Joe Ranft

Joe Ranft

“Joe was really a major part of Pixar’s soul. He was one of the key players who made all the films what they are.”—Pete Docter, director of Monsters, Inc. and Up, once said.

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Roone Arledge

Roone Arledge

Don Hewitt, the producer of 60 Minutes at CBS, and the only executive in network news whose longevity and influence rivaled Roone’s, said, ‘‘Just about everything that’s good in television has a Roone Arledge trademark on it.’’

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Walt Peregoy

Walt Peregoy

“To this day, Walt Peregoy’s color styling in One Hundred and One Dalmatians remains a fine example of how color can be used creatively in animation while serving more than a merely decorative function.” —Amid Amidi, modern animation authority

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Animation Disney Legend Burny Mattinson

Burny Mattinson

“Storyboards are as close to direction as you can get. You’re telling cameras where to go, what’s happening on screen, where to cut, and really making a blueprint for the film.” —Burny Mattinson

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Bob Booth

Bob Booth

“The similarly innovative, creative, and fascinating work of our manufacturing and production entities—and the work of steadfast guys like Bob Booth—often gets lost to the limelight. But without them, the dreams of the designers would never see the light of practical application.” —Marty Sklar, former Imagineering ambassador

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Dorothea Redmond

Dorothea Redmond

Dorothea remained at WDI to work on the Walt Disney World project in Florida, where her work was varied and prolific, including moody studies for Fantasyland, renderings for an architecturally opulent Main Street, and Adventureland area development that communicated a feminine and ethereal mood of exotica.

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Neil Gallagher

Neil Gallagher

“Every project leader wanted Neil on their team because he always solicited ideas and new solutions from his co-workers,” Marty Sklar once reflected. “Neil understood that leadership requires trusting and empowering your teammates.”

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Al Dempster

Al Dempster

Disney has had several superstar background artists: Sam Armstrong, Maurice Noble, Claude Coats, Walt Peregoy, Ralph Hulett, Thelma Witmer, Eyvind Earle, Frank Armitage… and Al Dempster.

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Oliver Wallace

Oliver Wallace

Animation music historian Ross Care also noted of Oliver’s prolific short cartoon music, “His scores for the Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse shorts… collectively provide a virtual, though still largely unread, textbook in animation scoring.”

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Art Linkletter

Art Linkletter

Walt Disney scored something of a coup in getting Art Linkletter as the primary host for his gala live broadcast of the opening of Disneyland.

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