Animation Artifacts &Commentary &Hubley 01 Aug 2008 08:05 am

Everybody Rides – 2

– We started slowly on Everybody Rides the Carousel. There was a six month schedule for about 72 mins of animation. Three half-hour original tv shows for CBS about 24 mins each. They’d air in the late summer of 1975 just prior to the start of the new tv season. Each show would air a day apart from the others – three nights in a row.

John and Faith spent a lot of time – a lot of time – at RCA studios on 45th Street. (It’s
____ The carousel was bottom lit & became soft focus.____-_ now an IRS office.) They recorded many of voices playing the numerous parts in their show. I tried to time meeting them there a couple of times hoping to meet some of the actors (I particularly wanted to see Jack Gilford in action. He was doing an hilarious part with his wife, playing a couple of cranky old people in a diner.) It didn’t work out that way, but I did see the facility and heard parts in process.

The key staff working IN the studio (not counting animators who would, for the most part, work freelance) included Ida Greenberg. Ida was a brilliant checker/coordinator who’d started back in the Florida days of the Fleischer studio. (She told me a few great stories about Gulliver’s Travels.) Ida was a great woman, with the thickest New Yowk accent, who never seemed to buckle under pressure. I grew very close to her. I tried after that to have Ida everywhere I worked. She led Raggedy Ann’s I&Pt and R.O.Blechman’s special._____________ Art Babbitt animated some of the mimes.

Kate Wodell was a student of the Hubleys at Yale. She was a talented artist who’d moved into production during the making of Cockaboody and continued on staff there. Sometimes she colored, sometimes she animated, sometimes she did whatever was necessary. This was exactly how I moved into the studio and loved the experience. She worked with Faith for many years after John died.

Earl James was an animator who’d worked in the backroom of many NY studios from Paramount to Terrytoons to NY Institute of Technology. He also had done some comic strip work.

Earl was given the carousel to animate. This came from a couple of elaborate drawings John did. Earl worked 16 fld. using a 96 drawing cycle. It gave us a lot of opportunity to move in tight or stay wide. However, it was a nightmare that took forever. Joe Gray was hired to assist Earl. (Joe started during the Terrytoons strike and never left. He was a lifetime assistant like a handful of other noted names in NY.)

This scene moved so slowly through production that I kept jumping in to assist as well. I was a fast assistant, but that carousel slowed even me down. 8 horses moved in perspective in a circle; you got to see 96 different rotating views of all the horses. I’d guess the scene took about 10 weeks to complete.

I was also doing layout and animation of a lot of connecting scenes throughout the production. These were scenes that would have to blend from one animator to another, or John had decided to go in tight for a closeup. In one case with Art Babbitt’s mime character, I was asked to change it from two’s to four’s with a dissolve technique John taught me (he said they’d used it on Fantasia.)

There were four people in my room, Earl, Joe, me and Mark Hubley. He worked alongside me for most of the film. He colored artwork given him by Ida, who was working in the larger room next door. Mark and I had a good releationship going back the many years I worked there. He joined the studio once he completed college. Emily Hubley worked alongside Kate and Ida.

Two younger, more experimental animators were brought in by John. Adam Beckett had made a name for himself with the films he was doing at CalArts.
Fred Burns was doing some incredible work at UCLA. They both were very different and added their unique touch.


___________ Adam Beckett’s scenes included these two surreal images.

Adam did a scene a couple of scenes wherein office furniture floated about in a very complicated surreal cycle. Fred did this amazing scene of a roller coaster from the POV of the rider. He and I worked together a number of times after that, and we’ve stayed friends.


______________ Fred did this very elaborate sexual roller coaster.

______________________

I decided, last week, that I had a lot to say about this feature film. Hence, you’ll have to excuse me for reminiscing over the series of pieces I’m going to write. I also have some artwork – other than frame grabs – that I’ll try to share in future pieces.

5 Responses to “Everybody Rides – 2”

  1. on 01 Aug 2008 at 10:35 am 1.Mark Mayerson said …

    It shows how different the world was then when a film that looks like this could play on a U.S. network in prime time.

  2. on 01 Aug 2008 at 1:27 pm 2.Tim Rauch said …

    Reminisce away, it’s a fun story to read.

  3. on 01 Aug 2008 at 2:25 pm 3.Richard O'Connor said …

    Those Fred Burns sequences are great. I assume he’s also responsible for “Thudpucker” (or whatever it is) in Trudeau, the perspective down the guitar.

    While the graphic design and art production on this film are, as always by Hubley, unparalleled, what makes it great is the character animation.

    The sequence with teenager fighting with her parents, resolved by taking out the garbage, is the rarest emotional realism. It brings me to tears its so good.

    I hate to sound like Gene Shallit with all this over-the-top gushing. Its hard not to when the film holds so many special moments.

  4. on 02 Aug 2008 at 8:07 am 4.Michael said …

    The “Thudpucker” sequence on Doonesbury was animated, for the most part, by Ruth Kissane. I assisted the scene. I also animated and assisted the piano turning 3/4 during the scene so that it would blend into Ruth’s work. I wrote a short piece about this on a past blog entry. HERE

  5. on 12 Sep 2008 at 5:54 pm 5.Pamela Taylor said …

    It was a great delight to see the two images by Adam Beckett! I am his biographer and have been trying to find if he actually worked on this film and what he contributed. I have seen pencil drawings of the city street scene, as I looked through his many drawings, and wondered what they were as they are so different from his independent work. I’d love to get any information you have about Adam as he worked on this film. His films have recently been restored and we are working towards a DVD release of the films with additional artwork…!

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