23 Questions with X Atencio

Now in the ninth decade of a life fully lived, Francis Xavier “X” Atencio still retains a gimlet sparkle in his eyes, and the mischievous spirit that no doubt helped lead him to creative triumphs throughout his career still animates his spry frame. His comic timing is impeccable, as we pleasantly discover during a visit to his comfortable home on a scenic hilltop overlooking Woodland Hills, California, and he tells stories with an élan that many men half his age couldn’t muster. In a spacious wood-paneled room adorned by—not overwhelmed with—Disney mementos, he matter-of-factly talks about his glory days, first at the Disney Studios as an animator, later working with animator Bill Justice on the stop-action masterpieces Jack and Old Mac, Symposium on Popular Songs, and the opening sequence for The Parent Trap, among others. And then on to WED, serving as a creative mastermind on such attractions as Pirates of the Caribbean and Haunted Mansion. He paints a vivid portrait of an era that has faded into the mystic chords of memory, a world of pencil and paper, audiotape and film, slide rules and thick-black glasses… when if Walt said you could do it, well, you had to go figure out how. X Atencio’s days as a mesmerizing Disney storyteller may be in the past, but any man in possession of his towering gifts always has another tale to tell.

D23: How does a kid from Colorado join the Studio at age 18?
“X” Atencio: After I graduated high school in Colorado, I came out to California to go to school at the Chouinard Art Institute. At the end of a semester, a couple instructors told some of us to get our portfolios together and they would take them to the Studios to get critiques on our work. I had developed a character, Poncho, a Colorado Cowboy, and I had done a storyboard, but that was about it. And I thought, “I’ll never get a job over there.” So I went to Disney to see if I could get a summer job to make some money to go back to Art School. When I got there, George Drake, the fellow who recruited all us people, said, “Sit down here for a minute, I’ll be right with you.” And with that, three other guys from my classes came in and I thought, “There goes my job. I’ll never get a job now.” And George says, “We went through your portfolios and we like what you’ve done.” Would you be interested in coming to work for us?”

Quite a pinch-me moment?
Well I was living in Hollywood at the time, and from Hyperion to Western Avenue in Hollywood, if you happen to know the area, is a pretty good jaunt. And I ran all the way home. “I got a job at Disney!” I was so excited that I was going to work for Mickey Mouse.

Pinocchio was your first film for Disney. What was the very first character you worked on?
I went into production out of the Training Center with Woolie Reitherman. Bill Justice was his first assistant. I was his second assistant, an in-betweener, really. The first thing we were working on was Monstro the Whale. Then Jiminy Cricket, but mostly it was Monstro.

What do you remember about working at the Hyperion Studio?
At that point in my career, I was just an in-betweener. The Animation Department wasn’t privy to all the wonderful things that were going on in the studio. It wasn’t until you moved up to an animator that you were in meetings with Walt. But they kept us little in-betweeners off in the corner there to do our pick-and-shovel stuff. Almost as bad as the Ink & Paint Department!

Do you remember the first time you met Walt?
No, but I remember the first time Walt met me! I was waiting in the hall for the elevator, and Walt came by and waited for the elevator, too. So I said, “Hi Walt,” and he said, “Hi X, how are you doing?” I thought, “He knows me, he knows who I am!” I almost fell on the floor to kiss his boots. That was a wonderful feeling that this great man actually knew who I was.

What was it like to leave the Studio and head off to World War II?
When the [Animators’] strike came in 1941, I went out on strike. I didn’t know what I was out there for. But all my buddies were out there. When the strike was over [five weeks later], they called me and asked me to come back to work on Monday. I think they realized that I wasn’t a rabble-rouser. I said I’d love to but I just got a greeting from Uncle Sam, so I went right off to war. I was in England for two years, in Greenland for a year. Everywhere I went they knew I was a Disney cartoonist, I was like a real celebrity!

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Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom (1953), the first animated cartoon to appear in widescreen CinemaScope, won an Academy Award® for Best Short Subject (Cartoons). What do you recall about the making of that film?
That was my first screen credit. Ward Kimball recruited me to do that picture. He said, “You might want to work on our picture, we got one called Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom, and it’s your style of animation and design.” We used to call them pointy nose characters as opposed to the little fat bunnies. Ward knew that I had a talent for this type of animation and design. I once asked Walt, “Why don’t we do something like UPA [United Productions of America] has been doing? I like those stylized characters.” He said, “They’re making pictures for the intellect, we’re making pictures for the heart. And there’s a hell of a lot more heart than there are intellects.”

What was the biggest compliment you ever received from Walt?
One time we were in Detroit at Ford making a presentation for Epcot. I made my presentation, and after that, we all got back on the plane and went on to New York to see the World’s Fair. And Walt came to the back part of the plane—this was the Gulfstream we used to fly in those days—and he went to the back of the cabin and took a little nap. And a bit later, he came out and drew the curtains open and said to [then vice president of advertising and sales] Card Walker: “Open up the bar.” So we all went up to the bar and Walt stood behind me and put his hand on my shoulder, and said, “You know, you did a good job, X. But don’t let it go to your head!” That was the way Walt was. He would compliment you with one hand and with the other hand he’d challenge you to keep it to yourself. I always remember that little scene of Walt being so personal with me.

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What do you remember about your stop-motion days?
In the 50s, Bill [Justice] and I were working on short things like Jack and Old Mac [1956] and things like that, which were based on Walt’s doodles. Walt was a great doodler. At all the meetings I remember the secretary would pick them up and save them. So Walt suggested we do a film on doodles. It was crude and very short, but it was well received. And then we moved on to the stop-motion Symposium on Popular Songs, which has much more detail. Bill was really good at animating these things, he had a lot of patience. I had none. I was more at the design end, designing the characters [rather] than the actual animation of the rags and bones and pieces of junk.

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What do you remember about Babes in Toyland (1961)?
Well, if you’re watching, “my” soldiers were the ones with the straps on the back in the form of an X!

The stop-motion opening title sequence for The Parent Trap (1961) is the stuff of legend. What do you remember when you see that sequence today?
How much fun it was. I remember working on it with Bill [Justice] and T. (Thornton) Hee. T. was more of a designer and animator, more like I was. We were more alike. T. was an ego. That’s why didn’t stay at the studio for 900 years like I did. These guys kind of felt like they were as talented as Walt was. And they were, maybe, just in a different way. T. was a great talent, but he wasn’t a Walt Disney.

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Your career can be divided into three parts: First you were an animator, then a designer/stop motion animator, then you have this fantastic career at WED [Walter Elias Disney Enterprises, now Walt Disney Imagineering]. Looking back, which role did you most enjoy?
People often ask me which phase I enjoyed the most, and I’d have to say it was my time at WED. Primarily because that was an assignment I received directly from Walt. I remember when he called me up to his office and he said, “Well, X, I’ve been wanting to get you to WED for some time, and now is a good time to go.” I said, “Okay, boss, whatever you say.”

What were your early days at WED like?
Nobody knew what I was supposed to be doing. I just kind of flubbed around and then latched on to [Disney Legend] Claude Coats, who was one of my favorite guys, and helped him do the design for Primeval World. I worked with Claude for about a month or six weeks, then Walt called me and said he wanted me to make the script for Pirates of the Caribbean. I had done storyboards before, but never a script. So I put on my pirate hat and dug out any information I could find out about pirates. The first thing I worked on was the Auctioneer scene, and I sent it over to Walt and he said, “Fine, keep going.”

What was it like at WED and you heard Walt was coming over? Were you nervous?
You would be. First, you’d hear that chronic cough. “Here he comes,” we’d think. He never came with an entourage. He wanted to be alone to think with us. I remember you’d be at the storyboard, and you’d have your back to him. And he’d be in his wooden chair. And then you’d hear him tapping his fingers on the arm of the chair, and he was suddenly way ahead of you. And he’d talk about a board further down in the sequence than where you were, and he’d say, “Why don’t we take that sequence down there and move it up here? We should have thought of that.” If he were with you, boy, he’d be standing up there dancing, doing the whole thing. If he wasn’t, he’d be coughing with disappointment.

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What did Walt say when you first showed him Pirates in mock-up?
We mocked it up on a soundstage in full size and we pushed Walt through it, we rigged up a cart that moved about the same pace the boat would and we moved him through and we had the Auctioneer up here and he said, “What do ye offer this buxom wench?” and on the other side a pirate yells, “Six bottles of rum, etcetera, etcetera.” But it was hard to hear, and I said, “I’m sorry Walt you can’t hear stuff too clearly.” And he said, “If you go to a cocktail party you tune in on one conversation, and then you tune in on that one. Every time they come through they’ll see something new.” And I thought, “Why the heck didn’t I think of that?”

Was Walt concerned at all about whether or not Pirates was appropriate for a Disney audience?
Yes there was some talk about it. They put up a sign hanging there behind the Auctioneer that said, “Take a Wife.” They were not just doing hanky-panky, they were shopping for a wife or a mate. That took the onus off it being too vulgar.

You wrote “Yo Ho (A Pirate’s Life for Me). Where did that come from?
The last meeting we had, I suggested to Walt maybe we should have a song in this one. I had a lyric in mind and kind of a melody so I half sang it and half recited it. He liked it, he said, “It’s good. Get George [Bruns] to do the music for it.” So George and I worked on the music. Later I did the Haunted Mansion “Grim Grinning Ghosts (The Screaming Song)” and suddenly I became a songwriter.

“Walt was a great doodler. At all the meetings I remember the secretary would pick them up and save them.” —X Atencio

There’s a school of thought about Haunted Mansion, that [artist and Disney Legend] Ken Anderson came up with the scary side and [animator/designer and Disney Legend] Marc Davis the humorous. Is that true?
I don’t think so. Walt implanted this in Marc’s mind. This was basically Walt’s idea. We researched Japanese spooky stuff, and Walt didn’t want any blood and guts. In the song “Grim Grinning Ghosts,” I say, “Come out to socialize.” That was the key to it. They terrorize but their main point was to socialize. Walt bought that idea. That was the hook, the Disney angle. “Socialize” is the key word.

What was the biggest challenge facing the team creating Haunted Mansion?
[Imagineer and Disney Legend] Yale Gracey worked on it and came up with some great illusions, and we ran into the problem of how were we going to move people through [efficiently]. And Dick Nunis kept saying we had to get capacity. Hopalong Capacity we used to call him [Nunis].

What was it like working with Paul Frees, the voice of Haunted Mansion’s Ghost Host?
Paul Frees would come in on a call and spend the first half hour telling you how great he was. And you would say, “Okay, Paul, can we get to work now?” And he’d take a script and just run with it. Man, he was a genius. One take! Other people would try doing it all sorts of ways. Not Paul. He just ran with it and he’d put things in it and ad-lib it at exactly the right place. I couldn’t think of it, but it was always a great addition.

Which do you like more, Pirates of the Caribbean or Haunted Mansion?
Oh, the pirates. But I love the ghosts, too.

In 1997, the Auctioneer sequence in the Pirates attraction was changed so that the pirates pursued women holding pies. Later they also added Jack Sparrow. Do you like the changes?
I liked adding Jack. The pirates chasing the gals… nobody asked me but my reaction was this is Pirates of the Caribbean not Boy Scouts of the Caribbean!

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Do you ever wish you were working now with all the new technology?
Yes and no. I enjoy my retirement. I paid my dues. I remember when I retired, John Hench told me, “You’re going to get tired of playing golf. Then what are you going to do?” And I said, “I’m going to clean out the garage for one thing.” I still haven’t cleared out the garage!

Exclusive: John Lasseter Talks Pixar Oscar® Nominations

“We screamed and yelled,” recalls John Lasseter upon hearing that Pixar films had received a spectacular three Academy Award® nominations last week—including Best Animated Feature and Best Original Screenplay for Inside Out and Best Animated Short Film for Sanjay’s Super Team.

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“It’s a little tradition—I always get up and watch it live,” explains Lasseter of nomination morning in an exclusive talk with D23. “I had two of my sons on the phone. I also happened to be with Josh Cooley and Meg LeFauve who were waiting to hear if Inside Out was going to be nominated for Best Screenplay, because they both got credit for that.”

The cheering at Lasseter’s house got so loud that “my wife came out saying, ‘What is going on in here? Why are you making so much noise at 5:30 in the morning?’ I said, ‘We got a nomination!’”

Since Toy Story was released in 1995, Pixar has received an amazing 55 Academy Award® nominations and 15 awards—including seven for Best Animated Feature and a special Oscar for John Lasseter for Toy Story. And perhaps on February 28, Pixar will bring that total to 18.

Lasseter explains that it was particularly gratifying to be with screenwriters Cooley and LeFauve last Thursday, as this is the first Oscar nomination for each. It’s not the first time Lasseter has seen one of his studio’s films receive screenplay honors. “Toy Story was the first animated film in history to be nominated for Best Original Screenplay, and that was so special,” he recalls. Since then Pixar has also received screenplay nods for such films as Ratatouille, Up, WALLE, and Toy Story 3.Inside Out is such a good movie and has such an original story and idea that I’m so proud the movie got the nomination for screenplay.”

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Lasseter is equally excited for Pixar’s other two nominations. “It’s thrilling to have Inside Out nominated for Best Animated Feature Film and Sanjay’s Super Team nominated for Best Animated Short Film.”

And he’s looking forward to the big night. “The Oscars are just fun,” he says. “It’s fun to see everybody. I’m so excited for our nominees. I hope they all win. I hope they all win and go home with an Oscar.”

And after all these years—and nominations—does he still get nervous?

“Yeah, of course you do,” he says with a smile. “But I’m so proud.”
 
 

The Oscars will be presented on Oscar Sunday, February 28, 2016. The ceremony will be broadcast live on ABC, beginning at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT. To view the full list of nominees and for more information about the telecast, visit Oscar.com.

Five Famed Flicks: Disney Films Released in January

It’s the middle of January, a month named after Janus—the Roman god of beginnings and transitions. It’s a time to reflect on the previous year, and to daydream about the fun yet to come in 2016. These particular 31 days got us to thinking: How has Disney kicked off the new year, cinematically speaking, throughout the decades? Sure enough, some of the most critically acclaimed (and crowd-pleasing) Disney films made their big-screen debuts in the first month of the year. Here are a few notable January releases… with a special bonus film that premieres later this month!

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Sleeping Beauty—January 29, 1959
This gorgeous film—Walt Disney’s most lavish animated production to date—tells the story of Princess Aurora, who is cursed by the evil fairy Maleficent to die before the sun sets on her 16th birthday by pricking her finger on the spindle of a spinning wheel. Add in three good (though bumbling) fairies, a handsome prince, and a fire-breathing dragon, and you’ve got a fairy tale that truly stands the test of time.

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One Hundred and One Dalmatians—January 25, 1961
Another notable January release is this animated classic, based on the book by Dodie Smith. The film follows the adventures of Pongo, Perdita, their 15 adorable puppies, and the wicked Cruella de Vil, who wants to kidnap the pups for her own nefarious plans. Its place in Disney history was cemented by its sole use of an advanced Xerox process to transfer the animators’ drawings directly to cels.

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Son of Flubber—January 16, 1963
This hilarious sequel to The Absent-Minded Professor was released 53 years ago this month, and once again featured Fred MacMurray as Ned Brainard—the Medfield College teacher who created the unpredictable green substance of the title. Fun fact: Walt Disney’s grandson makes a short cameo appearance as a baby!

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White Fang—January 18, 1991
Another January release, White Fang starred Ethan Hawke as Jack Conroy, a young gold hunter in the late 19th century who befriends a wolf-dog in the harsh, white wilderness of Alaska. Based on the novel by Jack London, the film was directed by Randal Kleiser (Grease, Big Top Pee Wee)—who went on to direct Disney’s 1992 hit Honey, I Blew Up the Kid.

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Glory Road—January 13, 2006
Josh Lucas (The Mysteries of Laura) and Jon Voight (Ray Donovan) starred in this January 2006 Disney release based on the true story of the Texas Western Miners basketball team, an all-African-American squad who proved themselves to a still-segregated nation by defeating the all-white University of Kentucky Wildcats and winning the 1966 NCAA tournament title.

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The Finest Hours—January 29, 2016
Our bonus January release is still over a week away… but the storm’s a-brewin’! Based on the amazing true story of the most daring rescue in U.S. Coast Guard history, The Finest Hours stars Chris Pine, Casey Affleck, Eric Bana, and Ben Foster, and was directed by Craig Gillespie (Million Dollar Arm).

High School Musical Turns 10!

It’s hard to believe it’s been 10 years since Troy, Gabriella, and the rest of the gang sang their way into our hearts forever in High School Musical! To celebrate the tenth anniversary of this classic Disney Channel Original Movie, “get’cha head in the game” and check out these 10 fun facts about everyone’s favorite group of Wildcats!

    1. Ashley Tisdale suggested that Sharpay’s school locker be distinguished from the others and painted pink.

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    1. Gabriella’s red dress in the final scene was custom-made based on Kenny Ortega’s directions after he saw Vanessa Hudgens wearing a similar vintage dress, in white fabric, and it reminded him of a classical musical 1940s-style dress.
    2. Kenny Ortega asked Ashley Tisdale if Props could use her real cell phone, which she had bedazzled with rhinestones, to create Sharpay’s accessories—including her bedazzled microphone.
    3. “We’re All in This Together” was originally called “Everyone’s a Winner,” but I thought that seemed corny and cheesy. So I asked them to write new lyrics and a new hook,” Gary Marsh, president and chief creative officer, Disney Channels Worldwide, once said. “When it came in, it was perfect. It summed up the movie. “We’re All in This Together” became an anthem for everyone.”

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    1. The High School Musical soundtrack was the biggest, fastest success the pop charts had seen in years. It was the No. 1 selling album of 2006 and the first TV movie soundtrack to make it to No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200. It was also the first television soundtrack to helm the Billboard Top 200 in 21 years—since Miami Vice in 1985.
    2. In 2006, the week of the Super Bowl (February 5, 2006), Zac Efron was the No. 2 most-searched term on Google.com/Zeitgeist. In contrast, the Super Bowl teams were No. 14 (Seahawks) and No. 14 (Steelers), respectively.
    3. After High School Musical premiered January 20, 2006, it aired 10 times more before the cast made their first public appearance together at Walt Disney World (Friday, April 7) for the opening of the Expedition Everest

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    1. On March 14, 2006, High School Musical became the first TV movie available on the iTunes Music Store.
    2. “The music wasn’t written yet, so as a warmup for callbacks, we asked the cast to sing a song from Hairspray,” remembers Judy Taylor, senior vice president, Casting and Talent Relations, Disney Channels Worldwide. “The actors were all together surrounding the piano, and I remember gazing around that room thinking, ‘Oh my God… this could be big!’”

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  1. An unprecedented nine original songs from the High School Musical soundtrack broke onto Billboard’s Hot 100 chart—with five of them in the Top 40. The duet “Breaking Free” made the largest jump in the 48-year history of the Billboard Hot 100, catapulting from No. 86 to No. 4 in just one week. The catchy “Get’cha Head in the Game” broke a 34-year-old record—making the biggest jump ever from the anchor position and soaring from No. 100 to No. 23.

Watch Minnie #RockTheDots in a Brand-New Bow-Toons Short

If you find yourself seeing spots this Friday, January 22, don’t be alarmed—it’s National Polka Dot day! And when Disney fans think about polka dots, the first thing that comes to mind simply has to be Minnie Mouse: fashionista, style icon, and Mickey’s best girl.

Our friends at Disney Consumer Products are celebrating Minnie’s signature style with an interactive fashion and art installation in Los Angeles, Minnie Rocks the Dots, which kicks off this weekend; but you can #RockTheDots now with this exclusive Minnie’s Bow-Toons short from our friends at Disney Junior. Three brand-new shorts will premiere Friday, January 22, on Disney Channel (at 7:55 a.m. ET/PT, 8:25 a.m. ET/PT, and 8:55 a.m. ET/PT) and repeat on Disney Junior in the afternoon.

In “Happy Campers,” Minnie and Daisy take the twins, Millie and Melody, on a camping adventure. Everything goes wrong until Minnie discovers a new way for the girls to sleep under the stars.

Disney Releases Earn 15 Oscar® Nominations

The envelope, please! Nominations for the 88th Oscars® were announced at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills, California, this morning, and Disney releases received 15 nominations, including five for Star Wars: The Force Awakens, two for Disney•Pixar’s animated feature Inside Out, and six for the Disney-released Bridge of Spies, a Dreamworks Studio production directed by Steven Spielberg.

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Excited we were that Lucasfilm’s Star Wars: The Force Awakens earned nods in five categories, including Visual Effects and Original Score. “I’m deeply honored and grateful to the Academy for this recognition. It’s been a privilege and a joy to revisit the Star Wars galaxy and to work with the brilliant director J.J. Abrams on this very special film,” composer John Williams said upon receiving the nomination—his 50th. We think the Force will be strong on Oscar Sunday!

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We jumped for joy over the fact that Disney•Pixar’s animated feature Inside Out was nominated in two categories, Animated Feature Film and Original Screenplay. The film’s director, Pete Docter, and producer, Jonas Rivera, made the following statement this morning: “We are beyond grateful to the Academy for honoring us with these nominations—especially in a year with so many fantastic movies. On behalf of the cast, crew and team at Pixar we would like to say… THANK YOU! We’re lucky to work at a studio that allows us to make movies that are colorful, fun, personal—and emotional.”

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It’s just, well, super that Sanjay’s Super Team has been nominated in the Animated Short Film category. “It is a great honor to be recognized by the Academy with a nomination for our short, Sanjay’s Super Team. This is an incredibly personal, but also otherworldly, story that was as much a labor of love for our crew as it was for myself. Making a film about my own childhood, and exploring the space that separates a young boy from his traditional immigrant father, meant that everyone really had to trust my vision, and the result is a truly beautiful film. So I share this honor with the crew, my true Super Team,” director Sanjay Patel said.

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Disney’s live-action Cinderella also earned a nomination in costume design for triple-Oscar winner Sandy Powell’s stunning creations.

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Additionally, the Disney-released Bridge of Spies, a Dreamworks Studios production directed by Steven Spielberg, received six nominations, including Best Picture, Actor in a Supporting Role (Mark Rylance) and Original Screenplay.

Disney releases were recognized in the following categories:

Best Picture
Bridge of Spies

Actor in a Supporting Role
Mark Rylance, Bridge of Spies

Animated Feature Film
Inside Out

Costume Design
Cinderella

Film Editing
Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Original Score
Bridge of Spies
Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Production Design
Bridge of Spies

Animated Short Film
Sanjay’s Super Team

Sound Editing
Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Sound Mixing
Bridge of Spies
Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Visual Effects
Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Original Screenplay
Bridge of Spies
Inside Out

The Oscars will be presented on Oscar Sunday, February 28, 2016. The ceremony will be broadcast live on ABC, beginning at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT. To view the full list of nominees and for more information about the telecast, visit Oscar.com.

D23 congratulates all the nominees for the 88th Oscars®!

Heigh Ho! Snow White Comes to Digital HD

Walt Disney was first exposed to the Brothers Grimm’s Snow White—about a fair-skinned maiden, her seven short-statured friends, and a very wicked stepmother—as a teenage boy, when he attended a screening of a 1917 silent film treatment of the fairy tale at Kansas City’s Convention Hall. The story became Disney’s first full-length animated film, 1937’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, which took a full three years (and more than 750 artists) to produce. It was a creative, as well as technological, triumph… and the rest, as they say, is history.

On January 19, Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment debuts Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs on Digital HD and Disney Movies Anywhere for the very first time! Plus, a new high definition Blu-ray™, which includes the Digital HD copy, hits store shelves February 2… and it’s all marking the launch of The Walt Disney Signature Collection—special releases of Disney’s most groundbreaking films.

This edition of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is full of new bonus features, including The Fairest Facts of Them All, a clever look at seven details you might not know about the classic (hosted by Disney’s Descendants star Sofia Carson, who played Evie, daughter of the Evil Queen herself), and @DisneyAnimation: Designing Disney’s First Princess, where current Disney artists examine how Snow White has guided the look of other Disney characters.

D23 recently sat down with longtime Disney animator Mark Henn—who created an exclusive “DisneyGraph” downloadable image included in the Snow White digital release—to discuss how the film continues to hold significance… for himself, for today’s audiences, and for generations to come.

“There’s such a simplicity and an elegance in its storytelling, and the art form.”

D23: Thanks for chatting with us, Mark! First off, can you talk a little bit about the “DisneyGraph” that you recently created?

Mark Henn (MH): Well, the drawing that I created, it’s the original drawing that I did based on [the character] Snow White, and it’s available for anybody who downloads or buys the digital copy of the film. It’s kind of an “old-meets-new” [piece]—older characters and new technology. It’s kind of a neat idea. Just the fact that they asked me to be a part of this and create this “DisneyGraph” is a real honor, and I was very pleased to have been asked to help make [this release] extra special!

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D23: Sounds great… Speaking of the character, did you find yourself particularly drawn (pun intended) to Snow White over the years?

MH: Yes, definitely! For me, I grew up in Ohio—and I grew up as a small boy dreaming of working for The Walt Disney Company as an animator. I didn’t actually see Snow White for the first time until I was in high school. By then, it was well in my brain that that was my dream—to eventually work here as an animator, but to see Snow White, to see the first feature, and be old enough to really appreciate it… I had a rudimentary understanding of how animation worked, so I could appreciate not only the film for film’s sake, but I could also appreciate the artistry and the craftsmanship that the animators and all the artists put in to the film. It’s our first. It’s Disney’s first feature, and it’s just a wonderful film.

D23: Why do you think it still resonates so much with audiences, all these years later?

MH: Well, that’s a big question—and I suppose every person you’d ask would give you a different answer… There’s certainly a quality of innocence to the film, in a sense. Not that its squeaky clean—I mean, you’ve got an evil witch; a stepmother with some anger management issues [laughs]. But there’s such a simplicity and an elegance in its storytelling and the art form,.

And just in terms as a piece of entertainment, it’s very easy on the eyes. You can just sit down, watch it, and it just sucks you in and takes you on this amazing journey with this young girl for a little over an hour or so. It’s a really very emotional story. It’s very gentle in that way. It has its moments of [bigger] impact—but you just get to sit back and enjoy what the filmmakers put on the screen, and the story that they’re telling. I think it’s simple, clean—just an elegant film…

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D23: Is there anything else you’d like our readers to know about Snow White, and this Digital HD release?

MH: I would just say, take the time and watch the movie again. Just be reminded of how good it is… Sit down, watch it with your kids, watch it with your grandkids—and just be reminded and enjoy it.

Disney Details: Sit Back and Imagine

Imagine an image of striking contrasts—land and water, sunlight and shade. An open-air structure hovers over a sparkling pool, the extended span of its roof providing shade so calming you can’t help but while away a few minutes—or hours—in its relaxing embrace. Photographer Gary Krueger snapped this shot at Walt Disney Imagineering’s campus in Glendale, California, during a tour of the always active laboratory of the imagination, where the hard labors of dreaming up the world’s most beloved theme park experiences are as constant as the gentle breezes floating through this peaceful retreat.

It’s all in the Disney Details!

Shanghai Disney Resort Opening Date—Plus More in News Briefs

Shanghai Disney Resort to Open June 16

We’ve become ever more excited for the opening of Shanghai Disney Resort with every detail that’s been shared to date—the themed lands, the beautiful Enchanted Storybook Castle (the largest and tallest at any Disney theme park), the Disneytown international shopping, dining, and entertainment district, Wishing Star Park (which will no doubt be as lovely as its name)—but now we can mark the opening date on our calendars and book passage to Shanghai! Today Disney and Shanghai Shendi Group announced that Shanghai Disney Resort will host a multi-day, grand opening celebration, culminating in a spectacular welcoming ceremony for the resort’s first official guests on June 16, 2016. The world-class resort, located in the Pudong District of Shanghai, will be Disney’s first destination resort in mainland China, featuring classic Disney storytelling and characters with all-new experiences tailored for the people of China. See you in Shanghai!

Mark your calendar with upcoming Disney events

Save the Date!
Be sure to mark these upcoming Disney events on your calendar:

D23 and Walt Disney Archives
January 29
D23 Behind-the-Scenes Experience: Walt Disney’s Office Suite

February 20
D23’s Adventure in Wonderland

February 20
D23 Shopping Day at Mickey’s of Glendale

April 20
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On Tour in Portland, Oregon

June 8
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On Tour in Salt Lake City, Utah

Studios
January 29
The Finest Hours opens in theaters.
March 4
Zootopia opens in theaters.
April 15
The Jungle Book opens in theaters.
May 6
Captain America: Civil War opens in theaters.
May 27
Alice Through the Looking Glass opens in theaters.
Parks
January 16
Club Villain at Disney’s Hollywood Studios
March 2—May 30, 2016
Epcot International Flower & Garden Festival
June 16, 2016
Shanghai Disney Resort to open
Television
January 15
The Lion Guard series premieres on Disney Channel at 9:30 a.m. ET/PT
January 19
Marvel’s Agent Carter returns to ABC at 9 p.m. ET
February 15
Gravity Falls series finale airs on Disney XD at 7 p.m. ET/PT
February 21
The Wonderful World of Disney: Disneyland 60 airs on ABC from 8 to 10 p.m. ET/PT on ABC.

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First Glimpse at New Disneyland Riverfront

Transformations, ahoy! There are some changes coming to Disneyland Resort—all to make way for the sure-to-be-amazing Star Wars-themed land, the park’s big 14-acre expansion project. Luckily, we’re already getting a look at what the Disneyland riverfront will look like once the project is completed!

The colorful artist’s rendering, from Walt Disney Imagineering, shows the north bank of the Rivers of America and the elevated trestles that will soon carry the Disneyland Railroad. Keep an eye out for more updates on the beautiful new waterfront (and, of course, the Star Wars-themed land) as it becomes available…

Princess Leia Comes to Star Wars Rebels

Exciting news from the world of Star Wars Rebels… Princess Leia, the unstoppable Rebel hero featured in both the original Star Wars trilogy as well as the recent Star Wars: The Force Awakens, will make her Star Wars Rebels debut in an upcoming all-new episode!

Taking place three years before the events of A New Hope, Leia is introduced as a young leader on her way to becoming the strong, more resolute character portrayed in the original trilogy. Appearing in her only episode of the season, the young Princess Leia is voiced by Julie Dolan—who also lent her vocal talents to the Rebel leader featured in Disney’s Star Tours attraction.

Meet young Leia when her special episode of Star Wars Rebels debuts Wednesday, January 20 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on Disney XD.

Meet Makuu in New The Lion Guard Featurette

Disney Junior’s The Lion Guard debuts this Friday, January 15—and the call of the wild is stronger than ever! “Be Prepared” for the big show with this new featurette highlighting Makuu the crocodile, as voiced by Blair Underwood (Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.).

Makuu’s name means “great” in Swahili, and he is tough and courageous—but he’s got a lot to learn about being a leader. Hear all about Blair’s take on his croc character by watching the video, above… and make sure to tune in this Friday at 9:30 a.m. ET/PT on Disney Junior.

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Minnie Mouse “Rocks the Dots” with Fashion Retrospective

The polka dots, the bows, the yellow shoes… Minnie Mouse has been a fashion icon for decades! “Minnie Rocks the Dots,” an interactive fashion and art installation celebrating Minnie’s signature style—in collaboration with Refinery29—will launch in Los Angeles with a splashy red carpet preview event on National Polka Dot Day (Friday, January 22) before opening to the public. The exhibit will take fans on a journey through the history of Minnie’s influence on fashion and pop culture, from her black-and-white debut in 1928 to her debut in color, and all the fresh fashion since.

Fashion designer Christian Siriano will reveal a custom dress made just for Minnie during the exclusive preview night. The Project Runway winner, known for his whimsical designs—from fantasy evening gowns, cocktail dresses, and sportswear, to intricately detailed shoes and accessories—has dressed many a style icon over the years… so a collaboration with Minnie makes perfect sense!

Hot off the heels of the successful “Minnie: Style Icon” exhibition during London Fashion Week, “Minnie Rocks the Dots” will feature iconic photographs, archive imagery, and sketches from the 1930s through the present day. Celebrity portraits of Twiggy and other fashion icons will also be on display.

Hear from Cast and Filmmakers in New The Finest Hours Featurette

Just a few short weeks until the release of Disney’s The Finest Hours, the amazing true story of oil tanker SS Pendleton’s crew and the U.S. Coast Guard ship that set out to rescue them in February 1952. Find out more from the cast and filmmakers themselves in this new featurette, which includes interviews with stars Chris Pine, Casey Affleck, and Ben Foster, and director Craig Gillespie.

The Finest Hours—presented in Digital 3D™, Real D 3D, and IMAX® 3D—will transport audiences to the heart of the action, creating a fully immersive cinematic experience. The film storms into theaters on January 29.

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The Wonderful World of Disney Celebrates Disneyland Resort’s 60 Years

As the Disneyland Resort continues to delight guests of all ages with their glittering 60th Anniversary Diamond Celebration, ABC’s The Wonderful World of Disney has decided to get in on the fun! An upcoming episode will honor Walt Disney’s big, bold theme park creation with a glamorous, star-studded Diamond Anniversary event—both in the heart of Hollywood at the Dolby Theatre, and throughout some of the most iconic locations at the resort, including Disneyland Park’s Sleeping Beauty Castle and Main Street, U.S.A., and Disney California Adventure’s Cars Land.

The special will also showcase two of the resort’s dazzling displays of technology—the Paint the Night Parade and World of Color–Celebrate! The Wonderful World of Walt Disney—along with exclusive performances and much, much more! The Wonderful World of Disney: Disneyland 60 will air on Sunday, February 21 from 8 to 10 p.m. ET/PT on ABC.

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Marvel’s Agent Carter Season 1—Now Available On Demand

Fans of the unstoppable gal in the red fedora, listen up! From now through Tuesday, January 19, you can catch up on the entire first season of ABC’s hit series Marvel’s Agent Carter on both ABC.com and the WATCH ABC app. Watch from the beginning as Peggy Carter navigates life as a single woman in America, in the wake of losing the love of her life, Steve Rogers—aka Captain America—and frantically works to clear Howard Stark’s name… putting herself on a path of murder, deceit, and intrigue. All eight episodes are available, on demand, in their entirety.

And don’t forget—Marvel’s Agent Carter returns to ABC for a second season on Tuesday, January 19, with a two-hour season premiere from 9–11 p.m. ET/PT.

Disney and ABC’s “Magic of Storytelling” Enters Fourth Year

Last week, Disney announced that it will donate its whopping 50-millionth book to First Book, a nonprofit that provides new books to educators and organizations serving children from low-income families. To celebrate this huge milestone, Disney and ABC are inviting readers to join the fourth annual “Magic of Storytelling” campaign through a slew of fun activities between now and March 31, 2016—including the first annual Disney Reads Day on February 6, 2016.

The “Magic of Storytelling” campaign is a collaboration between Disney Publishing Worldwide and Disney|ABC Television Group to help First Book put brand-new books into the hands of children in communities nationwide. The 2016 campaign features social media tie-ins (like taking a “shelfie” in front of your favorite books), special events, and a 50-state online challenge. And this year, the campaign will also feature a public service announcement—check it out, above—voiced by Oscar® winner Steven Spielberg, director of Disney’s upcoming film adaptation of Roald Dahl’s The BFG. To learn more about the “Magic of Storytelling” campaign and Disney Reads Day, check out FirstBook.org/BeInspired.