments:
Happy birthday BR! And many more.
Happy Birthday Borge!
Keep on flipping.
Yours
Jürgen Frohn
("'Tau Ceti" - Egenolf & Jeske Cologne 1990)
Happy Birthday Borge - here is another animator that's still with us from the Golden Age.
Hi Hans. Is Borge's memoir illustrated? Is it worth getting for those who don't speak Danish?
I remember how happy and thrilled I was when Borge's film won the Oscar. At the same time I learned a big lesson - the producer gets the award. I swore to always be, at the very least, one of my own producers so my name would be called out. (Even though I didn't win, that was a big thrill, too.)
What a long and great life he's led. Happy Birthday, Borge.
Oh Hans,
On your calculations board - I've tried typing in "Feet to frames" but it only comes up with "NaNaNa" or something - is there a different way, is it broken or am I not doing it right?
--Steven
Steven, it should work (just did for me)! The left top input box is for frames (a whole number), the right for feet (format: "nnn-nn" like "012-14"). If you enter feet in the left box, you get the output you mention. After entering in any box, click outside it and read the answer in the other box.
Thanks for the advice,
I've managed to figure out - my using the footage on the right. Although I noticed that the calculations only go up to 999 feet. Although I figured out that if I wrote "1110-07" and my result only comes up as "1176-07" - I realised that I need to add another (0) to the feet colum and it will come up as 11760-07. I managed to figure that out by testing on a normal calcultor. Because 1110 x 16 is 17760.
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