The Lost Studio Of Romer Grey
"I remember Pete Burness and I were sitting around the lobby
of the Chouinard School one Saturday morning and the phone rang," A Forgotten Bear Cub For a while the studio ran smoothly, so much so that Grey attempted
to expand the operation by abandoning his father's garage in favor
of a building located on Beverly Boulevard, near Vermont, in Hollywood.
But with no income to offset the capital outlay (there is no confirmation
that Grey had any kind of distribution deal in place), it was not
long before problems arose. After a while, paychecks for the artists
stopped coming, though the more resourceful among them found a way
to fight back. "A few blocks away [from the studio] there was a drug store
that had a counter that served lunch," the late Tom McKimson
recalled in 1992. "We got the idea that, if Romer's not going
to come up with regular payments, we would go down there for lunch
and we'd charge it to him. And we did. A half-a-dozen of us would
go there at lunch time and order a hamburger or soup or whatever,
and charge it to Romer. Well, this was fine for about a month or so,
and then Romer's mother saw those bills coming in and cut us off." By July of 1931 the studio had two completed Binko cartoons ready
to be duped, but Romer's interest was flagging. On top of that, the
producer was informed that fifty-thousand dollars was required to
keep the operation afloat, and that, apparently, was too much even
for Lina Grey. Binko the Bear Cub, the cartoon character who would
never be, was finished, and the studio disappeared into obscurity.
So did Romer Grey, who died in 1976 at the age of 66, his chief claim
to fame still that he was the son of the great Zane Grey. The Lingering Legacy Another young artist with no prior animation experience who answered
the call was Preston Blair, who, like Zander and Burness, was hired
on the spot and went to work in the Grey garage. In a 1992 interview,
the late animator recalled: "One time Zane Grey, the old master,
came out to the studio and looked it all over. His idea was that everybody
there had a great deal of imagination and he wanted to meet people
with imagination. He came out in the backyard to see what the hell
was going on."
What was going on was the attempt to make an animated star out of
one Binko the Bear Cub, a cheerful little guy with a globe head, tiny
ears and a button nose, all of which combined to create more than
a passing resemblance to Mickey Mouse. Four cartoons were planned
and at least partially drawn: Arabian Nightmare, Hot Toe Molly
(which might have been a take-off on Van Beuren's Hot Tamale,
released in the summer of 1930), Binko the Toreador and Sand
Witches.
For the young animators, it was a different story. Virtually all of
them remained in the business and not a few would achieve places on
the industry's A-list. Volney White would relocate to Terrytoons in
New York; Paul Allen would move on to Disney and become a "Duck
Man," specializing in Donald Duck cartoons; Bob Stokes would
animate for Ub Iwerks; Cal Dalton would become an animator and director
for Schlesinger; Preston Blair would become one of the most respected
animators in the business through his work for Disney and Tex Avery;
Ken Harris would go on to be Chuck Jones' lead animator; Pete Burness
would eventually be a creative force at both UPA and Jay Ward Studios;
Jack Zander would animate in the Hanna-Barbera unit at MGM and later
head up his own commercial studios; Bob McKimson would achieve renown
as a Looney Tunes animator and director; his brother Tom would work
in layout at Warners before becoming art director for Western Publishing;
and Lou Zukovsky would shorten his name to Zukor and eventually become
a fixture at Filmation.
says veteran animator Jack Zander. "A Miss Smith answered, and
after hesitating a moment, turned to us and said, 'Are you fellows
animators?' We really didn't know what an animator was, but having
nothing better to do, we said, 'Yes!' She said [into the phone], 'I
happen to have two of them right here and I'll send them right up.'
She gave us the address and we went out, jumped into my car and off
to Altadena. I remember that we didn't have too much difficulty in
convincing Romer that we were the men he needed. He was desperate."
For decades, nothing of the Romer Grey Studio survived except distant
echoes in the memories of some veteran animators. Moreover, it would
have remained unknown except for a spectacular discovery in 1990.
While working in the basement of the Zane Grey house, a plumber and
one time sketch-artist named Rollin Nesmith uncovered the entire remains
of the Romer Grey Studio, including exposure sheets, detailed production
records, a musical score, a handful of cels and thousands of animation
drawings, many in full color, which were packed away in boxes and
regarded as junk by the house's then-owner. (Unfortunately, no trace
of film was found.) Rescuing the artwork and records from destruction,
Nesmith has spent the last decade cataloguing and archiving the material,
bringing Binko the Bear Cub back into the light for the first time
in sixty years.
























amazing! thank you for this story.
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