ANIMATION WORLD MAGAZINE - ISSUE 3.8 - November 1998



Awards

© Girls, Inc.

Girls, Inc. Honors Animated Women. Girls, Inc. (formerly Girls Clubs of America), a U.S. non-profit organization devoted to "helping every girl become strong, smart and bold," has announced that six women in the children's entertainment industry will be honored at its annual celebration luncheon. The event will take place on Tuesday, November 10, 1998 at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California. The honorees are: Margaret Loesch, president of Jim Henson Television Worldwide; Sue Rose, creator and executive producer of the animated series, Pepper Ann; Anne Sweeney, president of Disney/ABC Cable Networks and president of The Disney Channel; Brenda Laurel, founder of Purple Moon; Donna Brown Guillaume, executive producer at Confetti Entertainment Company; and Meryl Marshall, executive producer at Two Oceans Entertainment Group. In addition, a corporate vision award will be presented to Los Angeles-based animation studio, Klasky Csupo. The organization's co-chairs include Betty Cohen, president of Cartoon Network Worldwide; Carol Monroe, senior vice president of programming and development at Fox Kids Network; Herb Scannell, president of Nickelodeon/Nick at Nite and Nancy Steingard, executive vice president of Universal Cartoon Studios and Universal Family Television. Proceeds from the fund-raiser will benefit Girls, Inc.'s programs, which include college scholarships and a media awareness initiative called Girls Re-Cast TV. For information about the organization, or to purchase tickets for the celebration luncheon, visit www.girlsinc.org.

Sitges Selects Un Jour. The Sitges Fantasy Film Festival wrapped up on October 16 in Barcelona, Spain. The international jury for the "Anima't" animation festival within a festival was comprised of Jerry Beck (U.S.A.), Mercedes Gaspar (Spain) and Giorgio Valentini (Italy). They selected Un Jour by Marie Paccou (France) as Best Film, and gave an Honorable Mention to Glassy Ocean by Shigeru Tamura (Japan). In the main festival, Bill Plympton's film, More Sex & Violence won the "Best Short Film" award.

Visit the December 1997 issue of Animation World Magazine to read "
Sitges: Horror and Animation in Barcelona," a review of last year's Sitges festival, by Bill Plympton.

Writers Group Honors Bressack. The Writer's Guild of America's Animation Writers Caucus presented its first-ever Animation Writing Award to Gordon Bressack, at its annual meeting and reception on Wednesday, October 7, 1998. The honorary award is given to "that member of the Animation Writers Caucus and/or the guild who, in the opinion of the Board of Directors, has advanced the literature of animation in film and/or television through the years, and who has made outstanding contributions to the profession of the animation writer." Craig Miller, chair of the Animation Writers Caucus, said, "We're very pleased that the guild has seen fit to present this new annual award. It confirms the guild's determination to bring animation writing fully into its fold and that the guild holds animation in the same esteem it holds all other writing." Bressack, whose credits include Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain, Tiny Toons, Darkwing Duck and Captain Simian and the Space Monkeys, received a 1996 Daytime Emmy for Achievement in Animation for Animaniacs.

In 1994, the WGA formed the Animation Writers Caucus (AWC) to address the issues of working conditions in the field of animation, as well as to provide a forum in which animation writers could gather to exchange information and address methods of organizing. Read all about it in
Craig Miller's article in the September 1998 issue of Animation World Magazine.

Night of the Carrots by Priit Pärn. © Priit Pärn.

Ottawa Picks Carrots. The Ottawa International Animation Festival wrapped up on Sunday night with an awards show at the National Arts Center in Canada's capital city. The grand prize went to the new Estonian film, Night of the Carrots, by Priit Pärn who was on hand to accept the award as the festival also hosted a four-part retrospective of Estonian animation. The jury, comprised of Igor Kovalyov (Russia/U.S.A.), Janno Pöldma (Estonia), Erica Russell (U.K.), Mike Smith (U.S.A.) and Lea Zagury (Brazil), chose not to award prizes in two categories: Educational Production (C) and Music Video (F). The additional winners are as follows:

Grand Prize:
Night of the Carrots, by Priit Pärn.

Category A (Independent Works Under 30 Minutes):
"Underground" by Matti Kütt (Estonia).

Category B (Best First/Student Work):
"Peaches" by Charmaine Choo (U.K.).

Category D (Commercial):
"MK.00" by Fred MacDonald, Olive Jar Animation (U.S.A.).

Category E (Station/Program Identification):
"Flying Daddy" by Keita Kurosaka (Japan).

Category G (Television Specials):
"For Ever and Ever" by Micheala Pavlàtova and Pavel Kouteck (Czech Republic).

Category H (Television Series):
"Pond Life: Bitter and Twisted" by Candy Guard (U.K.).

Chromacolour Award for the Best Use of Colour:
"Firehouse" by Bärbel Neubauer (Germany).

Gordon Bruce Award for Humor:
"Crocodile Gangsters" by Eric Blesin (Belgium).

Zach Schwartz Award for Best Story:
"The Mermaid" by Alexander Petrov (Russia).

Mike Gribble Award for Most Hilarious Film:
"Millennium Bug" by Lee Lanier (U.S.A.).

Viacom Canada Prize for Best Canadian Film:
"Linear Dreams" by Richard Reeves (Canada).

Craft Prize for Best Sound:
"Smash" by Kirsten Winter (Germany).

Media Prize for best Computer Animation:
"Bingo" by Chris Landreth (Canada).

Special Jury Prize:
"Black Burlesque" by Tomasz Kozak (Poland).

Special Jury Prize:
"Bermuda" by ülo Pikkov (Estonia).

Most Innovative Design:
"Staggerings" by Peter Collis (U.K.).

The Ottawa International Animation Festival is reviewed in this issue of Animation World Magazine, available on-line November 1.

Toons Win Twin Geminis. The Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television presented the 13th annual Gemini Awards on Sunday, October 4 in Toronto. The winner in the "Animated Program or Series" category is Nelvana Limited's 2D series, Sam & Max, produced by Patrick Loubert, Gwenn Saunders Eckel, Michael Hirsh, Stephen Hodgins, Robert Ross, Clive A. Smith and J.D. Smith. The winner in the "Preschool Program or Series" category is Cochran Entertainment's mixed-media show, Theodore Tugboat, produced by Andrew Cochran. In addition, on October 2, Canadian software developer Puppet Works and Beevision Productions were honored with the Gemini Award for Outstanding Technical Achievement. As part of their acceptance speech, the companies demonstrated their real-time motion-capture technology at the gala event.

AMPAS Reveals Sci-Tech Oscar Noms. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (A.M.P.A.S.) has selected 34 achievements to be considered for 1998 Academy Awards. The selected achievements are announced in advance, "to enable those with claims of prior invention or with devices similar to those under consideration to advise the Academy," said category committee chair Edmund M. DiGiulio. Following is a list of achievements being considered which have some relation to animation technology: INFERNO Special Visual Effects System, Discreet Logic; RenderWorld, Arete Image Software, Inc.; Laser Based Motion Picture Film Recording System, Pixar Animation Studios; The ILM Skin Animation System, Industrial Light & Magic and PDI Facial Animation System for Computer-Generated Characters, Pacific Data Images. Demonstration of selected achievements will be conducted on Tuesday, October 27 in the Academy's Samuel Goldwyn Theater, and the committee will meet on December 9 to vote on the awards. The Scientific and Technical Awards will be presented at the Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel on Saturday, February 27, 1999.

L'Enfant au Grelot /Charlie's Christmas by Jacques-Remy Girerd. © Folimage.

It's "Christmas" for the Cartoon d'Or. Every year since 1991, the organization CARTOON, with the support of the MEDIA program of the European Union, selects one short European animated film as the "Cartoon d'Or," or "best European animation film." This year's winner, announced at the Cartoon Forum in Greece (September 23-27), is L'Enfant au Grelot (Charlie's Christmas) by Jacques-Remy Girerd (France)--reviewed in this issue (English and French). The film also won awards at this year's Annecy and Stuttgart festivals. The 26-minute film is distributed by U.K.-based Eva Entertainment and was produced at Folimage in Valence, France, the studio where the 1995 Cartoon d'Or winner, Le Moine et le Poisson (The Monk and the Fish) was also produced. That film's director, Michael Dudok de Wit, animated the main character in Charlie's Christmas. Director Jacques-Remy Girerd said he will spend the Cartoon d'Or prize money (25,000 ECU, approximately U.S. $25,000) toward his feature film, La Prophétie des Grenouilles (The Frog's Prophecy). Next year, Girerd also plans to expand Folimage, a studio he co-founded, to include an animation school. In a program with three other animated shorts, and through the AFCAE independent distributor's network, Charlie's Christmas will be released in French theaters starting October 14. Previous Cartoon d'Or winners are La Vielle Dame et les Pigeons (1997) by Sylvain Chomet (France), Quest (1996) by Tyron Montgomery (Germany), The Wrong Trousers (1994) by Nick Park (U.K.), The Village (1993) by Mark Baker (U.K.), Manipulation (1992) by Daniel Greaves (U.K.) and Creature Comforts (1991) by Nick Park (U.K.). This year's other nominees up against Charlie's Christmas were Famous Fred by Joanna Quinn (U.K.), Frontière by Christian Fisher (Germany) and Maud Gravereaux (France), Heavy Stock, the Sound of the Railway by Michael Salkeld (U.K.), Sientje by Christa Moesker (Netherlands) and T.R.A.N.S.I.T. by Piet Kroon (Netherlands).

The organizers of the Cartoon Forum also announced the formation of a forum specifically for animated features. A date and place for this new event has yet to be determined. The next Cartoon Forum, which focuses on TV animation, will take place September, 1999 in Cordoba, Spain.

The 1998 CARTOON Forum is
reviewed by Marie Beardmore in this issue of Animation World Magazine. Plus, the organization CARTOON was profiled by Heikki Jokinen in the October 1997 issue of Animation World Magazine.

Ignatz Honors Comics. The Ignatz Awards presentation took place on September 26, during the Small Press Expo (SPX) in Bethesda, Maryland. Named after Ignatz, George Herriman's brick-wielding mouse, the awards aim to recognize outstanding work that challenges popular notions of what comics can achieve, both as an art form and as a means of personal expression. A panel of five cartoonists (Michael Cohen, Tom Devlin, Tom Hart, Marc Hempel and Dylan Horrocks) selected the nominations, and winners were voted on by SPX attendees. The winners are:

Outstanding Artist:
Dave Sim (Cerebus, published by Aardvark-Vanaheim).

Promising New Talent:
Carla "Speed" McNeil (Finder, self-published).

Outstanding Story:
Ghost World
by Dan Clowes, serialized in Eightball (published by Fantagraphics Books).

Outstanding Series:
Acme Novelty Library
by Chris Ware (published by Fantagraphics Books).

Outstanding Comic:
Acme Novelty Library #9
by Chris Ware (published by Fantagraphics Books).

Outstanding Minicomic:
Amy Unbounded
by Rachel Hartman.

Outstanding Graphic Novel or Collection:
Ghost World
by Dan Clowes (Fantagraphics Books).

IFP and IFC Award Students.
The Independent Feature Project (IFP) and the Independent Film Channel (IFC) have announced the winners of their first student film competition, IFC2000. The U.S. $2,500 "Outstanding Achievement in Animation" prize has been awarded to Hisao by Masahiro Sugano, a student from the University of Illinois at Chicago, School of Art & Design. The film is described as "an animation documentary that portrays the actual life of a Japanese singer/songwriter who has been seeking his dream in a foreign land for the past 25 years." Hisao , along with the three award-winning live-action films, were screened on September 19 at the IFP's Independent Feature Film Market in New York, and on October 1 in Los Angeles, at a screening sponsored by Kodak. The films will also air on the Independent Film Channel later this year (date TBD). Animator Faith Hubley, who was honored by the IFC this year, is on the jury that selected the IFC2000 winners. The other animation nominees vying for the award were Asa Nisi Masa by Ian Wilmoth (Rhode Island School of Design), Crazy Glue by Tatia Rosenthal (NYU Tisch School of the Arts) and Everybody Bowl by Dustin Woehrmann (Cal Arts).

Disney's Mulan received the most Annie Award nominations this year, but the race is on in the animated feature category. © Disney. All Rights Reserved.

ASIFA-Hollywood's Annie Noms. ASIFA-Hollywood has released the list of nominees for its 26th annual Annie Awards, which will take place at Alex Theatre in Glendale, California on Friday, November 13, at 7 p.m. For information call (818) 842-8330.

The Winsor McCay Award for contributions to the art of animation will be given to three honorees this year: Eyvind Earle, Hayao Miyazaki and Ernie Pintoff. The June Foray Award will be given to ASIFA-Hollywood president Antran Manoogian. A special award for Technical Achievement in the Field of Animation is being given to Digital Domain Inc., for their work on Titanic. In the 26 competitive categories, nominees were selected by separate panels of industry judges. The winners will be selected over the next few weeks by mail-in voting of ASIFA-Hollywood membership.

The nominees (as provided to AWN by ASIFA-Hollywood) are:

Outstanding Achievement in an Animated Short Subject:
Geri's Game, Pixar Animation Studios.
Redux Riding Hood, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Three Little Pigs, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Titey, J.J. Sedelmaier Productions, Inc.
T.R.A.N.S.I.T., The Illuminated Film Company in association with Picture Start.

Outstanding Achievement in an Animated Interactive Production:
The Curse of Monkey Island, LucasArts Entertainment Company, LLC.
Eggs of Steel, Rhythm & Hues.
Flying Saucer, Wild Brain, Inc.

Outstanding Achievement in an Animated Television Commercial:
G-Police, Wong Doody, Acme Filmworks.
Lizards II, Circle-K Stores, Pacific Data Images.
Old Friends, American Express, Warner Bros. Classic Animation.
Old Navy, Old Navy, Spumco, Inc.
Willy Wonka's Wild Ride Campaign: Shock Tarts, Nestle Corporation, Wild Brain, Inc.

Outstanding Achievement in an Animated Interstitial, Promotional Production or Title Sequence:
Genie's Great Minds: Ben Franklin, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Late Night Black and White, Cartoon Network, Ink Biscuits.
O Canada Open, Cartoon Network, Wild Brain, Inc.
Retromotion Open, Locomotion Channel, Wild Brain, Inc.
The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit, Walt Disney Company, Acme Filmworks.

Outstanding Achievement in an Animated Daytime Television Program:
Angry Beavers, Nickelodeon Animation Studio.
Animaniacs, Warner Bros. Television Animation.
The New Batman/Superman Adventures, Warner Bros. Television Animation.
Oh Yeah! Cartoons, Nickelodeon Animation Studio.
Pinky and the Brain, Warner Bros. Television Animation.

Outstanding Achievement in an Animated Prime-Time or Late Night Television Program:
Dexter's Laboratory, Hanna-Barbera Cartoons.
King of the Hill, 20th Century Fox, Deedle Dee Productions, Judgmental Films, 3 Arts Entertainment.
A Pinky and the Brain Halloween, Warner Bros. Television Animation.
The Simpsons, Gracie Films in association with 20th Century Fox
South Park, Comedy Central

Outstanding Achievement in an Animated Home Video Production:
Belle's Magical World, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Fern Gully 2: The Magical Rescue, Wild Brain, Inc.
Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Spunky's Camping Adventure, Global Television Syndication in association with CBN International.
Batman & Mr. Freeze: Sub Zero, Warner Bros. Animation.

Outstanding Achievement in an Animated Theatrical Feature:
Anastasia, Fox Animation Studios.
I Married a Strange Person, Bill Plympton.
Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.
Quest for Camelot, Warner Bros. Feature Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Character Animation:
Ruben Aquino, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.
Tom Bancroft, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.
Mark Henn, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.
T. Woody Yocum, Genie's Great Minds, Walt Disney Television Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Effects Animation:
Jerome Chen, Godzilla, Sony Pictures Imageworks in association with Centropolis and TriStar Pictures.
Michel Gagne, Quest for Camelot, Warner Bros. Feature Animation.
Peter Matheson, Anastasia, Fox Animation Studios.
David Tidgwell, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Production Design in an Animated Television Production:
Dan Chessher, "The Mighty Knothead," The Angry Beavers, Nickelodeon Animation Studio.
Dale Hendrickson, "Antibody," Silver Surfer, Saban Entertainment
Mike Lowery, "Fair's Fair," The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries, Warner Bros. Television Animation.
Pascal Morelli, "An Army of Rogues," The Legend of Calamity Jane, Contre-Allee in association with Warner Bros. Television Animation.
Carlos Ramos, "ChalkZone," Oh Yeah! Cartoons, Nickelodeon Animation Studio.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Production Design in an Animated Feature Production (one nominee...it's a shoe-in!):
Hans Bacher, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Storyboarding in an Animated Television Production:
Maxwell Atoms (Adam Burton), "The Karate Chick," Cow and Chicken, Hanna-Barbera Cartoons.
Barry Caldwell, "Brain Acres," Pinky and the Brain, Warner Bros. Television Animation.
Linda Miller, "Bad to the Bone," Disney's 101 Dalmatians: The Series, Walt Disney Television Animation in association with Jumbo Pictures.
Cynthia Petrovic, "Home Is Where the Bark Is," Disney's 101 Dalmatians: The Series, Walt Disney Television Animation in association with Jumbo Pictures.
Carlos Ramos, "ChalkZone," Oh Yeah! Cartoons, Nickelodeon Animation Studio.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Storyboarding in an Animated Feature Production:
Li Hong, Fern Gully 2: The Magical Rescue, Wild Brain, Inc.
Chris Sanders, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Writing in an Animated Television Production:
Cydne Clark and Steve Granat, "Swine Song," Disney's 101 Dalmatians: The Series, Walt Disney Television Animation in association with Jumbo Pictures.
Derek Drymon, Robert Porter, and Peter Hannan, "DogGone," Catdog, Nickelodeon Animation Studio.
Charles M. Howell IV, Earl Kress and John Ludin, "The Family That Poits Together Narfs Together," Pinky and the Brain, Warner Bros. Television Animation.
Steve Marmel, "The Perfect Gift," Johnny Bravo, Hanna-Barbera Cartoons.
Mark McCorkle and Robert Schooley, Genie's Great Minds, Walt Disney Television Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Writing in an Animated Feature Production:
Karl Geurs and Carter Crocker, Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Flip Kobler, Cindy Marcus, Bill Motz, and Bob Roth, Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Chris Sanders, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.
Eric Tudhman (Animation Adaption), Susan Gauthire, Bruce Graham, Bob Tzudiker, Noni White (Screenplay), Anastasia, Fox Animation Studios.
Richard Tulloch, Fern Gully 2: The Magical Rescue, Wild Brain, Inc.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Male Performer in an Animated Television Production:
Maurice LaMarche, as the voice of The Brain, Pinky and the Brain, Warner Bros. Television Animation.
Nandor Nevai, as the voice of Delivery Man, Sniz & Fondue, Funbag Studios in association with Nickelodeon.
Rob Paulsen, as the voice of Pinky, Pinky and the Brain, Warner Bros. Television Animation.
David Warner, as the voice of Doc, Toonsylvania, DreamWorks SKG TV Animation.
Robin Williams, as the voice of Genie, Genie's Great Minds, Walt Disney Television Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Male Performer in an Animated Feature Production:
Hank Azaria, as the voice of Bartok, Anastasia, Fox Animation Studios.
Tim Curry, as the voice of Forte, Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Jerry Orbach, as the voice of Lumiere, Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Christopher Plummer, as the voice of Barnaby Crooked Man, Babes in Toyland, MGM Animation.
Paul Winchell, as the voice of Tigger, Winnie the Pooh: The Search for Christopher Robin, Walt Disney Television Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Female Performer in an Animated Television Production:
Christine Cavanaugh, as the voice of Dexter, Dexter's Laboratory, Hanna-Barbera Cartoons.
June Foray, as the voice of Granny, The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries, Warner Bros. Television Animation.
Kathy Najimy, as the voice of Peggy Hill, King of the Hill, 20th Century Fox in association with Deedle Dee Productions, Judgmental Films, and 3 Arts Entertainment.
Bebe Neuwirth, as the voice of Belladonna, All Dogs Go To Heaven, MGM Animation.
April Winchell, as the voice of Cruella DeVil, Disney's 101 Dalmatians: The Series, Walt Disney Television Animation in association with Jumbo Pictures.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Female Performer in an Animated Feature Production:
Catherine Cavadini, as the voice of Mary, Babes in Toyland, MGM Animation.
Angela Lansbury, as the voice of Marie, Anastasia, Fox Animation Studios.
Paige O'Hara, as the voice of Belle, Belle's Magical World, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Meg Ryan, as the voice of Anastasia, Anastasia, Fox Animation Studios.
Ming-Na Wen, as the voice of Mulan, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Music in an Animated Television Production:
Bill Burnett and Guy Moon, "The Ugliest Weenie, Part 2," Cow and Chicken, Hanna-Barbera Cartoons.
Alf Clausen (Music) and Ken Keeler (Lyrics), "The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson," The Simpsons, Gracie Films in association with 20th Century Fox.
Lino Sound, "Suave-O-Matic," The Off-Beats, Curious Pictures in association with Nickelodeon.
Randy Peterson and Kevin Quinn, "Dalmatian Vacation, Part 2," Disney's 101 Dalmatians: The Series, Walt Disney Television Animation in association with Jumbo Pictures.
David Smith, Thomas Chase, and Steve Rucker, "LABretto," Dexter's Laboratory, Hanna-Barbera Cartoons.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Music in an Animated Feature Production:
Michelle Brourman and Amanda McBroom (Songs), Joseph DeLuca (Score), Hercules and Xena: The Battle for Mount Olympus, Universal Cartoon Studios.
Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Ahrens (Songs), David Newman (Score), Anastasia, Fox Animation Studios.
Carl Johnson (Score), Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Rachel Portman and Don Black (Song), "As Long As There's Christmas," Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Matthew Wilde and David Zippel (Songs), Jerry Goldsmith (Score), Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Directing in an Animated Television Production:
Jaime Diaz, "ChalkZone," Oh Yeah! Cartoons, Nickelodeon Animation Studio.
Raimund Krumme, Big and Little Doors, Acme Filmworks.
Pascal Morelli, "A Slip of the Whip," The Legend of Calamity Jane, Contre-Allee in association with Warner Bros. Television Animation.
Jim Reardon, "Trash of the Titans," The Simpsons, Film Roman in association with 20th Century Fox.
Nelson Recinos, "Brain Acres," Pinky and the Brain, Warner Bros. Television Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Directing in an Animated Feature Production:
Don Bluth and Gary Goldman, Anastasia, Fox Animation Studios.
Barry Cook and Tony Bancroft, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation.
Karl Geurs, Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Andy Knight, Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas, Walt Disney Television Animation.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Producing in an Animated Television Production:
Joe Ansolabehere and Paul Germain, Disney's Recess, Walt Disney Television Animation.
Vincent Davis, Cow and Chicken, Hanna-Barbera Cartoons.
Gary Katona and Ed Wexler, Genie's Great Minds, Walt Disney Television Animation.
John W. Lynn, Jr., Celebrity Deathmatch, MTV Animation.
Rob Renzetti, "The F-Tales," Oh Yeah! Cartoons, Nickelodeon.

Outstanding Individual Achievement for Producing in an Animated Feature Production:
Don Bluth and Gary Goldman, Anastasia, Fox Animation Studios.
Pam Coats, Mulan, Walt Disney Feature Animation
Brian Rosen, Richard Harper, Jeff Kahan and Jeff Fino, Fern Gully 2: The Magical Rescue, Wild Brain, Inc.


Note: Readers may contact any Animation World Magazine contributor by sending an e-mail to editor@awn.com.


News Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Feedback?
Past Issues

About | Help | Home | info@awn.com | Mail | Register


Animation World Magazine | Animation World Store | The AWN Vault 
The AWN Gallery | Animation Village | Calendar of Events | Career Connections | Forums & Chats | Home

 

©1998 Animation World Network