Animation Magazine Comic Con 22 Edition

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Book Excerpts

The Strike That Shifted the Landscape T he new book The Disney Revolt: The Great Labor War of Animation’s Golden Age by animation historian Jake S. Friedman, chronicles the union war fought by animator Art Babbitt and the animators’ strike of 1941. Walt Disney responded to the five-week strike by firing many of his animators, but he was eventually pressured into recognizing the Screen Cartoonist’s Guild. In this excerpt, Friedman describes the first morning of the strike, following Babbitt, labor leader Herb Sorrell and head of the independent union Bill Littlejohn. [From Chapter 25]

The press called them “loyalists.” But there were many reasons why hundreds of non-striking Disney artists drove to work the morning of May 28, 1941. Dumbo and Bambi would not be completed without them. They also shared a gratitude toward Walt, who not only had hired them during the Depression but also had provided them with an opulent new studio. Besides, what kind of tyrant insisted on being addressed by his first name? The first thing they noticed as they approached the studio was a seemingly endless line of cars parked by the curb leading to the front gate. What they saw at the Disney entrance was a spectacle they had not anticipated. About 500 men and women were on their feet, walking in a large circle in front of the entrance. Nearly one in 10 carried wooden picket signs, many painted with cartoon characters. It’s Not Cricket to Pass a Picket, warned Jiminy Cricket. I’d Rather Be a Dog Than a Scab, chided Pluto. I Sign Your Drawings / You Sign Your Lives, taunted a caricature of Walt. Michelangelo, Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci, Rubens, Rembrandt All Belonged to Guilds. The number 600 showed up a few times, too, referring to the total number of Disney artists. A strike handout reported that one sign read, One Genius Against 600 Guinea Pigs. Another had, Snow White and the 600 Dwarfs. Traffic entering the studio slowed to a crawl. As each car inched through, the strikers hooted and hollered, calling each strikebreaker a “scab” and a “fink.” A sound truck was parked nearby, providing a portable PA system to the person at the microphone. Bystanders and non-strikers were

handed flyers titled An Appeal to Reason — its title borrowed from the Socialist periodical that Walt’s father used to read. “The salaries of the Disney artists average less than those of house painters,” read a press bulletin. “The Disney girl inkers and painters receive between $16 and $20 a week. On Snow White, the much-publicized bonuses did not even compensate the artists for the two years of overtime they worked. Snow White made the highest box office gross in history — over $10,000,000.00. All the other major cartoon studios in Hollywood have Screen Cartoon Guild contracts. The Disney Studio is the only nonunion studio in Hollywood.” The strikers were demanding a 10 percent wage increase across the board, a 25 percent wage increase for the lower bracketed artists and the reinstatement of the 19 animators — including Babbitt — who they argued were fired for union activity. The Disney carpenters, machinists, teamsters and culinary workers refused to cross the picket line. Electricians, cameramen, sound men and film editors also refused. One striker photographed each “scab” who drove through. Atop a hill in the eucalyptus knoll across the street, a striker in a beret and smock stood at an easel painting a landscape of the ordeal. On the ground, there were “guys pouring their individual speeches

into the ears of those on the fence,” wrote one non-striker that day. “I was struck with the magnitude of it all.” “The average age was less than 25,” said Herb Sorrell in 1948. “They became the most enthusiastic strikers I have ever seen in my life.” Some strikers leaped onto car bumpers; others rocked cars side to side. Once embattled drivers were through the gates, they were greeted with cheers and claps from a welcoming committee of non-striking inkers and painters. The strikers had each been given two- or three-hour shifts, ensuring a 24-hour picket line. They were mostly in-betweeners, animation assistants, inkers and painters, but among them were also story artists, effects artists, background painters and animators. Bill Tytla and Art Babbitt stood out as the highest paid on strike. The previous night, the Guild had voted to include supervising animators among its membership. This made not only Babbitt and Tytla eligible to strike, but also all other top animators. Babbitt was on his feet rallying alongside the other strikers, shouting to non-strikers by name, including Ward Kimball. “I felt terrible,” Kimball journaled that day. “Friends on the inside waving to me to come in. Friends on the outside pleading with me to stay out; Jeezus. I was on the spot!”

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Articles inside

Creative Connections

4min
pages 150-151

Tech Reviews

10min
pages 142-145

Experiencing the World of Tomorrow Today

49min
pages 116-137

Autonomous Animator

3min
pages 146-147

Unleashing the Dinosaurs Again

7min
pages 138-139

Animated Musings

4min
pages 148-149

Conjuring New Demons

6min
pages 140-141

First Look: Netflix Animation Spotlights

3min
pages 114-115

Brief and Beautiful Visions

15min
pages 106-113

Flight of Fancy

6min
pages 104-105

20 Movies to Catch at Annecy

6min
pages 102-103

A Few Words from Monsieur le Délégué

6min
pages 100-101

An Animation Legend Looks Back

6min
pages 94-97

The Strike That Shifted the Landscape

7min
pages 98-99

The Essentials:35 U.S. Studio Movies of the Past 35 Years

1min
page 80

35 Animated Shorts to Explore, Ponder Ignore or Enjoy*

8min
pages 82-85

On Representation and Diversity: How Far Have We Come?

7min
pages 78-79

Riding the Japanese New Wave

5min
pages 76-77

A Lot Can Happen in 35 Years

9min
pages 74-75

Reflections on 1987 and the 35th

4min
pages 72-73

35 Years of Great Quotes

11min
pages 66-69

A Crowd-Sourcing Pioneer

4min
pages 70-71

Drawn to Excellence

6min
pages 60-61

Cyber Group Expands Its Giant Footprint

6min
pages 62-63

Blue Skies Ahead for Red Animation

6min
pages 64-65

Daughter of Invention

6min
pages 58-59

On Being a True Warrior

7min
pages 56-57

Crouching Teen, Hidden Powers

6min
pages 54-55

Sophisticated Sci-Fi Is Back

8min
pages 44-47

A Toon Town Trailblazer

6min
pages 42-43

From Stage to Animated Screen

6min
pages 50-51

A Hero Who Keeps on Giving

6min
pages 52-53

And Never Feed Them After Dark

6min
pages 48-49

The Red Ribbon Army Returns

3min
pages 40-41

Mavka, the Spirit of Ukrainian Culture

5min
pages 38-39

Here Be Monsters

9min
pages 22-25

Whatever Happened to Those Chipmunks?

6min
pages 30-31

The Way of the Feline Samurai

6min
pages 36-37

Make It Extra — with a Side of Optimism

8min
pages 26-29

Teddy Bears vs. Unicorns

6min
pages 32-33

A Toy’s Origin Story

10min
pages 14-17

A Real Disney Heroine

7min
pages 18-21

The Tiniest Movie Star

7min
pages 34-35
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