Norm Ferguson (animator) explained

Norm Ferguson
Birth Name:William Norman Ferguson
Birth Date:2 September 1902
Birth Place:Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Death Place:Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Employer:Fables Pictures Inc. (1923–1929)
Walt Disney Animation Studios (1929–1953)
Occupation:Animator
Children:1

William Norman Ferguson (September 2, 1902 – November 4, 1957) was an American animator for Walt Disney Studios and a central contributor to the studio's stylistic development in the 1930s. He is most frequently noted for his contribution to the creation of Pluto, one of the studio's best-known and most enduring characters, and is the artist most closely associated with that character. He is also credited for developing Peg-Leg Pete and the Big Bad Wolf.[1] Ferguson, known at the studio as "Norm" or "Fergy", was the primary animator of the witch from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the first in a long line of great Disney feature villains. He was also a sequence director on the film.

Career

After starting at the studio in 1929 as a cameraman, Ferguson switched to the animation department and rose rapidly, despite a lack of formal art training. His early animation of the dog who would become Pluto drew strong response at the studio and on-screen for giving the character a personality and apparent inner life that was considered a great step forward for the young art form of animation. Animators Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston paid extensive tribute to Ferguson's work in their 1981 book , calling his famous "flypaper sequence" from the 1934 short Playful Pluto- in which the dog is stuck to a piece of flypaper- a "milestone in personality animation...through it all, his reaction to his predicament and his thoughts of what to try next are shared with the audience. It was the first time a character seemed to be thinking on the screen, and, though it lasted only 65 seconds, it opened the way for animation of real characters with real problems."

He is remembered for having worked "rough" and "loose", in animation terms, with a focus on feeling, action, and the character's personality rather than detail, structure, or formal draftsmanship. Fellow animator Fred Moore is quoted as having said of Ferguson, "He doesn't know that you can't raise the eyebrows above the head circle, so he goes ahead and does it and it gives a great effect." Animator Shamus Culhane remembered Ferguson as having produced a high volume of work- about 18 feet a week as opposed to the more average ten at the Disney Studios at the time. (A "foot" of animation- a measurement based on film footage- is sixteen frames).

Norm Ferguson served as a sequence director or directing animator on many of the classic Walt Disney features films from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in 1937 through the 1950s, including Pinocchio, Fantasia, Bambi, Cinderella, Peter Pan, and Alice in Wonderland.

Ferguson, who later in life suffered from diabetes, left the Disney Studios with his health and career in decline in about 1953. Immediately after a brief, unsuccessful stint with Shamus Culhane Productions, described by Culhane in his 1986 book Talking Animals And Other People, Ferguson died as a result of a heart attack in Los Angeles, California in 1957.[2]

Ferguson posthumously received the industry's Winsor McCay Award in 1987 and was posthumously inducted as a Disney Legend by the studio in 1999, along with fellow animator Hamilton Luske (also posthumous), among others. The two men are the subjects of chapter five in Thomas and Johnston's Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life, titled "Cartoon Comes of Age: Norm Ferguson and Ham Luske."

Filmography

Feature films

YearTitleRoleNotes
1937Snow White and the Seven Dwarfssupervising animator
1940Pinocchio supervising animator and sequence director "J. Worthington Foulfellow" and "Gideon"
1940Fantasia supervising animator and director "Dance of the Hours" segment
1941The Reluctant Dragon Himself
1941Dumbo directing animator and sequence director
1942Bambi supervising animator
1942Saludos Amigos supervising animator and supervising director Pedro, El Gaucho Goofy, Aquarela do Brasil
1944The Three Caballeros Director and production supervisor
1950Cinderella directing animator
1951Alice in Wonderland
1953Peter Pan

Short films

YearTitleRoleNotes
1926School Days Animator
1927Horses, Horses, Horses
1929Mickey's Choo-Choo
1930Cannibal Capers
Frolicking Fish
The Gorilla Mystery
Arctic Antics
Midnight in a Toy Shop
Night
The Chain Gang
Pioneer Days
The Fire Fighters
Monkey Melodies
The Picnic
Winter
Playful Pan
1931Traffic Troubles
The Birthday Party
Mother Goose Melodies
Blue Rhythm
The Castaway
Birds of a Feather
The Moose Hunt
The Delivery Boy
The Beach Party
Mickey Cuts Up
Mickey's Orphans
The Barnyard Broadcast
1932The Whoopee Party
Trader Mickey
The Duck Hunt
Flowers and Trees
The Mad Dog
Babes in the Woods
Mickey's Nightmare
King Neptune
Bugs in Love
The Klondike Kid
Santa's Workshop
Mickey's Good Deed
1933Puppy Love
Mickey's Pal Pluto
Birds in the Spring
The Pet Store
Ye Olden Days
Father Noah's Ark
Three Little Pigs
Old King Cole
1934Shanghaied
The Big Bad Wolf
Playful Pluto
Gulliver Mickey
Orphan's Benefit
Mickey's Steam Roller
1935Who Killed Cock Robin?
The Golden Touch
Pluto's Judgement Day
On Ice
1936Mother Pluto
Moving Day
Alpine Climbers
Mickey's Polo Team
Mickey's Grand Opera
Donald and Pluto
Three Little Wolves
Mickey's Elephant
1937Pluto's Quin-puplets
Moose Hunters
1938The Fox Hunt
1939The Practical Pig
The Pointer
Beach Picnic
Society Dog Show
Officer Duck
1940Bone Trouble
1941Pluto's Playmate Animator and director
1951Plutopia Animator
R'coon Dawg
Cold Turkey
1952Pluto's Party
1953 The Simple Things
1954Social Lion
1958To Itch His Own Released posthumously

TV series

Notes and References

  1. Steve Watts, The Magic Kingdom: Walt Disney and the American Way of Life, University of Missouri Press, pg. 132
  2. http://www.michaelbarrier.com/Home%20Page/WhatsNewArchivesAugust11.html Michael Barrier interviews Corny Cole