Les Clark

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Full Name:

Les Clark

Occupation / Title:

,

Date of birth:

17/11/1907

Date of death:

12/09/1979

Biography


Les Clark was born in Ogden, Utah, in 1907. He attended the elementary school there until his parents decided to move to Los Angeles. It was there that he graduated from Venice Highschool, 4 days before he began working for Walt Disney. He joined the ink and paint department in 1929 and had also started inbetweening. He won his first animation on Disney’s first Silly Symphonies “The Skeleton Dance.”

Les became the key person in the development of Mickey Mouse. He started with Mickey’s debut film “Steamboat Willie”, then began creating his most memorable mickey scene’s such as Mickey in the Sorcerer’s apprentice. Les animated and directed on over 20 features which include “101 Dalmations,” “Dumbo,” Cinderella,” Alice in Wonderland,” “Peter Pan,” and many others as well as over 100 shorts. Les soon became director for television specials and educational films such as “Donald in Mathmagic Land,” and “Donald and the Wheel.” He retired from Disney in 1976 then later died of cancer in 1979.

Family and early life


Les Clark married Mirian Clark and had one biological daughter, Miriam Leslie Clarke Weible. They adopted Richard.

Career outline


Clark entered animation at a pivotal time and participated in events that shaped not only Disney’s future but the history of the art form itself. When he arrived, the Alice series was winding down and a series starring a new character named Oswald the Lucky Rabbit was beginning. Ub Iwerks, who became Clark’s mentor, was the studio’s top animator, capable of turning out large numbers of cleverly animated drawings each day. 

Before working at the Disney Studios, Walt Disney had complimented Les on the lettering he made for the menus on the mirrors at a candy store. Two years later in 1927, about to graduate from Venice High School, Clark got up the nerve to ask Walt for a job. “Bring some of your drawings in and let’s see what they look like,” he recalled Walt saying. At the Hyperion studio in the Silver Lake area east of Hollywood, Clark showed his samples, which he admitted were freehand copies of cartoons in College Humor, but Walt admired his “swift, deft” graphic line and hired him.  Clark graduated from high school on a Thursday and jubilantly reported to work the following Monday, February 23, 1927 though Walt warned him “it might just be a temporary job.” The “temporary” job lasted nearly half a century.

By the time he retired in 1975, Les Clark was a senior animator and director, and the “longest continuously employed member of Walt Disney Productions.”  One of his earliest jobs was in-betweening for Ub Iwerks on Steamboat Willie. Les Clark’s debut as an animator came in the first Silly Symphony, The Skeleton Dance (delivered on May 10, 1929). He animated a scene of a skeleton playing the ribs of another skeleton like a xylophone.  Disney’s job offer changed Clark’s life. Throughout his lengthy career he repaid Walt with loyalty and a dogged striving to improve his work. In return, he gained a knowledge of the animation business from the ground up.

During Clark’s first year at the studio, he happily toiled in the industry’s lowest entry-level positions: for his first six months he operated the animation camera, then spent a subsequent six months as an inker-painter.  Over the span of 48 years Les Clark animated and Directed a copious amount of films, as well as more than 100 short films. After serving as sequence director for “Sleeping Beauty” Les was asked by Walt to direct television specials and educational films. Les was the longest continuously employed member to Walt Disney. He was employed from February 23, 1927 to September 30, 1975.

References:


  • Canemaker, John. (2001). Walt Disney’s Nine Old Men and the Art of Animation. New York, NY: Disney Editions. ISBN 0-7868-6496-6
  • Lenburg, Jeff. Who’s Who in Animated Cartoons. Applause Theatre & Cinema Books, 2006.




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