February 1996...
The animation for The Hunchback of Notre Dame comes to a conclusion...
Then, in April 1996...
The company newsletter informs us there will be a Super Premier at the Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana for Hunchback.
May 1996... The animation crew and their families are invited to the Big Easy for the Premier and other festivities...
June 1996...
The traditional cast and crew party was held here in Los Angeles...
(LaVonne and me with Quasimodo at the cast and crew party) |
Three days later we boarded a chartered plane for New Orleans...
(Melissa, LaVonne and me as we are about to board the plane) |
The crew and our families at LAX.
LaVonne, my daughter Melissa, and me as we boarded the plane. Melissa, back for the summer from her freshman year of college at Spelman, was the only one of our three kids still at home...
My sons; Jai, coming from Morehouse College in Atlanta, GA and Mikel, from Howard U in Washington, DC, met us in New Orleans.
(Me, Jai and Mikel in the hotel lobby) |
Above left, our day-to-day guidebook to the fun and festivities in New Orleans...And above right, anticipating the heat, a fan to cool off from the sweat worked up from the planned activities.
(About to enter the Gallier Hall) |
we walked, led by a small band, to the Spanish Plaza where we boarded the Riverboat Cajun Queen for dessert as we floated on the Mississippi River.
(About to walk to the riverboat) |
(Jai, Melissa, me and Mikel in the grandstands) |
(Our point of view from the bleachers) |
The Bark spotlighted our time there.
The month of June ended with a news article focusing on the contributions of African-Americans in the making of The Hunchback of Notre Dame. To some it may not seem like anything to make a fuss over, but there is not a lot of exposure to art in general in the black community. Sports and entertainment (singing, dancing etc.) yes. The Arts, no. Even in the sports field the list is short in certain arenas. Can you name a black swimmer? A black golfer, chess, rodeo? One or two at the most.
Exposure is one way to get the word out that there are avenues to creative careers in the arts to diverse communities.
Though we are all listed as animators in the headline, each one of us played a separate part in the production of the film.
Lillian Chapman in the clean-up department working on my character Djali.
Serge Michaels painted backgrounds.
Marlon West is credited with visual effects and
Marshall Toomey was Lead Key in the clean-up drawings of Quasimodo.
The Bottom Line...
After all of the fanfare ushering in the production, the focus then becomes, "How well will the feature do at the box office when released? Will it make back production costs? Will it turn a profit? Can the studio afford to make another animated feature?
These are big questions that can only be answered by the public. And the public did answer...
Seven months later we all celebrated the worldwide success of The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
Everyone wants approval of what they do. Visual artists are no exception. We animators put our characters through an acting performance. The question is, will the character's personality communicate to the audience and do so in an entertaining way as the story being told unfolds? We sure hope so...
Over the thirty years of animating at Disney I got my share of fan mail. This letter is from a family who attended the premier screening at the Superdome in New Orleans.
Regardless of the profession, one of the by products of a job well done is the positive effects it has on others. I'm humbled and blessed to have had an opportunity to positively influence others via my art.
Greetings Mr. Husband,
ReplyDeleteI just found your book on amazon and will be ordering it soon. I have so enjoyed reading the preface and about your truly wonderful career with Disney. I am so happy you have a blog, too! I am going to soak up as much talent as I can from you to apply to my career. I am a graphic artist by trade but am shifting now towards illustrating/children's books. I was raised on animation and Lucky Charms. My current classwork includes learning how to express emotion in a few strokes of the pen. I am sure I will be sketching better after studying your amazing work. Thank you sooooo much for showing me the ropes. BTW, I just LOVED The Rescuer's; and every other movie you have worked on. You are awesome~ sharon in san diego
Sharon-thanks for the kind words, once you go through the book, let me know what effect it has on the way you view your art- best wishes on your children's book illustrations, I illustrated a childrens book 'Steamboat School' to be published by Hyperion next summer:-)
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