Book Review: Working with Walt: Interviews with Disney Artists

In Don Peri's new book, insights abound, but the real Walt Disney remains elusive.
Posted In | Magazines: AnimationWorld

Don Peri, no stranger to the world of Walt Disney Productions, has finally released 15 interviews with some of Disney's best-known (and lesser-known) creative minds. The interviews were conducted from 1974-1980, and one immediately regrets that they were not collected and published sooner. In reading these interviews, however, one increasingly gets the sense that the title is somewhat of a misnomer: there is never the sense that any of the interviewees worked with Walt. Rather, they worked for him, and Walt Disney would be the last one to let any of them forget that fact.

As in Michael Barrier's excellent book The Animated Man, Walt Disney emerges as a mercurial, unpredictable, and ultimately unknowable figure; his employees were still trying to fathom him even after years of retirement, and it emerges in these interviews that most of them never will. There is, however, agreement among them on some facets of Walt Disney that are already well known to most of Disney's historians and serious fans.

For example, Harper Goff and Herb Ryman relate that Walt always had an unerring feel for the public's taste. Disney's unceasing drive and determination are chronicled by Jack Cutting, Ken O'Connor, Ben Sharpsteen and Wilfred Jackson. Dick Huemer, Jackson, and Ryman attest to Walt's ability to instantly solve seemingly impossible problems in any production. O'Connor and Sharpsteen chronicle Walt's perfect judgment of his employees' talents and abilities. Everyone marvels at his uncanny acting ability.

Still, none of the interviewees in this book, not even Eric Larson, one of Disney's famed "Nine Old Men," truly knew the man they worked for. Ken Anderson and Herb Ryman both use the term "impenetrable" when talking about Walt Disney, and Ken O'Conner reiterates this. Harper Goff remembers his boss as "a difficult and frightening man" who still gave him nightmares years later.

Both Cutting and Ryman mention that Walt was so multifaceted that no one knew him; Les Clark, the first of the Disney Nine, maintains that Disney wanted no one close to him. Nearly every interviewee agrees on one thing: Walt Disney was all about his business and, outside of his all-consuming studio, there was little time for diversions, small talk -- or other people.

Walt Disney dominates this book like a looming spectral force, a living memory of difficult and temperamental genius. When Herb Ryman states that "Walt was not a deity, Walt was not a superman, Walt was just a regular, live, flesh-and-blood person... " it almost seems that Ryman has to convince himself that it is true. "Awe" is used by several of Peri's subjects in describing their feelings about Walt Disney. As the interviews continue, it becomes apparent that the only method of knowing what it was like to work for Walt is to see him reflected through the prism of his employees.

That is the genius of Peri's book: as an interviewer, Peri always manages to ask a question that reveals each of his subject's unique psychology in relation to their legendary boss. Wilfred Jackson, despite his undeniable talent and creativity, comes off as oddly insecure, his humility reading much like a lack of self-esteem. Ken Anderson presents with almost worshipful fervor. Ben Sharpsteen and Don Duckwall recount the abject terror that came with having a cartoon short go sour at its premiere.







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