latimes.com
Mel Shaw dies at 97; Disney design artist
A veteran Disney artist, Mel Shaw worked on
'Bambi,' 'Fantasia,' 'The Lion King' and other animated classics.
By Valerie J. Nelson, Los Angeles Times
9:21 PM PST, November 29, 2012
While playing polo on the fields of Southern
California in the late 1930s, Mel Shaw met Walt
Disney and was soon playing on his team, the
Donald Ducks, that took on the president of
Mexico's personal team in 1938 and won.
"He called me a wild Indian because I was
stealing the ball from him all the time," Shaw
later said of that first meeting.
But as Shaw told the story, one day Disney handed
him a stack of papers and said: "You like to draw
animals read this and see what you can do."
It was the script for "Bambi," and the beginning
of Shaw's long affiliation with Disney as a
visual development and design artist. He help set
the style for that 1942 animated classic and many
others from the studio, including what became
"Fantasia" (1940), "The Fox and the Hound" (1982)
and his final Disney project, 1994's "The Lion King."
Shaw, 97, died of congestive heart failure Nov.
22 at Woodland Care Center in Reseda, said his son, Rick.
"Mel was on a short list of vanguard artists who
would jump into a new film when it was still a
blank piece of paper and with his stunning work
he'd show us all the visual possibilities," Don
Hahn, a producer who worked with Shaw on "Beauty
and the Beast" and "The Lion King," said in a statement.
Outside of the studio, Shaw was perhaps best
known for drawing the title sequence of the 1977
movie "The Rescuers." The animated prologue shows
a character placing a plea for help in a bottle
and tossing it into the high seas.
"You see these very beautiful pastel drawings,
and all of them are Mel's," said Charles Solomon,
an animation critic and historian. "The producer
and director of the film looked at his
preliminary drawings and said, 'That's it, we don't need anything else.'"
The artist was involved with practically every
sequence of "Bambi," he said in "Walt's People,
Vol. 12," a newly published collection of
interviews with artists who worked with Disney.
The intensity of color in "Bambi" reflected the
dramatic action, a feat Shaw said he helped bring
about through a color chart he made with pastels
that "talked about the sequences and how colors
would change ... to fit the mood," he said in the book.
During World War II, Shaw left Disney to serve in
the Army Signal Corps as a combat photographer in
Southeast Asia. He also worked on a documentary on the Burma campaign.
Back home, he opened a design business with Bob
Allen, a former MGM Studios animator. Through
Allen-Shaw Productions, Shaw illustrated the
first "Bambi" children's book for Disney,
designed children's toys and conceived pieces for
Metlox, the noted Manhattan Beach pottery manufacturer.
The partners received almost no attention for
their late 1940s redesign of Howdy Doody, the
marionette on the popular 1950s NBC show of the same name.
The original Howdy Doody resembled "Pinocchio
with fuzzy hair," Shaw said in "Walt's People."
They reconceptualized him as a "hayseed," he
later said. Allen came up with the freckled face,
Shaw made the model for the head and they had a
"little cowboy costume" created.
But when the new Howdy Doody was revealed, the
partners were never given credit for the design,
Shaw said in the book, so they patented it in 1950.
His second tenure at Disney began in 1974, when
he was brought in to mentor younger animators as
the older generation retired. According to the
studio, Shaw went on to influence the look and
story of many "modern day Disney favorites."
He was born Melvin Schwartzman on Dec. 19, 1914,
in Brooklyn, N.Y., the second of four brothers of
an attorney and his wife, an opera singer.
As a 12-year-old, he won a top prize in a
national Procter & Gamble soap-carving contest
and sculpted throughout his career.
In the late 1920s, he moved with his family to
Los Angeles, where he attended the Otis Art Institute as a teenager.
At 14, he ran away to Utah to become a cowboy.
Four months later, he was back in Los Angeles
lying about his age to get a job at Pacific Title
and Art Studio, where he created title cards at the end of the silent-film era.
Two Disney animators Hugh Harman and Rudy Ising
hired him to join their studio to conceive and
animate stories in the early 1930s. While there,
he helped Orson Welles storyboard a version of
"The Little Prince" that was never produced.
By 1937, Shaw was working for Disney and playing
polo for the Donald Ducks, who traveled to Mexico
in his Dodge station wagon to face an elite team.
Rainy weather and Mexico's decision to put in its
second string helped them win, Rick Shaw said.
Mel Shaw's first wife, Louise, died in 1984. He
is survived by their two children, Rick Shaw and
Melissa Couch-Deranleau; three stepchildren, Ken
Lounsbery, John Lounsbery and Andrea
Gessel-Severe; 14 grandchildren; and a brother, Bob Shaw.
His second wife, Florence Lounsbery, was the
widow of John Lounsbery, one of the pioneering
Disney animators known as the Nine Old Men. With
Florence, Shaw lived for nearly 20 years in a
home she designed in Acampo, Calif., near
Stockton. After she died in 2004, he moved to
Woodland Hills to live with his son.
His second marriage took place on Thanksgiving
Day 1985. He died on the holiday 27 years later.
R.I.P. Mel Shaw
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