Articles on Animation &Disney 05 Sep 2009 07:41 am

Snow White at 50

- Last week I posted an article about women in animation which originally appeared in Sightlines Summer/Fall 1987 issue. I’d also mentioned that the very same issue had an article by John Canemaker about Snow White’s 50th Anniversary. Naturally, I have to post that article as well. It ties in with the recent issue of D23 wherein John has an article about Snow White celebrating a new remastering of the film and the ways it continues to inspire new animation artists. This is its 72nd anniversary.

Here’s the article:

SNOW WHITE IS FIFTY

This year, Walt Disney’s first animated feature, SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS, celebrates its golden anniversary with its re-release in some 2,000 theatres in North America and in venues in 60 countries overseas. The blitz of media events and publicity has encompassed proclamations, parades, and public appearances; soft-drink, clothing, and book tie-ins; a TV special; and, according to Jon Lang, Disney’s director of film licensing, “More merchandising for this movie than any other, including STAR WARS.” Even a Snow White rose has been created, with 100 bushes shipped to mayors in 40 major cities.

To date, the half-century-old SNOW WHITE has worldwide grosses totalling more than $330 million, making it one of the most popular motion pictures of all time and the movie that saved the Disney studio from financial disaster. “You should have heard the howls of warning when we started making a full-length cartoon,” recalled Walt Disney years later. Hollywood pundits called it “Disney’s Folly,” and predicted no one would sit through a seven-reel cartoon.

One of Disney’s reasons for producing SNOW WHITE as a full-length, animated cartoon was financial: The introduction of double-features during the 1930′s bumped Disney’s one-reelers—his cartoon “fillers”—off the screen. The other reason was an artistic one: A bold visionary and innovator, Walt Disney wanted to make full use of his staff’s extraordinary skills, which were developed during the making of his short films. Starting with Mickey Mouse’s debut in 1928, the Disney studio artists made remarkable and steady progress in expanding the stylistic and narrative parameters of the animated cartoon.

Disney’s introduction of certain technological elements-sound and color—forced animation to change. Soundtracks dimensionalized a character’s personality and toned down the over-exaggerated pantomime favored by the silent cartoons. In 1932′s FLOWERS AND TREES, one of Disney’s experimental Silly Symphonies (a series of shorts begun in 1929), Disney utilized a three-toned Technicolor process that allowed for a full range of hues. Old graphic formulas for characters and forces of nature were gradually redesigned to convey the illusion of reality and sincerity that Walt saw in his mind’s eye. The plots of the shorts came to be based on the personalities of the characters, rather than on mere action or gags. Thus, the emotional possibilities for animation were extended as never before.

Unprecedented Problems

The problems encountered in the making of SNOW WHITE were unprecedented. More than 750 artists worked on the film for three years, creating at least two million drawings (of which 250,000 made it into the film).

One of the most formidable problems was the animation of the human figures. The Princess, the Queen, the Prince, and the Huntsman had to be convincing for the melodrama to work. Indeed, the audience had to truly believe that two cartoon characters were going to murder another cartoon character. Previous unsuccessful attempts to portray human motion included the 1934 Silly Symphony, THE GODDESS OF SPRING. To overcome the drawing problems and stiff animation of that experiment, Disney established art classes on the studio lot. All staff artists were obliged to attend in order to study films frame-by-frame and to draw from a nude model. In addition, live models were filmed for the animators to study; interestingly, the model for Snow White was a young dancer who later became famous as Marge Champion.

The animation of the human characters works, for the most part, but is spotty. Snow White has a unique, sweet charm, but the poor Prince is never more than a cardboard symbol of a romantic hero. In contrast, the seven dwarfs are superbly realized. “These inspired gnomes,” wrote New York Times caricaturist Al Hirschfeld, “with their geometrical noses, flexible cheeks, linear mouths and eyes, highly stylized beards and costumes . . . lend themselves to articulation because of the tremendous magic of well-directed lines. But the characters Snow White, Prince Charming, and the Queen are badly drawn attempts at realism. … To imitate an animated photograph, except as satire, is in poor taste.”

For SNOW WHITE’S feature-length format, the violent, fast action and bright colors used in Disney’s earlier short films had to be softened and paced to sustain audience interest. Muted earth tones of green and brown predominate, and the extensive use of shadows enhances cool forest scenes, as well as bright meadows and moonlit castles. Snow White’s nightmarish escape through the forest is a scene full of rapid cuts and violent movement. It is followed by the sequence in which the forest animals discover Snow White, which is gentler and slower-paced than the one that precedes it.

The score, eight songs by Frank Churchill and Larry Morey (including “Whistle While You Work,” “Someday My Prince Will Come,” and “Heigh-Ho”), advances the plot and adds to our knowledge of the characters and their motivations, desires, and inner thoughts. The integration of songs with the plot precedes Broadway’s Oklahoma by six years.

Disney’s greatest personal input was in the development of the script and the personalities of the characters. The final scenario is admirably lean, clocking in at 83-action-packed minutes. While the story is succinctly told, it is also filled with details, the result of three years of intensive story conferences and ruthless storyboard critiques by Walt and his creative staff. Six months of work on the film was scrapped by Disney, and he ordered entire scenes redrawn. Three sequences in story-board or rough animation were cut from the film, not because they were bad, but because they impeded the flow of the story. At a recent press conference at the new Disney animation studio in Glendale, California, drawings and test footage from those “lost” sequences were shown. It was apparent that those sequences—which feature the dwarfs’ bed-building routine, soup-eating song, and a dream ballet with Snow White and the Prince—would have been as charming and entertaining as anything that remains in the film.

Disney’s perfectionism drove up the cost of the movie, produced during the Depression years of 1934-37, to astronomical heights, from an initial $150,000 to $1.5 million. “As the budget climbed higher and higher,” said Walt, “I began to have some doubts, too, wondering if we could ever get our investment back.” There was a cliff-hanging deal with a bank to borrow more money; but as the world knows, SNOW WHITE finally proved a great success. The film made its world premiere on December 21, 1937, and reviews were glowing. SNOW WHITE initially earned $8.5 million at the box-office, an enormous sum for the time, especially since children’s movie tickets cost 10 cents.

Feminist Reassessment

Although SNOW WHITE is undeniably a masterpiece of American cinema and a classic of character animation technique, the film has recently become the focus of feminist reassessment and anger. Feminists argue that Snow White is a symbol of female passivity, as she waits to be rescued by an active male, who will give her life purpose and meaning. Film historian Sally Fiske suggests that in order to “comprehend the statement SNOW WHITE makes, imagine reversing it. Try to imagine that the dwarfs were seven little women and the title character was a young prince. The story becomes utterly inconceivable—which is a very telling comment about how we perceive women.”

Charles Solomon, writing in The Los Angeles Times about this subject, interviewed Karen Rowe, an associate professor of English at UCLA specializing in fairy tales and folklore. “While children need a sense that a young figure can confront problems and surmount them, heroes tend to overcome problems in more active ways,” claims Rowe. “What I think is problematic for the 20th century reader of popular tales-including the Disney versions— is that no provision is made for activity on the part of the heroine. It’s all rescue, all passivity. What that communicates to a female child is that it’s never by your own will or action that you overcome a problem. It’s through intervention on your behalf by some other figure. That undercuts any sense of growth and leads to a cultural emphasis on female dependency, which I think is very destructive.”

When SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS was made in the 1930′s, issues concerning women’s rights, feminism, and role models were not part of the social consciousness of the time. Our approach to viewing SNOW WHITE today should be the same as the one we bring to viewing other film classics, such as THE BIRTH OF A NATION, whose ideology is out of step with current important social issues. Parents should discuss such anachronistic screen images with their children, placing the characters within the context of the period in which they were created and supplementing them with alternative stories and female characters who are, as Professor Rowe says, “more affirmative of a young girl’s ability to act.”

John Canemaker, a contributing editor to Sightlines, ;s the author of Winsor McCay—His Life and Art, recently published by Abbeville Press.

If you want to see more pictures from Snow White, I posted a bunch of model sheets last Monday. Go here.

7 Responses to “Snow White at 50”

  1. on 05 Sep 2009 at 10:23 am 1.Eddie Fitzgerald said …

    Nice article! I’m a huge fan of the personality-driven animation that Disney pioneered for his features…I’m also a fan of the gag-style that it displaced.

    Gag cartoons were more innovative, more tied to poular music, more influenced by cartoony print syles, were more lively and street smart, and were cheaper to make. That last point is important because the staggering cost of animated features forced producers to fall back on mind-numbing formula in order to re-coup their money.

  2. on 05 Sep 2009 at 10:39 am 2.Michael said …

    You’re right about the last point. Maybe the current Independent features being made by Bill Plympton, Marjane Satrapi, Nina Paley or Sylvain Chomet will help direct us back to the more cartoony and less expensive animation (before the medium dies from cgi overload.)

  3. on 05 Sep 2009 at 5:11 pm 3.Eddie Fitzgerald said …

    Gee, I forgot to comment on Fiske and Rowe’s implication that Disney’s Snow White was sexist. Well, that’s kind of silly, isn’t it? Disney wanted his film to have a timeless, mythic feel, and a perky Snow White with attitude who heroically defended herself with shield and sword would hardly have accomplished that.

    What worries me is that whole generation of storytellers has been influenced by the silly idea that any story that doesn’t assign equal weight to male and female characters is sexist. Our generation believes that every James Bond needs a Sally Bond, and every David Copperfield needs a Jane Copperfield. Maybe this is why the short story and the novel have died in our time. The intuitive element in modern storytelling has been sacrificed to political correctness.

    Am I against stories about strong women? No, of course not. I just don’t think Jane Eyre would be improved by teaming her up with Billy Eyre, or that Wonder Woman needs a sidekick called Wonder Man.

  4. on 05 Sep 2009 at 9:17 pm 4.Swinton Scott said …

    Oh wait, there WAS a Wonder Man in comic books. See: Early lawsuits by National Periodicals against pretenders to Superman’s throne. And drawn by Will Eisner no less!
    Have the short story and the novel died? Maybe the great ones aren’t being written as much as they used to? Are people reading as much as they used to in the “Olden days”?
    I think great stories are just as hard to find now as always. Just because a book is printed does not make it great. I wonder if the percentage of “great” novels has gone down over the years. Or if it is just holding steady. Who would you ask to get the answer?
    But a really good comment, and I know what you mean.
    Sorry to get off track Michael.

  5. on 08 Sep 2009 at 8:49 pm 5.Patrice said …

    What inspires me was how disney went to such lenghts to be original and creative and snow white is proof of that. It’s much harder today to survive purely on wanting to be artistic, I have had animator’s tell me animation is a buisiness not an artform (Doesn’t make any sense to me but apperently some people beleive that). The thought of 3D never crossed my mind, but I’ve had people asking me why I wasn’t interested in it, and even laughed at at. It’s simple I personaly can’t be artistic with a mouse, I need my pencil and I thank the calssic Disney for innovations such as Snow White to have helped me see that there no limits to creativity or making your dreams real, its about sacrifice, risk and most importantly self accomplishement. Funny enough, I find myself reading a lot more lately, and there are still some great writers out there not to mention all the classic novels, I just can’t stand modern television shows anymore and many of the current movies, they’re simply just far too bland or nothing but special effects. I hope that the indie animation shorts will also break away from fear that some magazine or newspaper will call them sexists or anything else. You can’t please everyone and oddly enough I grew up with those so called “unethical movies from the 20th century, and I didn’t grow up to be racist, sexist or homophobic. I certainly hope Snow White and the seven dwarfs will live on for at least another century.

  6. on 08 Sep 2009 at 11:16 pm 6.Michael said …

    Patrice, all you need is the pencil and a brain. It sounds like you have the brain. Go girl. Don’t worry about Snow White. It’s a treasure and it isn’t going anywhere. I can’t say much about many of the current masterpieces.

  7. on 08 Feb 2010 at 7:58 am 7.Jim Rodkey said …

    First of all, having just discovered this wonderful place, let me thank you for what you have shared with all who come to THIS happy place.

    Second, the sexist comments related to Snow White… It seems to me that there are still wicked queens who are angry when they look in their mirrors and find out that Snow White is still the fairest of them all. They have now, however, dispensed with the poison apples and are trying to do away with her via the poison pen.

    How sad.

    Why aren’t volumes written about the demands these stories place upon the average male because he is not a Prince and therefore will never find the princess he has been “indoctrinated” into thinking he deserves? The answer to that is because it’s ridiculous, just like the arguments made here about Snow White.

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