Disney attended McKinley High School in Chicago, where he took drawing and photography classes and was a cartoonist for the school paper. He also took night …show more content…
When his contract ended, the brothers created their own character, Willie, from Steamboat Willie, the first all-sound cartoon. It featured Disney as the voice of a character that was first called “Mortimer Mouse,” but was later changed into today’s phenomenon, Mickey Mouse. Disney gave his entire life to his pictures, insisting on perfection, and his clear talent as a story editor got his projects out there. Characters such as Mickey, Donald Duck, Minnie, and music, fusioned with Disney’s sharp use of music, sound, and edition, made the Disney shorts of the 1930s a global sensation, with a lot of promise and a bright future. These characters were all featured in silly Symphonies, and was a huge success. One of the most popular cartoons, Flowers and Trees, was the first in color and also the first to win an Oscar. In 1933, The Three Little Pigs and its theme song “Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?” became a great distraction for the country during the midst of the horrendous effects of the Great Depression. The great sell-out led to a great expansion of the Disney brand, establishing profitable, Sisney-controlled sidelines in advertising, publishing, and …show more content…
Snow White, premiered in Los Angeles, surprisingly produced $1.499 million, even with the Great Depression going on; an amount that no one would’ve imagined, and continued its streak, winning a total of 8 Oscars. More of this genius productions came behind, with films like Pinocchio, Bambi, Dumbo, and the great musical spectacle, Fantasia. Seal Island brought wildlife films into the picture, becoming an additional source of income. Treasure Island led to a major product, live-action films, which brought a traditional family market. Disney Studios had a rough patch in the 1940s because there was a strike by Disney animators, in 1941, to be exact. It took some years for the company to recover, but came back swinging in 1950, when Cinderella was released, followed by Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, Lady and the Tramp, Sleeping beauty, all in the 1950s, and 101 Dalmatians, in 1961. More than 100 features were produced in his studio. He was one of the first to use television as an entertainment medium, being extremely popular within the young audiences. His last major success was Mary Poppins, a film that mixed live action and animation, which he produced before his disease was found. Disney was diagnosed with lung cancer in 1996, and