Showing posts with label Bob Thomas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Thomas. Show all posts

Monday, February 9, 2015

Between Books - Walt's People: Volume 14 Talking Disney with the Artists Who Knew Him


Sometimes you never know what gem you will find in a volume of Walt's People.  For me my most recent excitement was finding a connection to Disney and the end of the United States Army cavalry.  It is always surprising how a volume of Didier Ghez's edited collection reflects 20th century history and culture in unexpected ways be it the rise of modern media or the World War II home front.

Walt's People: Volume 14 Talking Disney the Artists Who Knew Him edited by Didier Ghez captures snapshots of Disney history from the early days of the studio to the development of Disneyland Paris.  The majority of chapters are oral history interviews with former Disney employees conducted by historians Dave Smith, Bob Thomas, Ghez, John Canemaker, Jim Korkis and more.  The interviews largely are arranged in chronological order.  Interview subjects that will catch the interest of most Disney fans include Alice Davis, Bill Justice, Joe Grant, and Lillian Disney.  But as always the collection also includes largely unknown names.  Along with the interviews are two essays, on Dick Kelsey and Eric Knight, and a collection of letters.  To close the book is additional reference material for those who want to look deeper into the subjects.

One should know that the majority of the book is interview transcripts, not a narrative.  For historians, as I keep saying, this makes these volumes fantastic resources since one can read the actual subjects account in their own words.  Yes at times the memory may have failed some or the interviewee may have remembered something incorrectly.  But the memory is as they recollect it.  For me because of my own interests the interviews that stood out to me were Lillian Disney and Admiral Joe Fowler.  The Disney interview conducted by Michael Broggie discusses Mrs. Disney's marriage to Walt Disney including their courtship.  Though for me what really stood out was the discussion of trains.  A reader discovers that she herself had her own connections to trains, though she largely did not participate in Walt Disney's passion for railroads.  But having Broggie who's father helped Walt Disney build his own backyard train and who himself remembers the Lilly Belle creates an very interesting situation as they reminiscence together about that phase of Walt Disney's life.  Additionally, Mrs. Disney shares with Broggie what her husband thought of Broggie's father Roger.  Being someone who has studied 20th century military history, I found the Fowler interview very interesting.  For me one of the most interesting moments was reading about his post-war position reorganizing the War Department.  As part of this charge, he helped oversee the retirement of the cavalry as a non-essential service.  As someone who has met a former cavalry veteran and visited a museum focused on the horse cavalry, I enjoyed uncovering the surprising connection. 

Walt's People: Volume 14 Talking Disney the Artists Who Knew Him is an essential volume for those who love Disney history (I feel like I have said this before).  The volume captures the words of those who helped create the magic.  Yes, you may read a story you have heard before, like Alice Davis' first meeting with Walt Disney.  But the majority of stories captured include recollections heard less, like why Davis left Disney employment.  Showcasing stories from over 80 years of Disney history including the animation, live-action and the Disney Parks, this volume likely has something that every Disney historian can appreciate.


Review Copy Provided by Theme Park Press

Monday, July 9, 2012

Between Books - Building a Company

Cover: Builiding a Company
Almost anyone with a television in the world is aware of some of the entertainment contributions of one founder of the Walt Disney Company, Walt Disney, but often it is forgotten that the company began in 1923 as the Disney Brothers Studio.  Often forgotten is the legacy of the older brother in the Disney partnership, Roy O. Disney.  When I originally read Bob Thomas’ Walt Disney: An American Original I was struck by the loyalty that Roy O. Disney showed his brother and the essential though often invisible role he played in the success of Walt Disney by overseeing the business side of Disney endeavors.  This lead me to seek out more on the life of Roy O. Disney and the first and most prominent source I reached for was a lesser know book by Thomas, Building a Company: Roy O. Disney and the Creation of An Entertainment Empire.
Thomas outlines Roy O. Disney’s life from birth on June 24, 1893 to his death on December 20, 1971.  As a youth he developed a strong relationship with his much younger brother Walter.  The two boys often worked and played together despite a sizable age difference.  Disney left his job as a bank teller to serve in the U.S. Navy during World War I.  Having acquired tuberculosis during his naval service, Disney relocated to a veteran’s hospital in the Los Angeles area.  His brother Walt followed soon after his Kansas City cartoon studio became bankrupt.  Walt asked for Roy’s assistance and the next morning Roy checked out of the hospital never to return for his wartime affliction.  Forming a partnership called the Disney Brothers Studio, Walt oversaw the creative endeavors while Roy guided their business interests and occasionally operated a camera.  Over the next 50 years Roy oversaw the growth of the Walt Disney Company, his suggestion for a  name change, that transitioned from cartoon shorts to animated features, live-action movies, television programs and two theme parks.  During all of these projects Thomas makes it clear that Roy O. Disney dutifully supported the dreams of Walt Disney, though not always in agreement, and acquired the resources and funding needed to make Walt Disney’s ideas come alive. 
I really found this book a delight and helped fill my need to know more about this great man and co-founder of the Walt Disney Company.  Thomas does an excellent job of introducing us to Roy O. Disney the man.  We get the picture a loyal man who followed his younger brother into a questionable future based on his faith in that brother’s ability.  Roy O. Disney was also the man who finished Walt Disney’s dream of Walt Disney World, admittedly not as ambitious as Walt may have dreamed but one that was still made available for public enjoyment.  It is the picture of the Walt and Roy O. Disney relationship that captures my imagination the most.  The two men were in many ways different yet thoroughly attached to each other.  And we see Roy O. Disney as the quieter brother, coming home after work for time with his wife and son while Walt was the public face of the company and in the eye of the fans.  Especially gripping for me is the retelling of Roy O. Disney’s last visit with his dying brother as Walt dreamed one last time with his older brother.
Along with Roy O. Disney the brother we also get a picture of the business man.  Roy O. Disney was very personal in his interactions with associates.  For example his trips to Europe included his wife Edna, who would entertain the wife’s of Disney staff members and contacts abroad.  He was a man who put a personal touch on a growing company.  And these personal relationships greatly benefited the company’s bottom line as it expanded into new markets.  Additionally in the personal area we see his interactions with his family including his long relationship with Edna and his love for his son Roy E. Disney.  It would be easy to write a book about the business choices of Roy O. Disney from founding a start-up to evolving into a publicly traded company.  But instead Thomas does an excellent job of showing Roy O. Disney the man. 
Thomas yet again provides solid readable writing that Betweenlanders will enjoy.  Additionally as a historian his book is very well researched including interviews with prominent Disney personalities and legends and use of documents found in the Disney Archives, including Roy O. Disney’s personal and business correspondence.  Building a Company is the most extensive profile of Roy O. Disney available to the public.   
As someone who has become a fan of Roy O. Disney’s life and legacy I highly recommend this book for all Between Book libraries.   

Monday, March 19, 2012

Between Books - Walt Disney: An American Original

Bob Thomas in Walt Disney: An American Original chronicles the life and legacy of Walt Disney.  Thomas discusses briefly the Disney ancestors and then details Walt Disney’s birth in 1901 and childhood.   The book charts the moves of Walt Disney’s formative years from his birthplace in Chicago, to Disney’s idealized Marceline, Missouri, to Kansas City, back to Chicago, France and finally his return to Kansas City.  In this final relocation to Kansas City, Disney took his first steps into animation forming his own animation studio.  After setbacks and failures in the Midwest, Disney moves to California in 1923 asking his older brother Roy O. Disney to partner with him in a new animation studio.  Thomas covers the successes and failures of the Disney brothers including Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, the birth of Mickey Mouse and the production of a full length feature in Snow White released in 1937.  Thomas details Walt Disney’s steps into new endeavors including live action movies, television productions, and theme parks with the opening and growth of Disneyland.  Finally, Thomas discusses Disney’s final days and death in 1966 followed by the Walt Disney legacy with his unfinished dreams including the Walt Disney World Resort and EPCOT.  Along with chronicling the business and intellectual career of the historical figure, Thomas also discusses extensively Walt Disney the son, brother, husband and father. 
Walt Disney: An American Original is a Disney library must have.  It balances a comprehensive biography on Walt Disney with a readable narrative.  It is small enough to fit into a backpack for a Disney vacation, hint hint, while still being comprehensive enough to give the reader a good overview of Walt Disney’s life.  Thomas interviewed many individuals who knew Walt Disney personally and had the support of the Walt Disney Archives in providing content and sources.  However, I do wish as a historian that there were footnotes, as they would help guide further reading.  The text itself is highly readable and enjoyable, in fact it is more readable than most historical narratives that I have run across. 
This was one of the first Walt Disney biographies I ever read.  I found it not too short, not too long but just right!  It was a story, a true life one at that, which grabbed me and made me even more interested in Disney history.  When you read of the setbacks Walt Disney experienced one cannot help but be inspired.  You find a Walt Disney that really does embody the “Keep Moving Forward” spirit of Meet the Robinsons.  Additionally, I found myself becoming interested in expanding into other topics.  One topic that I was left wanting to know more about was Walt Disney’s vision for EPCOT, the Experimental City of Tomorrow and not the Epcot Park.  And I instantly wanted to find more information about Roy O. Disney, the older brother who stood beside Walt Disney and gave him the support needed to be the creator and innovator that he was.  Walt Disney: An American Original is a story that makes you want to know more!