(Item #274) [Did not sell.] |
In the upcoming auction, we saw works of Mary Blair, Gustaf Tenggren and Kay Nielsen. One of the least famous of the Great Inspirational Artists of the Disney studios has so far been missing in this list: Ferdinand Huszti Horvath. (Well, and Al Hurter, too).
Horvath is represented in the auction with above artwork. On the web, one can read: "Born in Budapest, Hungary on Aug. 28, 1891. Horvath was primarily a book illustrator. He lived in Hollywood, CA in 1937-47 and died in Riverside, CA on Nov. 11, 1973." After the outbreak of WWII, he worked for American Aviation and the Howard Hughes, "in a technical capacity on confidential designs." Joe Campagna found out that Horvath was buried in Hemet, CA.
In 1976, Russ Cochran sold a whole lot of Horvath's drawings, and issued a magazine collecting his works, Graphic Gallery 8.
In it, we find these:
One of the most interesting things in this 54 page magazine, though, I found to be the following, directly copied from Horvath's scrapbook:
SURPRISE IN GAGS
by Ferdinand H. Horvath
In m.m.o. (here and hereafter this abbreviation stands for: "my modest opinion") the most effective gags are those that will take the audience by complete surprise. The absurdity of the situation is an important factor.
Take for instance Captain Noah (in an old Fable Cartoon) diving overboard his ark to save his crew. Nobody in the audience knows what his purpose might be going overboard. We follow him to the bottom of the waters keying up suspense. He reaches the bottom and without much fumbling, pulls out a plug. The flood waters start to whirl and to drain off rapidly in the best bathtub fashion, and the water running from beneath the ark leaves it high and dry atop a convenient cliff. I have never seen any gag yet in all these years that went over in a bigger way.
This in m.m.o. is a typical example of a surprise gag: it seems logical, there seems nothing impossible about it, it is easily put over, clearly comprehensible to anyone, and yet the audience would expect anything else in the world to happen but that. There was no prop visible that would have given the gag away. It is for this reason that I think that gags of this sort are always superior to gags that necessarily need a lot of planting. Gags around convenient props that naturally lend themselves to gag situations are more or less anticipated by the audience. Take a sack of potatoes spilled on the cellar floor, and you will expect'some character to take a spill when coming in contact with them. Flypaper ditto...precariously balanced dishes...garden rake to be stepped upon.
Referring to some outstanding gag sequences, which were also mentioned in the "gag tip sheet", as for instance Pluto's skating sequence, Mickey with the rubber nipple, and Pluto1s flypaper sequence — all of these in m.m.o. are only mildly funny as gags themselves but they do offer good chances to the animator. However it depends on the animation whether a sequence of this sort will appear funny or not. Pluto is known as a clumsy.dog. Add Pluto, plus skates, plus ice and it takes no imagination to expect him to slide about, tumble, and do most of the things he actually did. Introduce Pluto and the flypaper and you know that he is apt to get tangled up with it. Anticipation gratified to the nth degree. Mickey with the overworked nipple gag is another example.
It has become more or less a rule to take any awkward character to place him near enough to something that might trip him, or punch him or cause him other bodily discomforts the audience will anticipate such, and it will be dished out to them ninety-nine times out of a hundred.
Good surprise gags, well timed, and not being touched off to order when the audience expects it are the laugh getters, because they keep you on edge in expectant mood, they keep you guessing and fool you in the end. (As a fine example I want to mention the little pig unexpectedly reopening the door to pull the "Welcome" mat in.)
Take a gag situation in one of our recent pictures (The Clock Cleaners which at the writing of these lines has not been released yet) The Goof, after being knocked coocoo by too much Liberty, walks in a daze over exposed scaffolding, narrow ledges, etc. He finally walks toward the camera on a horizontal ladder, on which very evidently one of the rungs is missing. Everybody chuckles in advance waiting for the Goof to step into space when he will have advanced far enough to set his foot on the missing rung. Sure enough the Goof does exactly that. It is funny as it is, because the whole sequence is so very well animated, and it surely won't misfire, but in m.m.o. we passed up a completely ideal surprise gag situation. It might have been so much funnier if one of the rungs, two or three notches ahead of the gaping hole would have given away, and the Goof would have dropped quite unexpectedly. Or after stepping safely over the hole caused by the previously established missing rung when naturally everybody expected him to drop into space, have him negotiate this dangerous spot successfully, keep him going for one or two more steps and then have a rung break afterwards when nobody would expect it. Here would be surprise, because people kind of expect him to fall where he won't. There would be a laugh when the Goof failed to fall through the most logical trap in the world the audience would laugh at being knowingly kidded, and then there would be immediately another laugh probably a much heartier laugh, after the Goof promptly broke through when everybody thought him safe. This, I believe illustrates clearly how a gag can be improved by its unexpectedness and correct timing.
Outline No. 10 dealing with the Fox Hunt pointed out as an example one of my gags in that picture: the fox, hard pressed by the pack of dumb hounds, suddenly slides to a stop (I hope without screeching brakes this time), and starts to scratch. The dogs do the same. If I am not dead wrong this gag should get a laugh because it comes as a complete surprise, is natural action and totally absurd at the same time. The audience does expect the fox to outwit the pack, to dive, to dodge, to double back and trick the dogs in numerous ways but they will hardly expect him to play follow the leader.
February 22, 1937 F. H. Horvath
Now - I don't think he is COMPLETELY right in this, but it certainly is worth considering!!!
Hans,
ReplyDeleteI noticed in your categoric links while preparing a "Fantasia" mosaic for "Bald Mountain" that there is a Cinderella draft link but no post yet.
Does that mean you are posting the draft?
Hi Steven...
ReplyDeleteI wondered if you'd notice ;-)
Ah, it's a little thing called "Eagle eyes" ;)
ReplyDeleteAnyways, this shall be exciting seeing this!
Eagle eyes? I just call it "scary!" ;-)
ReplyDeleteHorvath has some pretty good principals down here. I could sware Mike Maltese read that passage a few times!
ReplyDeleteI am very excited about the upcoming developments, too! I've been working around it the hardest of all, I should say.
"upcoming developments," Zartok-35?
ReplyDeleteYou lost me there for a moment...
What have you been working around?
Cinderella, of course! If you are going to be posting the drafts, I would be very greatful.
ReplyDelete