
Monday, February 23, 2009
Story: The Greatest Cartoon Writer Of All Time
This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see the bonus reason on our The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for links to more great posts featuring animation art.

The other day, a discussion on cartoon writing erupted in response to recent posts on the subject in John Kricfalusi's blog. One of John's main points is that the golden age cartoons that we all regard as the greatest cartoons ever created were written by cartoonists as storyboards, not written in words as scripts. In support of his argument, he presented video clips of Walt Disney and Walter Lantz discussing the qualifications of the people who wrote their cartoons. (See also, Page 5 of the 1938 Disney Training Manual).

Who was your favorite golden age cartoon writer?
It's a fair question- one that I've heard animators discuss and argue about on many occasions. Surely current cartoon writers would have golden age writer heros, just like animators study golden age animators like Milt Kahl or Grim Natwick...

Disney story man, Joe Rinaldi
But none of the scriptwriters participating in the discussion could name a single golden age cartoon writer. The only names they could mention were other current scriptwriters, or novelists, journalists and live action screenwriters who worked in totally different media. They had no idea who pioneered their profession and the process these people used to create cartoons for nearly half a century. To be fair, this sort of ignorance of the history of our craft isn't just limited to writers. I've heard the same sort of admissions of ignorance from producers and directors, as well as artists and animators.
Here is an example of a story by my favorite golden age story man... Warren Foster.

After Clampett's departure from the studio, he wrote for McKimson ("Gorilla My Dreams", "Easter Yeggs", "The Foghorn Legorn") and Freleng ("Ballot Box Bunny", "Bugs And Thugs", "Birds Anonymous"). Freleng said that Foster was the best story man he ever worked with. In the TV era, Foster wrote episodes of Huckleberry Hound, Yogi Bear, Quick Draw McGraw, The Jetsons and The Flintstones.
Here is a storyboard by Foster from his days at Hanna-Barbera. This is a model of clarity and simplicity, designed to meet the stringent economics imposed on TV animation at the time. This is a board from the pilot episode of The Yogi Bear Show.















WHAT ABOUT ADVENTURE SHOWS
AND COMIC STRIPS?
In his article, "Detour Guide For An Armchair Marco Polo", master comic strip storyteller, Milton Caniff writes...
There has been a tendency recently for artists to automatically assume they cannot write their own stories because they see so many double by-lines. I contend that any man who can invent pictures can invent situations and dialogue. In fact, it should be easier for the artist to pilot his own action because he is not likely to write himself into one of those undrawable dilemmas in manuscripts about which illustrators have complained for years. --Milton CaniffSound familiar?
I'm working on a series of illustrated articles on how cartoons were written in the "golden age". For the first four installments, see...
WRITING CARTOONS
Part One- The Gag Session
Part Two- A Continuity Emerges
Part Three- Structure
Part Four: The Rough Board
If you found this post to be interesting, see also... Ren & Stimpy: Big House Blues Part One, Part Two and Part Three / The Alvin Show: The Whistler Storyboard / Chad's Design For Television / Ren & Stimpy: Stimpy's Invention Part One and Part Two / Charlie McElmurry's Year Of The Tiger Storyboard.
Thanks
Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
2.23.08
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Labels: rerun

































6 Comments:
Great that you given a writer a credit..
Warren sure wrote some great cartoons..
Hope you highlight some other cartoon writers..
Will try to remember the name Warren Foster.in case I'm asked..:)
Thank you so much for resuming this-I read the first four parts multiple times (they actually became my research paper for my English class-heh).
i'm definitely a proponent for this kind of preproduction. i remember having to do a lot of scriptwriting in college and it never made sense to me, and i could never get things quite right, because it didn't make sense to use that format to plan things out.
but also, all these posts people are making about boarding make it sound like storyboards just start appearing without any written word prior, which i find a little bit of a stretch. is this to say there were no written outlines or notes? definitely no scripts, i get that. but it's not easy to just jump right in to a storyboard without knowing where you're going, what was the pre storyboard process, if not definitive scripts?
SMO, see the four links at the bottom of this post. They outline the process from the first concept through the rough board.
The younger generation is in a hurry to "make it", not taking time out to learn the craft they are attempting to master. Learning the history is a privilege and should be done by all. Ignorance is not a bliss; it's a costly omission. The wealth of pioneer's knowledge is something to cherish and definitely something to learn from.
It's been 30 years since I've seen a Yogi Bear cartoon, and I read the entire thing aloud in a passable imitation of Yogi, Boo-Boo and Ranger Smith(?). Weird. Deep-seated.
Thanks for these, and the links to the Bill Peet interview. Thanks.
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