OCR Text |
Show "7 ' : ' '' X'1?', ' 1 T 1 ""i iiTi ir " r rni iiiiinlmrr'n liimn Minm i im ' ' m W 1 o0 0 Cortoon ' 'C . Donald Duck, Woody Woodpecker and Mickey , Mouse con look to their laurels. The animated cartoon " ' craze has caught on in England, and a man-eating lion Wj.1LJ named Zimba and Lena, a brow-bcating lioness, are cavorting ca-vorting on the screen in sprightly antics that loom as a threat to the popularity of their American counterparts. British children and adults are currently in raptures over Lena's coyly inexorable pursuit of Zimba. LjA- -rf ItllllllMII III I IIIII.IT , BUI The hand behind Zimba is David David Hand, that is. He was once the protege and later second-in-command to the celebrated cartoonist Walt Disney. Here, he and animator Ralph Wright and John Reed discuss the merits of drawings submitted for consideration by ambitious artists. Hand was responsible for many of the Mickey Mouse cartoons and Silly Symphonies while with Disney. Now he is director of British animated films. Artists and animators gather in story department (above) for exchange of views oiter central theme for cor- r"?;1!"""-"1 i j "Wj'f toon is proposed. Then animators are colled into confer- ' (N ence (below) as details of o new character ore outlined. , t ' j s jfcj To get right expression for his drawings, Bert Felstcad . , 'ftO ; (right) grimaces at himself in mirror. I C"!,.vs ' "I . i' . ' y'-'v - i) ' "A ; )'' "J nv .5. i i -" i ? . - ' . V vvv vS;S " 1 11 mum n in'n.ann h wi , T.J |