lthough
there's a long tradition of animators marrying women from the ink
and paint department, animation has produced only a handful of husband
and wife creative teams: John and Faith Hubley, John Halas and Joy
Bachelor, Alexander
Alexeieff and Claire Parker [2]; and, most recently, Eric and Susan
Goldberg, on the "Carnival of the Animals" and "Rhapsody
in Blue [3]" segments of Disney's Fantasia 2000.
Partnerships in any creative endeavor are a potential minefield,
and collaborating on a film sounds like a formula for marital disaster.
But the Goldbergs share an unusual rapport; they give virtually
identical answers to questions posed in separate interviews. Eric:
"We've been married for so many years that we can complete
each other's punchlines -- we're on that much of a shared wavelength."
Susan: "After 17 years of marriage and two kids, we're two
halves of the same person. We finish each other's sentences, and
we can't tell jokes because we know what the other person's going
to say."
"When we were in color models, there were a lot jokes about,
`I get my way or you'll have to help your daughters with their homework
for a week,'" adds Susan. "But when we disagree at work,
we take it behind closed doors. We don't argue, we discuss it: `This
is why I think this and you think that. Now, how can we either compromise
or agree, so it's not a problem?'"
When asked about how they worked together on "Rhapsody,"
the Goldbergs are quick to praise each other's contributions. Eric
cites Susan's imaginative use of color as a major factor in the
success of the piece. "Left to my own devices, I would be much
more mundane -- I would make the trees brown, the leaves green,
the sky blue and that would be it," he says with a characteristic
laugh. "She'll look at something and say, `No, the trees are
purple and leaves are pink,' and it looks great! It's surprising
and delighting to the eye at the same time. People who are really
great at what they do always bring a better or more surprising or
more interesting way of doing something."
Susan credits Eric's vision and organization with getting the film
done ahead of schedule and under budget. "A film needs to be
tightly organized and tightly boarded, so the crew knows where they're
going when they start work on it. When you wander around in circles
and shoot each other in the foot, it takes longer. Eric is an incredibly
organized person. When we were doing commercials, we had no time
to wander in circles -- the deadlines and budgets were tight, so
you put up or shut up."
With "Rhapsody" finished and already receiving high praise
within the animation industry, the Goldbergs hope to continue working
together. They've already begun preliminary storyboarding on an
idea for a feature, and may one day become the first husband-and-wife
directoral team in Disney history.
Charles Solomon is an internationally respected critic and historian
of animation. His most recent books include The Disney That
Never Was (Hyperion, 1995), Les Pionniers du Dessin Animé
Américain (Dreamland, Paris, 1996) and Enchanted Drawings:
The History of Animation (Knopf, 1989; reprinted, Wings, 1994).
His writings on the subject have appeared in TV Guide, Rolling
Stone, The Los Angeles Times, Modern Maturity,
Film Comment, The Hollywood Reporter, Millimeter,
The Manchester Guardian, and been reprinted in newspapers
and professional journals in the United States, Canada, France,
Russia, Britain, Israel, the Netherlands and Japan.
Links:
[1] http://www.awn.com/imagepicker/image/3827
[2] http://www.awn.com/mag/issue1.2/articles1.2/bendazzi1.2.html
[3] http://www.awn.com/mag/issue4.09/4.09pages/solomonrhapsody.php3