Schneider and Hahn Talk Waking Sleeping Beauty

We talk to the filmmakers behind the brilliant documentary about Disney's second animation renaissance.
Posted In | Magazines: AnimationWorld | Site Categories: Business, Films, People

Check out the Waking Sleeping Beauty trailer and clips at AWNtv!

The phenomenal yet bittersweet comeback of Disney Animation from '84 to '94, encompassing The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin and The Lion King, is a testament to artistic passion and astonishing ego. And Waking Sleeping Beauty, opening tomorrow in limited release, captures the rise and fall of this tempestuous period with insight and candor, blending archival footage with brand new audio interviews. In separate conversations with Peter Schneider (who was president of feature animation and later studio chief) and Don Hahn (producer of the Oscar-nominated Beauty and the Beast), we get more of the inside story from the producer and director of Waking Sleeping Beauty. Meanwhile, Schneider and Hahn will be making Q&A appearances at several screenings this weekend: the producer will be at the Landmark Sunshine Cinema New York City and Hahn will be at the AMC Century City on Friday and the AMC Burbank 16 on Saturday.

All images courtesy of Disney.
Peter Schneider, Roy Disney and Jeffrey Katzenberg take a break from a story retreat in the early '90s. All images courtesy of Disney.

Bill Desowitz: What was this period like?

Peter Schneider: It was a great time, a very emotional time and a lot of good work got done by a lot of really good people.

BD: Well, people at Disney have told me it's an honest portrayal.

PS: Well, I think they were genuinely surprised at how honest it was when they saw it.

BD: Were there any surprises for you?

PS: Let's see: Not a lot struck me as out of the ordinary. What struck me was that everybody [from] this period of time roughly had the same story. And they may have had a different take on it, but they all felt the same way. But, ultimately, everybody -- Michael, Jeffrey, [Roy] me, Don, the artists -- all had a piece of the story that all fit together correctly. There was nothing out of synch with it, if you know what I mean. And that's what was so interesting to me.

BD: Randy Cartwright's home movies are astonishing. But any surprises uncovered among the archive footage?

PS: I think the Howard Ashman tapes. None of us had ever seen [them], and, for me, that's the emotional core, the emotional center of the movie. That to me was the most moving and surprising. He was a real storyteller. And there's this great story that our Roy used to tell about being sick in bed and Walt comes by and tells him the story of Pinocchio. And as Roy liked to say, when he finally saw it in a movie theater it wasn't as good as listening to Uncle Walt tell it. And what is so striking about that is that Walt did all the characters.

Howard Ashman excoriates directors Kirk Wise and Gary Trousdale during a tough story meeting on Beauty and the Beast
Howard Ashman excoriates directors Kirk Wise and Gary Trousdale during a tough story meeting on Beauty and the Beast (as drawn by Kirk Wise).

BD: Howard was very Walt-like, wasn't he?







Comments


I saw the film and it is very accurate. A few things they left out was Jeffery was referred to as "Sparky" by the animators at Disney. Who Framed Roger Rabbit was first sent to Disney animation but they turned it down because Robert Zemeckis wanted to move the camera and Disney insisted that the camera had to be locked when the toons were on the screen.There was a LA unit for "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" headed up by Dale Baer and his wife Jayne.They did the toontown and cab chase sequences.Don Hahn headed up a special projects unit after Roger Rabbit that did commercials and theme park films. The CAPS system had been tested on past scenes from Disney films using their archives to get the original drawings.
The film ended too soon.
The sequel should include how Disney spent $500 million on a film called "Dinosaur" and it never made it's money back. And yes that number is real when you build a state of the art facility from the ground up to make 1 film. "Dinosaur" was the beginning of the end of Disney Animation.
I'm wondering what the purpose of making this film was in the first place. It's like General Motors making a movie about all the cool cars they made in the 1950's but they suck today.

Pedro Nakama (not verified) | Tue, 03/30/2010 - 14:16 | Permalink

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