Showing posts with label Fact or Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fact or Fiction. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Steamboat Willie and Mickey Mouse

Q: In Steamboat Willy, does Mickey play himself? Is the boat the only thing named Steamboat Willy?
Charlotte, Topeka, Kansas

A [Dave Smith]: No, it is Mickey Mouse portraying the character of Willie, known as Steamboat Willie because he works on a steamboat. The boat has no name in the cartoon, though it docks at Podunk Landing.



Q: We were always under the impression that Steamboat Willie was the third Mickey Mouse cartoon to be produced, but the first one released, on November 18th, 1928. However, a few websites note Plane Crazy as being released on May 15, 1928, six months before Steamboat Willie. Was this a true release date or perhaps just a private viewing for distributors?
Joseph and Chrissy, Modesto, California

A [Dave Smith]: The May 15th date was a preview of the silent version of Plane Crazy in Los Angeles; the film did not have its official release until after sound was added. It opened at the Mark Strand Theatre in New York on March 17, 1929, four months after Steamboat Willie premiered.

More to see [by Marcio Disney]

Nowadays, you can see the "Steamboat Willy" boat at the AMAZING Fantasmic Finale at Disney's Hollywood Studios.




Here you can Watch this amazing short! I really love it :)



Friday, August 20, 2010

The Man Behind the Myth

Q: My cousins told me about a great documentary that was made about Walt Disney. They also told me it was directed by his grandson. Do you know where I can find it?
Gavin, Auburn, Indiana 

A [Dave Smith]: You are referring to Walt: The Man Behind the Myth. It was released on video cassette in 2001 and DVD in 2002, and they may still be available. You can also find copies on eBay. The executive producer was Walter Elias Disney Miller, Walt's grandson, for the Walt Disney Family Foundation.


Click Here to watch the full movie!





ºoº Marcio Disney Family Sites Network ºoº

Disney Picture of the Day

Vinylmation of the Day

The Disney History

Disney Pin of the Day

Marcio Disney Digital Media

Monday, August 2, 2010

Seven Dwarfs - The Original Names

Q: What were the original names chosen for the seven dwarfs?
Vicky, Ontario, California

A [Dave Smith]: In 1934, the names first selected were Wheezy, Jumpy, Baldy, Grumpy, Doc, Happy and Sleepy. Four of those names were retained. Dozens of other names were suggested, with a few being Hickey, Sniffy, Stuffy, Burpy, Tubby, Shorty and Dizzy.



[More to Know About Snow White by Marcio Disney]

Deafy is a happy sort of fellow - he always tries to make clever remarks, but he misinterprets other people's attitudes toward him. He feels, lots of times, that they are saying something about him, or that they have made some remarks, which they haven't at all - he takes exception to the most ridiculous things. Throughout the picture Deafy and Grumpy  are always clashing. Deafy will pick up one word of the conversation in the early part, and whereas the conversation topic might have changed completely, he still sticks to the first thing that he heard, and in this way we hope to get some comical situations out of Deafy.
—Story draft for Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, made in early 1936.


Differences from fairy tale

Though Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is similar to the fairy tale version, there are several differences. In the fairy tale, Snow White's mother wishes for a child with "lips as red as blood, hair as dark as the window frame, and skin as white as snow". This does not occur in the film, as Disney's Snow White is shown with only her stepmother, the Queen, and there is no scene of her biological mother.

In the fairy tale, Snow White accepts three gifts from the witch (a girdle, a poisoned comb, and the apple), but is rescued from the first two gifts by the dwarfs. When she is offered the apple, she is unwilling to eat it and only accepts after the witch takes a bite of the apple that is not poisoned. However, in the film, Snow White only accepts one gift (the apple) from the witch after she helps the witch inside the dwarfs' house (some of the woodland birds attacked the witch as a warning, which was misinterpreted by Snow White). She bites the apple after being told that the apple is magical and that one bite will make all of her dreams come true (namely marrying the Prince).

In the fairy tale, Snow White is not awakened by the prince's kiss. Instead, the prince buys the coffin and Snow White's body from the dwarfs and has it carried with him towards his castle. During the journey, a piece of apple in Snow White's throat becomes dislodged and she awakens.

Lastly, in the fairy tale, Snow White faces her stepmother one final time after eating the poisoned apple. The stepmother attends the wedding of Snow White and the prince, but she is stopped from causing further harm by being forced to wear hot iron shoes to her death. In the film, the stepmother (as the witch) is chased up to the top of a mountain by the dwarfs after giving Snow White the poisoned apple: when she tries to dislodge a boulder onto the dwarfs to kill them, lightning strikes the edge she is standing on and she falls to her death, along with the boulder falling and presumably crushing her.


Wikipedia

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is a 1937 American animated film based on Snow White, a fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm. It was the first full-length cel-animated feature in motion picture history, as well as the first animated feature film produced in America, the first produced in full color, the first to be produced by Walt Disney, and the first in the Walt Disney Animated Classics canon.[3]

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs premiered at the Carthay Circle Theatre on December 21, 1937, and the film was released to theaters by RKO Radio Pictures on February 4, 1938. The story was adapted by storyboard artists Dorothy Ann Blank, Richard Creedon, Merrill De Maris, Otto Englander, Earl Hurd, Dick Rickard, Ted Sears and Webb Smith from the German fairy tale Snow White by the Brothers Grimm. David Hand was the supervising director, while William Cottrell, Wilfred Jackson, Larry Morey, Perce Pearce, and Ben Sharpsteen directed the film's individual sequences.

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was one of only two animated films to rank in the American Film Institute's list of the 100 greatest American films of all time in 1997 (the other being Disney's Fantasia), ranking number 49. It achieved a higher ranking (#34) in the list's 2007 update, this time being the only traditionally animated film on the list. The following year AFI would name the film as the greatest American animated film of all time and the best ever Walt Disney Animated Classics movie.

In 1989, the film was added to the United States National Film Registry as being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".


The names of the Seven Dwarfs (Bashful, Doc, Dopey, Grumpy, Happy, Sleepy and Sneezy) were created for this production, chosen from a pool of about fifty potentials. The one name Disney always had in mind from the start was Grumpy, or something similar. Blabby, Jumpy, Shifty, and Snoopy were among those that were rejected, along with Awful, Baldy, Biggo-Ego, Biggy, Biggy-Wiggy, Burpy, Busy, Chesty, Cranky, Daffy, Dippy, Dirty, Dizzy, Doleful, Flabby, Gabby, Gloomy, Goopy, Graceful, Helpful, Hoppy, Hotsy, Hungrey, Jaunty, Lazy, Neurtsy, Nifty, Puffy, Sappy, Sneezy-Wheezy, Sniffy, Scrappy, Silly, Soulful, Strutty, Stuffy, Sleazy, Tearful, Thrifty, Tipsy, Titsy, Tubby, Weepy, Wistful, and Woeful.


It was called "Disney's Folly." Who on earth would want to sit still for 90 minutes to watch an animated cartoon? And why pick a well-worn Grimm's Fairy Tale that every schoolkid knows? But Walt Disney seemed to thrive on projects which a lesser man might have written off as "stupid" or "impossible". Investing three years, $1,500,000, and the combined talents of 570 artists into Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Disney produced a film that was not only acknowledged a classic from the outset, but also earned 8,500,000 depression-era dollars in gross rentals. Bypassing early temptations to transform the heroine Snow White into a plump Betty Boop type or a woebegone ZaSu Pitts lookalike, the Disney staffers wisely made radical differentiations between the "straight" and "funny" characters in the story. Thus, Snow White and Prince Charming moved and were drawn realistically, while the Seven Dwarfs were rendered in the rounded, caricatured manner of Disney's short-subject characters. In this way, the serious elements of the story could be propelled forward in a believable enough manner to grab the adult viewers, while the dwarfs provided enough comic and musical hijinks to keep the kids happy. It is a tribute to the genius of the Disney formula that the dramatic and comic elements were strong enough to please both demographic groups. Like any showman, Disney knew the value of genuine horror in maintaining audience interest: accordingly, the Wicked Queen, whose jealousy of Snow White's beauty motivates the story, is a thoroughly fearsome creature even before she transforms herself into an ancient crone. Best of all, Snow White  clicks in the three areas in which Disney had always proven superiority over his rivals: Solid story values (any sequence that threatened to slow down the plotline was ruthlessly jettisoned, no matter how much time and money had been spent), vivid etched characterizations (it would have been easier to have all the Dwarfs walk, talk and act alike: thank heaven that Disney never opted for "easy"), and instantly memorable songs (Frank Churchill, Leigh Harline, Paul J. Smith and the entire studio music department was Oscar-nominated for such standards-to-be as "Whistle While You Work" and "Some Day My Prince Will Come")





Friday, July 30, 2010

Is an 8mm reel-to-reel collectible?

Q: I have an 8mm reel-to-reel Disney cartoon that I watched when I was a child some 50 years ago. Is it collectible?
Carol, Pensacola, Florida


A [Dave Smith]: The old 8mm film versions of Disney cartoons are practically valueless today. Few people have projectors, the films have gotten brittle and practically all the films have been released on video cassette or DVD.



About 8mm [Marcio Disney]


"Eight millimeter" film is one of the oldest movie formats, that was first introduced in 1932.

Eight-millimeter film dominated the amateur market for thirty years, until Kodak decided to improve every aspect of the format, calling it, Super 8. 8mm film has almost completely disappeared from the home movie market. Today it finds use in Television Applications, some Documentary Films and Music Television.




CLICK HERE TO SEE A KODAK COMMERCIAL AT DISNEY [YOUTUBE]
[It's a Jungle Cruis Tribute video and the commercial recorded by Ed Sullivan starts at 2:13 ]


Most common 8mm and Super8 reels – 3" – can hold up to 50 feet of film, which is approximately 3-4 minutes of video.


There are larger reels as well:

    5" - 200 feet of film;

    6" - 300 feet;

    7" - 400 feet;

    8" - 600 feet;

    9 3/4" - 800 feet;

    10 1/2" - 1200 feet.






Everyday, Disney fans send dozens of questions for Disney Chief Archivist Dave Smith. Here are Dave's answers to your questions. Check back every day for a new post with a new question.

Dave Smith (born October 13, 1940) was the Walt Disney Archives founder and chief archivist which is located in the Frank G. Wells Building at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. He joined the company June 22, 1970. Forty years later, on July 2010, he retired.



Follow the links below to see our daily posts:


The Walt Disney World Picture of the Day
The Disney's Pin of the Day
The Disney's Vinylmation of the Day
http://vinylmationoftheday.blogspot.com/

The Daily Mickey [Comics]
http://tinyurl.com/DailyMickey

The Daily Donald [Comics + Cartoons]
http://tinyurl.com/DailyDonald

Fun Fact of the Day
http://tinyurl.com/DisneyFunFact

This Day in Disney History
http://tinyurl.com/TodayDisneyHistory



And meet our other blogs and sites:

Marcio Disney Blog
[Blog]
[Site]
http://sites.google.com/site/marciodisney/

Disney Tales [5 weekly tales]

The Disney History

Disney Archives
http://marciodisneyarchives.blogspot.com/

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Audio-Animatronics

Q: Disney revolutionized theme park entertainment with Audio-Animatronics®. What are the oldest Audio-Animatronics® still being used at Disney Parks? Which is the most complex? What is the largest?
Ryan-Philippe, North Hills, California

A [Dave Smith]: While they have been upgraded through the years, the first Disneyland show with Audio-Animatronics® was the Enchanted Tiki Room in 1963. Human figures were first created for the 1964 New York World's Fair; the humans in the Carousel of Progress and Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln were later added to Disneyland. The largest figures were the dinosaurs in Universe of Energy at Epcot and the mammoth Yeti in Expedition Everest, but the tallest one currently is the new Maleficent in Fantasmic! at Disneyland. The most complex early figure was probably Abraham Lincoln for the Fair — he was later simplified because he had possibly been made too elaborate, which caused maintenance issues. But the new Lincoln figure [since December 2009] at Disneyland is again sophisticate, with 20 functions in the head and face as opposed to seven in the preceding figure. Today some other Audio-Animatronics® have very realistic movements — such as the auctioneer in Pirates of the Caribbean and the Wicked Witch of the West in the Oz scene in The Great Movie Ride — or can even walk around, like Lucky the Dinosaur. Other complex figures today are Mr. Potato Head in Toy Story Midway Mania! and Stitch in Stitch's Great Escape. 



Chef Remy Video and Audio-Animatronics Timeline [Marcio Disney]




Early 1950s
Walt Disney purchases a mechanical bird while vacationing in Europe. The souvenir becomes the inspiration for Audio-Animatronics technology.

1951
Work begins on “Project Little Man.”  Roger Broggie and Wathel Rogers, pioneers in Audio-Animatronicstechnology, create a miniature figure that is programmed with cams, cables and tubes to mimic tap-dancing routines performed by the late Buddy Ebsen.

1963




Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room opens at Disneyland.  It’s the first show to feature Audio-Animatronics technology.


1964

The world’s first fully animated human figure, Abraham Lincoln, debuts at the New York World’s Fair in Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln.  The figure causes a sensation, not just with the audience, but with Disney Imagineers, who were able to complete the figure in half the time they anticipated.

Audio-Animatronics figures are also in three other World’s Fair shows designed and produced by Disney: Carousel of Progress (featuring figures animated using a programming harness, a precursor of today’s motion capture systems), Magic Skyway and it’s a small world.

1964



Two Audio-Animatronics birds, Robin and Umbrella, appear in “Mary Poppins.”  Walt Disney reinvests profits from the film to create MAPO, an organization within Walt Disney Imagineering dedicated to creating and innovating Audio-Animatronics figures.

1965
Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln – featuring the Audio-Animatronics figure of Abraham Lincoln (actually, a duplicate since the original was still performing at the World’s Fair) – opens at Disneyland.

1970
Audio-Animatronics technology enters the computer age with the use of DACS (Digital Animation Control System), a computer-controlled playback system for Disney shows and attractions.  Imagineers also begin using the Anicon-Animation Console – for animating and programming figures.

1989



The first A-100 Audio-Animatronics figure, the Wicked Witch of the West, debuts as part of The Great Movie Ride at Disney’s Hollywood Studios (then known as Disney-MGM Studios) in Walt Disney World Resort.  A-100 figures incorporate compliance technology that gives the characters more fluid and realistic movements.

1992




Pirates of the Caribbean opens at Disneyland Paris.  Attraction features sword-fighting pirates figures.

1998



Hopper, the grasshopper from the Disney•Pixar film “A Bug’s Life,” is the most sophisticated Audio-Animatronics figure produced to date.  Featuring 74 functions, the character appears in “It’s Tough to be a Bug!”

2002
The first portable, all-electric Audio-Animatronics figure, Meeko, the raccoon from the Disney animated film “Pocahontas,” appears.  He’s in a basket carried by Pocahontas.

2003




The first totally autonomous Audio-Animatronics figure, Lucky the Dinosaur, makes his debut, at Disney’s California Adventure.

2006


The yeti, a major element of Expedition Everest at Disney’s Animal Kingdom, is the largest and most powerful Audio-Animatronics figure ever created by Walt Disney Imagineering. Standing more than 18 feet tall, the thrust of the yeti’s arm has the equivalent amount of force as a 747 jumbo jet.

2007



The Muppet Mobile Lab, featuring Muppets Dr. Bunsen Honeydew and his assistant Beaker, marks the first time that free-roaming Audio-Animatronics characters can interact and converse with each other, as well as with guests they encounter along their way.

2008

2009
Mr. Potato Head in Toy Story Mania! at both Disney’s California Adventure and Disney’s Hollywood Studios marks the first time that anAudio-Animatronics figure features lips with such a wide range of lifelike movements, can remove and re-attach a body part (his ear) and has digitally animated eyes that can look directly at the particular guest with whom he is conversing. Also, since Mr. Potato Head has more lines of dialogue than any Audio-Animatronics figure ever created by Walt Disney Imagineering, it has required more programming hours than any other figure.
 
Chef Remy, the lovable star of the Disney/Pixar film "Ratatouille," who is the smallest Audio-Animatronics in the world, is appearing six days a week, four times a day at Les Chefs de France in the France pavilion at Epcot.




Everyday, Disney fans send dozens of questions for Disney Chief Archivist Dave Smith. Here are Dave's answers to your questions. Check back every day for a new post with a new question.

Dave Smith (born October 13, 1940) was the Walt Disney Archives founder and chief archivist which is located in the Frank G. Wells Building at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. He joined the company June 22, 1970. Forty years later, on July 2010, he retired.



Follow the links below to see our daily posts:


The Walt Disney World Picture of the Day
The Disney's Pin of the Day
The Disney's Vinylmation of the Day
http://vinylmationoftheday.blogspot.com/

The Daily Mickey [Comics]
http://tinyurl.com/DailyMickey

The Daily Donald [Comics + Cartoons]
http://tinyurl.com/DailyDonald

Fun Fact of the Day
http://tinyurl.com/DisneyFunFact

This Day in Disney History
http://tinyurl.com/TodayDisneyHistory



And meet our other blogs and sites:

Marcio Disney Blog
[Blog]
[Site]
http://sites.google.com/site/marciodisney/

Disney Tales [5 weekly tales]

The Disney History




Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Has Disneyland ever closed?

Q: Has Disneyland ever closed and if it has when?
Daniel, Chicago, Illinois



A [Dave Smith]: Disneyland was closed on Mondays during the off-season from 1955 to 1957, and on Mondays and Tuesdays from 1958 to 1985. The park closed full days for rain 11 times between 1956 and 1992, for the national day of mourning for President Kennedy in 1963 and in 2001 at the time of the terrorist attacks on 9/11. There have been a number of other days when the park closed early because of inclement weather.


More to Know [Marcio Disney]

The last time Disneyland was closed for a day was 5/4/2005 in preparation for the 50th anniversary celebration with started on 5/5/2005. Although that day was officially closed to the public they still had VIP's and Media for previews.

Why May 05, 2005?

In an historic first, all 10 of the Disney theme parks around the world collectively kick off the festivities for the "Happiest Celebration on Earth" to mark the 50th anniversary of Disneyland. (The opening of Hong Kong Disneyland in September will add #11 to the 18-month long global celebration.)

In Anaheim, the opening ceremony for Disneyland's 50th Anniversary takes place in front of the Sleeping Beauty Castle. Special guests include singer LeeAnn Rimes (singing "Remember When"), Art Linkletter (who co-hosted the television grand opening in 1955), and legendary actress-singer Julie Andrews (the Honorary Ambassador of the 50th anniversary and star of Mary Poppins). A special anniversary fireworks show called "Remember ... Dreams Come True" (sponsored by American Honda Motor Co.) debuts.

Down in Florida, Epcot's new Soarin' (a simulator attraction) officially opens as does the Disney-MGM Studios' Lights, Motors, Action! Extreme Stunt Show. Cinderellabration, a glittering stage show, officially premieres too - at the Magic Kingdom. Also officially debuting is Disney's Magical Express - a complimentary round-trip airport transfer for Disney World hotel guests

A Cast Member Called Lissa told us how was the 9/11 at Disneyland:

"Nothing was more eerie than working on and after 9/11. The parked was preparing to open that day when the news broke. Right away, all gates that were unlocked were quickly locked. All employees went to their emergency zones. Everyone was confused. Then, an announcement was made by one of our managers. Around noon-ish, it was officially decided not to open the park at all and most of us went home. Ticket booths stayed open to refund tickets while some stayed to turn away guests and break the bad news to them. Luckily, I wasn't there that day when it happened.

The next day, the parks were literally ghost towns. Only the hotel guests were really in the park. I remember working the monorail ticket booth (now a trading pin store) in the morning and I didn't sell a ticket. Just processed travel vouchers, sold Lion King tickets, and working as an information booth for the resort. Not a single guest walked through DTD, no planes in the sky, no music was playing on the walkway, and it was very difficult to keep a smile on anyone's face. Due to the low attendance, the parks closed earlier than scheduled. It was very surreal because only two days before it was packed. Something I'll never forget."

Other Dates:

When John F. Kennedy was assassinated in 1963.
After the 1994 Northridge earthquake for inspection.

There is a difference between closing down early and not opening at all.

For death reasons, the most recent example of this is the Big Thunder Mountain Railroad accident in 2003. When that happened they cleared the entire frontierland area so you couldn't even get close enough to see the mountain. However, the rest of the park remained open.


August 06, 1970


A bizarre occurence takes place at Disneyland when 750 "Hippies" and "Radical Yippies" infiltrate the park, and take over the Wilderness Fort. They raise the Vietcong flag and pass reefers out to passersbys.

Later, they march in a Main Street parade, and sing their own lyrics to "Zipadee Doo Dah" ("Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Mihn is going to win..."). More conservative park guests try to drown them out by singing "America the Beautiful." Before the confrontation can heat up, a platoon of Anaheim Police officers in full riot gear pour into the park from backstage areas! A riot is adverted and Disneyland vice president of Operations Dick Nunis orders the park closed at 7:10 PM. For many years afterward Disneyland will selectively enforced a "dress code" at the park, occasionally refusing admission to "long-haired hippies".  (This unusual incident is the only time an outside security force has ever made a full-blown public appearance at the park.)













Everyday, Disney fans send dozens of questions for Disney Chief Archivist Dave Smith. Here are Dave's answers to your questions. Check back every day for a new post with a new question.

Dave Smith (born October 13, 1940) was the Walt Disney Archives founder and chief archivist which is located in the Frank G. Wells Building at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. He joined the company June 22, 1970. Forty years later, on July 2010, he retired.



Follow the links below to see our daily posts:


The Walt Disney World Picture of the Day
The Disney's Pin of the Day
The Disney's Vinylmation of the Day
http://vinylmationoftheday.blogspot.com/

The Daily Mickey [Comics]
http://tinyurl.com/DailyMickey

The Daily Donald [Comics + Cartoons]
http://tinyurl.com/DailyDonald

Fun Fact of the Day
http://tinyurl.com/DisneyFunFact

This Day in Disney History
http://tinyurl.com/TodayDisneyHistory



And meet our other blogs and sites:

Marcio Disney Blog
[Blog]
[Site]
http://sites.google.com/site/marciodisney/

Disney Tales [5 weekly tales]

The Disney History




Monday, July 19, 2010

Walt Disney - With or Without You

Q: I recently did a little math. As of February 13, 2010, The Walt Disney Company will have been without Walt Disney as long as it had Walt Disney. Has this milestone occurred to anybody at the company? And do you have any reflections on that?
Richard, Whittier, California

A [Dave Smith]: Yes, a friend, Julian, sent me that same calculation several weeks before I received your question. Very interesting! The farther we get from Walt Disney the more important it is that we continue to make people aware of his contributions. Without Walt Disney we would have no company today.


Fun Fact and Walt Disney Info [Marcio Disney]

What happened in february 13, 2010 in Disney History?

During the 10th Annual Toy of the Year Awards in New York City, John Lasseter (chief creative officer, Walt Disney Company and Pixar Animation Studios, and principal creative advisor of Walt Disney Imagineering) is inducted into the toy industry Hall of Fame. Lasseter shares this honor with many including Walt Disney (inducted in 1987) and Jim Henson (in 1992).





Everyday, Disney fans send dozens of questions for Disney Chief Archivist Dave Smith. Here are Dave's answers to your questions. Check back every day for a new post with a new question.

Dave Smith (born October 13, 1940) was the Walt Disney Archives founder and chief archivist which is located in the Frank G. Wells Building at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. He joined the company June 22, 1970. Forty years later, on July 2010, he retired.



Follow the links below to see our daily posts:


The Walt Disney World Picture of the Day
The Disney's Pin of the Day
The Disney's Vinylmation of the Day
http://vinylmationoftheday.blogspot.com/

The Daily Mickey [Comics]
http://tinyurl.com/DailyMickey

The Daily Donald [Comics + Cartoons]
http://tinyurl.com/DailyDonald

Fun Fact of the Day
http://tinyurl.com/DisneyFunFact

This Day in Disney History
http://tinyurl.com/TodayDisneyHistory



And meet our other blogs and sites:

Marcio Disney Blog
[Blog]
[Site]
http://sites.google.com/site/marciodisney/

Disney Tales [5 weekly tales]

The Disney History




Sunday, July 18, 2010

Disney Legend: Dave Smith and Welcome to the Blog

First things first!

This is a new blog from the Marcio Disney Family Sites Network.



Everyday, Disney fans send dozens of questions for Disney Chief Archivist Dave Smith.

In this DAILY blog, you'll see Dave's answers to your questions. Updates and infos (result of my research for each post) will take you deeper in the theme with pictures, videos, fun facts and more!

Check back every day for a new post with a new question revealing Disney secrets and Mysteries.

This first post is just to introduce you the concept of the blog and show a little more info about Dave Smith's life at Disney and later, at midnigh, you'll got your first question in our daily posts :)

Disney Legend Dave Smith (born October 13, 1940) was the Walt Disney Archives founder and chief archivist which is located in the Frank G. Wells Building at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. He joined the company June 22, 1970. Forty years later, on July 2010, he retired.





Dave Smith


Dave Smith (Archives)

Inducted 2007











Walt Disney Archives founder and chief archivist David R. Smith officially joined The Walt Disney Company on June 22, 1970, but his Disney roots are even deeper.

A fan of Disney films throughout his youth, Dave adds, "I grew up in Southern California, and so my appreciation of Disneyland began as a child." In 1967, he had become interested in compiling an extensive bibliography on Walt Disney. With approval from the Disney organization, he spent more than a year researching all Disney publications and productions.

When the Disney family and Studio management decided to attempt to preserve Walt Disney's papers, awards and memorabilia, it was natural for them to contact Dave to do a study, and make a recommendation which established the guidelines and objectives of the Archives. Dave was selected as archivist, and in the years since the Archives was established, it has come to be recognized as a model among corporate archives in the country?and Dave is regarded as the final authority on matters of Disney history.



Born on October 13, 1940, and raised in Pasadena, Dave graduated as valedictorian from both Pasadena High School and Pasadena City College. He earned his B.A. in history at the University of California at Berkeley. While in school, Dave worked part-time for six years in the Manuscript Department of the Huntington Library in San Marino. 


Upon receiving his Masters Degree in Library Science from the University of California in June 1963, he was selected as one of seven outstanding graduates of library schools throughout the country to participate in an internship program at the Library of Congress in Washington. 


He returned to California where he served for five years as a reference librarian at the UCLA Research Library. While there, Dave authored several articles and had bibliographies published on the Monitor and the Merrimac Civil War warships, and on Jack Benny. 


Of his Disney role, Dave said, "The thing I like best is the tremendous variety in our work. We never know when we come to work in the morning what we'll be doing that day. It keeps the job interesting when you're not doing the same thing day in and day out." 


Dave has written extensively on Disney history, with a regular column in The Disney Channel Magazine, Disney Magazine, Disney Newsreel, and numerous articles in such publications as Starlog, Manuscripts, Millimeter, American Archivist, and California Historical Quarterly. He is the author of the official Disney encyclopedia Disney A to Z (now in its third edition), with Kevin Neary he co-authored four volumes of The Ultimate Disney Trivia Book, with Steven Clark he co-wrote Disney: The First 100 Years, and he edited The Quotable Walt Disney. Dave has written introductions to a number of other Disney books. 


"My greatest reward has been getting to know the many people who have come to use the Archives over the years. I have been especially proud to be a guide and mentor to so many young people who have gone on to exceptional careers in the Disney organization." Dave says humbly. 


"I have had the pleasure and privilege to work with Dave Smith for nearly 35 years," author and animator John Canemaker says, "and, to me, he has always been legendary. For his steady building of the Disney Archives over the years into one of the greatest, most invaluable, world-class resources for studying American animation?and for his kindness and generosity to all researchers."
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