Book Review: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs: The Art and Creation of Walt Disney’s Classic Animated Film
For example, the opening sequence featuring Snow White drawing water from the castle well, and first meeting the Prince while the Queen looks on, growing increasingly jealous of Snow White’s beauty, is covered from pages 38 to 61 – 24 pages devoted to one sequence. In addition to the half-page and full-page artwork, the text describes the Disney approach to filming the sequence. “The garden sequence, which served to introduce Snow White to the audience and depicted her first meeting with the Prince, was one of the last sequences in the picture to be developed and produced. Walt knew that this would be one of the most difficult sequences in the picture for his writers and artists to tackle, and purposely delayed work on this section until his staff had sharpened their skills and gained experience on other, less demanding parts of the story.” (p. 39) In addition to the concept drawings and story sketches (each of which is suitable for framing as fine art) in one and two colors, there are finished cels in full color. (Actually, many of these are not the original production cels, but meticulous reproductions created for this exhibition and book because of the fragility of the decaying original cels.) There is also a photograph of Snow White’s live-action model, Marjorie Belcher, in costume drawing water from the well, and three animators’ sketches of her to be used in the animation. Kaufman acknowledges Disney’s use of the rotoscope process, invented by Disney’s rival Max Fleischer, in the filming of the human characters, but he emphasizes how Disney used rotoscoping for more subtle reference footage for his full animation rather than just tracing over the outlines of the rotoscope models as Fleischer did.

For another example, Snow White’s introduction to the Dwarfs’ house, and her decision to clean it with the forest animals’ help, is detailed from page 90 to page 105. Kaufman describes how the animation of this sequence was assigned to two teams of animators under the supervision of Hamilton “Ham” Luske and Grim Natwick. (Kaufman is slightly inconsistent here. “Grim” was also a nickname; Natwick’s real first name was Myron.) “To take advantage of the artists’ strengths, the Luske unit was assigned most of the close scenes of Snow White that expressed her personality, while Natwick was given most of the full and long shots, where his technical skill could be applied to the sheer mechanics of moving the human form. […] Luske and Natwick had differing approaches to the character. Luske tended to portray her as an innocent little girl, while Natwick’s Snow White tended toward a slightly more mature young woman. Luske’s concept was closer to Walt’s own interpretation of the character, but both the Luske and Natwick concepts survived, and two distinct Snow Whites can be seen throughout the finished film.” (p. 92)

--
Fred Patten has been a fan of animation since the first theatrical rerelease of Pinocchio (1945). He co-founded the first American fan club for Japanese anime in 1977, and was awarded the Comic-Con International's Inkpot Award in 1980 for introducing anime to American fandom. He began writing about anime for Animation World Magazine since its #5, August 1996. A major stroke in 2005 sidelined him for several years, but now he is back. He can be reached at fredpatten@earthlink.net.























Post new comment