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9.

Eric Larson
Animation is a form of communication and therefore when youre animating youre making a statement: a
statement the character, the story, the feelings and emotions the character is feeling, human characteristics
and emotions, actions, personalities, archetypes, etc. If you want to have the audience get involved in the
story, connect with the character, and feel the emotions needed to sympathize and relate to that character
you must make a positive statement. To make a positive statement you have to know your character and
their personality, have a devotion to your craft, know how to use your art to express the statement you want
to make, apply feelings and emotions that are strong and real to a fantasy story, and most of all have
sincerity. If you dont have feelings and emotions for your character, how can it even be possible for the
audience to? Few people have ever understood sincerity and making a positive statement better than Eric
Larson, number 9 on our countdown and the subject of todays post.
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Eric Larson was a terrific animator who had the great ability of having sincerity
about his work and making characters believable and have them feel real on the
screen. He truly cared for his characters and had a gift for taking something that
people are familiar with as well as an emotion and personality theyve seen or
experienced and utilizing those two things to make the audience fall in love with a
character. Make a positive statement, stressed Larson. Dont be ambiguous in
what youre saying. Make it strong and clear. He was an expert at animating
believable animals such as Figaro the cat in Pinocchio, the Pegasuses in Fantasia,
Friend Owl in Bambi, Sasha the bird in Make Mine Music, Peg in Lady and the
Tramp, and the vultures in the Jungle Book but his best work includes humans
such as Cinderella and the boy and girl in the Once Upon a Wintertime sequence in
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Melody Time. Eric really cared for characters as human beings, remembered
excellent character designer Dan Haskett. I was doing a pencil test of a baby boy
and he started pantomiming patting the little kid on the head and got lost in what he was doing because he
was thinking about the character so completely. Eric was very, very gentle and he knew timing like
nobodys business, said animator and dancer Betsy Baytos. In real life Eric was a very giving, gentle, and
unselfish human being who always helped mentor others and for decades was largely responsible for
keeping together the sometimes egocentric and hyper aggressive top animators at the studio. He had no ego
and people always felt comfortable asking him for advice and guidance. Larson for the last 16 years of his
career worked pretty much exclusively on running the training program at the Disney studio and was very
successful at finding talent (honorees Mark Henn, Andreas Deja, Duncan Marjoribanks, Ruben Aquino, Dave
Pruiksma, Tony deRosa, Will Finn, Ellen Woodbury, Dale Baer, John Pomeroy, and Kathy Zielinski all either
went through Larsons training program or were hired during his time as head of the training program.)
However there was a drawback to his nature because many of the other directing animators as well as at
times studio management pushed him around and as a result of his unselfishness and reserved personality

he hasnt always been appreciated as much as he should be.


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Eric Larson was born on September 3, 1905 in Cleveland, Utah but moved to Salt Lake City around age 10.
He was born into a Mormon family and would continue to be devout and active in the faith all through his
life although he didnt talk much about his beliefs at the studio. Larson grew up on a ranch and became
fascinated by the animals that live there and their personalities. I was born and raised on a ranch, he
remembered in an interview. And I always wanted to be a rancher up to the time of my second year in
college. Its still a life I love, would still like to do. Other things that particularly intrigued Eric were writing
and drawing (the later he started doing around the age of 10.) Although he never took cartooning very
seriously until he got to the Disney Studio at age 27 throughout high school at Latter Day Saints University

he drew for the school yearbook and was the art director of it in his final year there. On the side Eric sold
illustrations to Westerner Magazine. Soon he entered the University of Utah where he studied journalism
and wrote for the university paper the Chronicle as well as studied drawing on his own private time and he
drew cartoons for the university humor magazine. In spring 1927 a personal incident that he never
mentioned to his colleagues at Disney (in respect to Erics wishes Im not going to repeat the story here but
you can read about it in John Canemakers book) took place that made the young man leave the university as
well as Salt Lake City forever. My whole attitude and whole hope after getting out of school was to just
write and travel, he remembered. Larson then moved on to work as a commercial artist in Los Angeles for 6
years. While working there through a window he saw a beautiful woman named Gertrude Jannes and
immediately told the person sitting next to him thats the girl he was going to marry. Eric and Gertrude
quickly fell in love and the prophecy was fulfilled when the wed in 1933. Now married he wanted to find a
job with higher dignity and pay so he decided to pursue a career writing in radio. Larson was sent to get
advice from former radio writer Richard Creedon, who then was working in the story department at the
Disney studio. Creedon liked his work but said that in the meantime he should get a job working at Disney.
At first Eric was reluctant but after the writer told him The animated film will challenge any creative ability
you have or will develop, he was intrigued and started as in inbetweener in 1933.
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At first Eric Larson wasnt too happy at Disney and almost quit early on in the first few days largely because
of George Drake, a man with no talent who was in charge with the inbetween bullpen only because he was
married to Ben Sharpesteens cousin. Drake would sit down and make a correction for you but he couldnt
draw worth a damn, the animator remembered. However Eric stayed with it and after 5 weeks as an
inbetweener the great Ham Luske discovered his talents and through request made him his assistant. As I
explained in my post ton him Luske was an intense analyzer who constantly studied life and action as well
as applied this knowledge to his work. Finally Larson had found someone who could enlighten him to the
great possibilities of animation and mentor him to make his talents shine. Ham had to work like dickens to
draw, he explains. Freddy Moore just wrote it off but Ham had to work his fool head off to make a drawing.
Every action had to be honest and to have character and sincerity. Hams thoughts on sincerity would
influence Erics approach and thoughts on animation forever. Also he became the first assistant animator to
be in charge of the cleanup of the main animator he was assisting. I moved in with Ham and first word I got
was now the assistants were going to be responsible for all the cleanup work, Eric said in an interview. I
wasnt too sure what a cleanup drawing should be! Ham was very patient and he helped. After a year
working as his mentors top assistant the animator started to animate his own scenes but even still he
worked primarily for Luske. He started animating on shorts such as animating the chorus girls in Cock
OWalk, a Silly Symphony released in 1935(It also was the great Bill Tytlas breakthrough film.) One of

Larsons first major assignments as a full-fledged animator was being assigned in the unit of animators that
would animate the animals in Snow White. Ham supervised the unit (although he only actually animated
Snow White herself) and the group included such promising young artists as James Algar, who would go on
to direct the Sorcerers Apprentice segment in Fantasia as well as sequences in Bambi, and Milt Kahl, who
would go on to become one of the greatest animators of all time. When we started working in features we
started to spend more time on personality because Walt knew we needed strong personalities for the
features to work, explained the animator. On many of the scenes especially the ones he animated with the
animals walking around Snow White and the ones of them cleaning up in Whistle While You Work Eric
animated all the animals on separate sheets of paper to concentrate on them separately. He also used
thumbnail sketches for every 2 feet of animation to help feel the composition. In later years Eric grew very
critical about the animation he did of the animals and resented the way they turned out. You could hardly
call them deer, he unhappily stated. They were stacks of wheat. When we got to Bambi, the idea was to be
honest with them. It was however the next feature film that would prove to be the film where Larson
became a star. The film was Pinocchio and the character was Figaro the cat.
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Pinocchio today would be impossible to make, Eric Larson told Steve Hulett. They wouldnt spend the
amount of money that would be necessary. We just wouldnt do it now. Where in the world would you ever
get the underwater effects? Where in the world would you get the ocean effect, the water effect when
Pinocchio and Gepetto were on the raft, escaping from the whale? In many ways Figaro is his signature
performance because it displays all of what he did best: giving animals believable human personalities,
combining caricature and fantasy with believable movements and real feelings, using walks and poses to
show character, brilliant timing, inspiration, action analysis, and last but not least sincerity. For the
inspiration Eric used his nephew, who influenced the cats personality and antics. A 4 year old kid is quick
to feel hurt if he doesnt get what he wants, he explained. He is probably going to put on a show for us, a
tantrum. Take an animal, like Figaro, move him around as a kitten would move. You dont take any liberties
with that kind of acting but now you inject into him a personality of this young kid who is used to having
everything he wanted. This is where we would cross from realism to fantasy, in my opinion. Larsons
animation of Figaro is brilliant because like he explain hes completely believable as a cat and has the
movements of a cat but has expressions and feelings that are very human. The animator did a brilliant job
at using pantomime and expression through the entire body to make the cats personality and emotions
resonate well with the movement. Not only is the timing brilliant but there is a great combination of having
Figaro realistic enough to be believable but caricatured enough to make him fit into the story and have the
audience accept his human expressions. Last is there is a great honesty and sincerity in Erics animation of
the cat. It is so apparent that he cared very much about his character and craft making the audience believe

in him more. There are two Figaro scenes that are must-studies: the one where he gets out of bed and closes
the window (pantomime and combining realism with caricature as well as timing at its best) and the one
where he pouts about having to wait to eat his dinner (great use of clear poses and showing character.)
Larson had now proven himself a top animator at the Disney studio and would continue to do great work but
perhaps the intimacy between animator and character was never as present in his other work as it is in
Figaro.
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After Pinocchio was completed Eric Larson was moved on to be a directing animator on the Pastoral
Symphony sequence in Fantasia alongside such household names as Ward Kimball, Fred Moore, Ollie
Johnston, and Art Babbitt (his mentor Ham Luske directed the segment.) His Fantasia work would bring one
of his biggest successes in his career but also would bring one of his strongest resentments and failures. On
the high note it had his absolutely beautiful animation of the Peaguses flying. The flying horses move
gracefully, are expertly timed to the music, and have the great essence of a horse moving as well as the
balanced flying motion. On the flip side Erics animation of the centaurs in the segment (he primarily did
them in the scene where theyre carrying the baskets while Fred Moore did a lot of them in the part where
they fall in love with the centaurettes) was grotesque and clumsy in a way no other Larson scene is. This
bothered him for decades and he was still honestly upset when talking to trainees about it in 1980. They
were lousy to animate because their design was completely wrong, Eric sighed to his students. We didnt
analyze the live action sufficiently to get a horse action in there. If you watch the front legs of these
centaurs they have a certain human feeling and it shouldnt have been that way. If I had just thought about
it then it would be so much better. Eric and Ollie Johnston moved onto Bambi in spring 1940 after
completing their work on Fantasia joining Frank Thomas and Milt Kahl as the four supervising animators on
the film. However although he wasnt on the crew the animator did do friend Ben Sharpesteen a favor by
without screen credit animating the animals cuddling together in the Baby Mine sequence of Dumbo, where
he did all the animals except for Tytlas Dumbo and Mrs. Jumbo. On Bambi Larson supervised a large crew
of over 30 people including 10 animators such as Don Lusk (a great underrated Disney animator known for
his specialty in animals and strong draftsmanship who did some stunning, magnificent animation on the
Great Stag on the feature) and Retta Scott (the first female animator at Disney who animated the hunting
dogs in the film.) On Bambi he had the largest crew of any of the top men and there was always someone in
his room with a problem, often nothing to do with the production, wrote Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston.
Eric was always patiently listening, occasionally counseling, but somehow he was still one of the best
footage men in the studio. And to top it all, he was able to get footage out of most of his crew. As for his
actual animation on the film Bambi was casted by sequence but Eric primarily worked on doing most of the
scenes with the outspoken and sometimes paranoid but always intellectual Friend Owl, which allowed him
to work more broadly and he did a brilliant job at getting into the character as well as applying that

personality to the action and performance, and the reserved but majestic Great Stag, a very difficult
assignment and probably the subtlest character the animator did in his career. My favorite scene he
animated on the film is the one where the owl is talking to adult Bambi, Thumper, and Flower about being
Twitterpatted and is doing all the actions and poses displaying how that is like. Its a good example of
showing how emotion affects character: owl, who usually is pretty calm and well spoken in manner, is
becoming crazy and all over the place because hes feeling inside him his attitudes and opinions towards
what he sees with people falling in love. On top of that the actions supporting the feeling and dialogue is
spectacular.
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During World War 2 Eric Larson stayed at the Disney studio and spent most of his time doing some very

subtle and warm animation of the boy in the Flying Gauchico segment of the Three Caballeros but hed
continue to shine on the package features animated in the second half of the 1940s. On Make Mine Music
he animated Sasha the bird in the Peter and the Wolf segment, which was a very warm, believable
performance displaying great usage of timing to music and looseness in movement to show expression and
feeling. I had the musicians put down on the exposure sheets each and every note that involved Sasha,
explained Larson. That same year Song of the South was released, which in the animated segments showed
some of the best character acting that he ever did for the studio. Although he animated all three characters
Erics animation for Brer Bear has always been a favorite of mine because the performance he did is so true
to the character and the personality Bill Peet had planned through the storyboards. He clearly
communicates through his actions, gestures, and walks that the bear is indeed an idiot who doesnt think to
hard about anything, is dumb, and just wants to get it over with. To show this Larson made his walk very
uncoordinated and showing tremendous weight while making his gestures and poses very unpolished and
having the expressions show he isnt thinking that hard. The next film, Make Mine Music, would also turn
out to be a tremendous triumph for Eric where he animated some very sincere, subtle, and warm animation
of a young boy and girl couple in love in the romantic Once Upon a Wintertime segment as well as the crazy
bird in the Samba segment. In the Wintertime segment he did an excellent job at staying true to the
beautiful, stylized Mary Blair designs and sketches while adding to them a three dimensional quality and
roundness that makes them seem believable and real (hard to do with a Blair drawing!) I love the
understanding of emotions and relationships he shows as well as the subtle expressions and gestures that
are held back but communicate so effectively. The bird, on the other hand, is unique in that he is by far the
broadest character Larson ever animated and has a wackiness and cartooniness that would be expected in a
Ward Kimball or John Sibley scene but is completely unconventional for Eric. However on the next film the
animators hard work and effort was completely ignored because he was given no screen credit for his work
on Ichabod and Mr. Toda, where he animated a lot of great scenes in the Wind and the Willows section. Don
Lusk was credited for all of his scenes after work resumed on the project (Larson started working on it
immediately after Bambi but it was shelved due to budget cuts.) He was very hurt because he felt he did a lot
of his best work on the film, including crediting the part where ratty says he misjudged Toad as the best
dialogue he ever did. I guess Toad was one of my favorites, stated Eric in a television interview. I think
some of the most enjoyable actions I was ever able to get on the screen was Toads defense of himself in
court. I felt that I did get a tone that is the peak of arrogance in that figure of action.
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As disappointing as it must have been to go no credit for his work on Toad Eric Larson was indeed given
credit for his work on the next assignment, which was a much more important one and arguably his best
work. The film was Cinderella and Eric had the challenge of being the first animator on the film and having
to bring the charming, sweet heroine to life for everyone to fall in love with. This was the first cohesive
story Disney had done since Bambi and the success of this picture was vital to having a successful future for
the studio. Cinderella was a challenge for several reasons. While in Snow White the love and affection the
dwarfs and the animals as well as the jealousy of the queen were able to tell a lot of the story and take a lot
of emotional weight Cindy had to take a large amount of the weight in the story because she had to connect
so many plots to each other: the Stepmother, the conflict between Lucifer and the Mice, and the King, Duke,
and Prince plot. She also had to be very sweet and have a homely feel but she had to have an intelligence
and strength to be able to stand up for herself and make her dreams come true so she couldnt be too passive
but had to stay warm-hearted and believe in herself. The last main challenge was that Cinderella as a film,
with the exception of the animals, was all shot in live action so the animators had to be able to use it as a
resource to make the action realistic and believable but it had to be caricatured and creative to avoid making
it too realistic and having it remain appealing. While Eric animated Cinderella first and animated the
majority of the footage Marc Davis came on a little later and the two didnt necessarily see eye to eye on the
character (a little bit of a reflection and taste of the much more hostile and intense conflict between their
mentors Ham Luske and Grim Natwick over Snow White.) While Larson wanted a girl who was very warm,
soft-spoken, comforting, and sweet and saw her as a sixteen year old girl with a pug nose Davis saw her as a
bit older, more sexually aware, witty, intelligent, less passive, and what the other called a more exotic dam
with a swan neck as only Marc Davis could draw. In many ways unlike the earlier conflict the two men
actually used their two interpretations of the character in a way that actually benefited the story and the
result was the most interesting and possibly the most dynamic Disney heroine ever: Cindy is warm and
sincere but also is intelligent and has emotional strength. However it was the heart and soul that mattered
the most as well as the sincerity so ultimately you could saw Erics girl is ultimately the one that won the
battle and the one girls all over the world of all ages have fallen in love with for decades. Although Marcs
Cinderella is more tied down fortunately the drawings were made to work together thanks to an unsung
hero. Ken OBrien was able to make Marcs gals look like my gals, stated Larson. OBrien is an
underappreciated animator who was brilliant at subtle movements and especially at animating females
(then he was still just a cleanup artist.) Personally Erics animation of Cinderella is very inspirational to me
and I credit his work on the film as one of my prime motivators into deciding to pursue Disney animation as
a career. I love how delicate and sincere she is! Larson did a great job at making her movements timed very
evenly and using subtle delicate gestures and expressions to communicate her feelings and desires. One
scene I particularly love is the one where she is waking up in the morning and talking about how wonderful a
dream she had. This one really shows the sensitivity Eric had in full tact as well as a textbook example of

warm, sincere animation in a character. He also animated Cinderella in the scene where shes looking out
the window and her dancing with the prince at the ball, to name a few. Larson also was the lead animator on
the prince on the film (a character that has mistakenly been credited by many people as being animated by
Milt Kahl although he didnt even do a single scene of him or Cindy.) The nice thing about Cinderella is
that you know what she is thinking in every scene. the animator simply stated to Andreas Deja.
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While Alice in Wonderland was as much of a triumph for Eric Larson as Cinderella it still contains a lot of
good work from him. His main focus on the film was animating the stubborn, rude Caterpillar, which proved
to be a good challenge because it was very hard for him to look appealing. Eric had a hard time being
cartoony and broad with the character the way the film was supposed to be, although several animators on
the film with the major exception of Ward Kimball failed to be able to contribute to the goal of making Alice
a cartoony feature (it wouldnt be until Aladdin 41 years later that Disney proved they could do one.) also on
the film the animator animated some of Alice, particularly in the scenes before she goes into Wonderland
and shes singing In a World of My Own. Larsons Alice isnt as tied down as Marc and Milts were but she is
very subtle and has sincerity in her performance. Last on the film he animated the Queen of Hearts when we
first see her where she is yelling and demanding to know who painted the roses red. I think Erics Queen is
appealing and has solid acting but I think it wasnt necessarily good casting and Frank Thomas certainly
gave her a psychological precision and craftiness that was needed for the character that just wasnt in the
other gentleman. On Peter Pan the animator had a very challenging assignment: he had to animate the
sequence where Peter and the kids fly into Neverland. This required Larson to have to use an expert
knowledge and utilization of mechanics as well as focus more on technique than is usually done in his
scenes. However, there still is a great spirit and feeling to the animation that only he could add. We not
only used multiplane, we had to work the hell out of that camera-per-fields and in-and-out exaggerations,
going away from you and coming at you, explained Eric. Besides drawing that we put emphasis on it by
using camera tilts. It was a very beautifully worked out thing mechanically. It really has a certain thrill to it.
Up next for the animator was a really juicy assignment that he thoroughly enjoyed and in my opinion is
alongside Cinderella and Figaro as his best work. It was animating all of Peg, the sexy female dog who is a
free spirit and has a strong affection for Tramp, in Lady and the Tramp. Only Ollie Johnstons girl in Reason
to Emotion is the only Disney character anywhere close to being as sexy as Peg. Larson did a brilliant job at
using touches in the way she walks and moves to enrich that personality and the acting is top notch. In
particular a huge inspiration to him on the character was Peggy Lee herself, who voiced the character. The
way she sang the song was a great inspiration, he remembered. Also the way she walked because she had a
pretty nice movement and these are thing that you try to pick up from human beings and translate into
animals. True to what he explained Ive got to admit Im a real sucker for the walk he gave the dog: that

alone is enough to tell the audience shes seductive and is a free spirit due to the tone of the walk and the
spacing between the steps. The design is something I love too. It was interesting because here was Eric,
whos a Mormon, and hes animating this sexy girl and having the best time, chuckled Burny Mattinson.
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Sadly however the next film he worked on proved to be a very negative experience for him and turned the
direction of his career in a negative way that he was never able to overcome. The film was on Sleeping
Beauty but this time he was in the directors chair. Sleeping Beauty had begun story work in 1951 and voices
were recorded soon after but in December 1953 Wilfred Jackson, who up to that point was directing the
project, had a heart attack and had to step down. It is unsure why Eric was the one they picked but likely its
because of his success supervising units of animators. However the production proved to be extremely
difficult and things moved extremely slowly. Eric got his first sequence to work on in Sleeping Beauty and
had very little help, remembers Burny Mattinson, who would later assist Larson for a dozen years. Even
his longtime assistant George Goepper was modeling things for Disneyland. So everything moved very, very
slowly. Eric was also one of those very precise people so when he handed out sweatbox notes, he told you
exactly how to correct the situation. The notes were very long and detailed. I think management looked at
those notes and though, this guys making too much work for these people. It was wrong that he got a lot of
blame for it. Although he was good at paying attention to detail and was always very patient, he ultimately
didnt have the guts and leadership to put everything together and keep the production moving. Larson also
wasnt very good at being a hammer and didnt do much to prevent tensions and problems on the
production, such as Eyvind Earles over dominance of the film. He also got a lot of blame for the large
budget of the film. Sadly in 1958 Eric was removed as director of Sleeping Beauty and Wolfgang Reitherman
and Gerry Geromini finished the picture. After Sleeping Beauty the animator only got to be a directing

animator one more time, which was on One Hundred and One Dalmatians were he animated a lot on the
puppies. Larsons most notable scene on the film is the one where all the Dalmatians are watching TV,
which has some beautiful personality animation and great warmth. Unfortunately however things were
getting a lot more clich at Disney and with Wolfgang Reitherman as the director of the films it was quite
easy for a unselfish, laid back animator like Eric Larson to go underappreciated and pushed around. As a
result on Sword in the Stone he was demoted to character animation and only animated a few bits and
pieces on the film. On Mary Poppins he animated the farm animals and did some very good stuff on them.
The demotion was still held during Jungle Book but he did get more scenes that in Stone by quite a bit
including Mowgli arguing with Bagheera and a lot of stuff on the vultures. His vultures show the animators
extensive knowledge of animal anatomy and strength in the fundamental of timing in animation. On
Aristocats he was continued to be phased out and did some animation of Scat Cat as well as a lot of the
mouse. His last feature was Robin Hood, were he animated only a few scenes of Little John and was
gradually phased out during the production. So in 1973 Eric put down the pencil and decided to spend all his
time on his more important endeavor, his job as the head of the Disney training program.
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While many animators and artists at Disney didnt care too much about the future of Disney animation,
were focused on battling with each other and extending their careers, and were at best passive to the issue
that they hadnt done a good job of training new artists and finding a continuous flow of talent to the
studio. With the Disney films not in as high quality as they used to be and artists beginning to get old,
retire, and in some cases even die Eric Larson, who was one of the few very concerned about passing on the
legacy of Disney and the future of the studio, sacrificed his career so he could devote full time to training a
new generation of artists. Eric loved to teach because he loved young people, fondly reflected Andreas

Deja. He was someone youd want to have as a grandfather. Erics training program was essential in
setting the foundation for the second generation to shine and found such talents as Ted Kierscey (1970),
Dale Baer (1971), John Pomeroy, Ron Clements, Andy Gaskill (1973), Glen Keane (1974), Ed Gombert, Randy
Cartwright, Dan Hansen (1975), John Musker (1977), Brad Bird, Jerry Rees, Mike Giamo, Chris Buck, Mike
Cedeno (1978), John Lasseter, Hendel Butoy (1979), Andreas Deja, Mark Henn, Barry Temple, Joe Ranft
(1980), Kathy Zielinski, Dave Pruiksma (1981), Ruben Aquino(1982), Ellen Woodbury, and Duncan
Marjoribanks(1985). However in that time frame he had some bad experiences. First of all his beloved wife
Gertrude passed away in 1975, which made him very depressed. One infamous one is being removed as the
director of The Small One. Larson had intended for this to be a film where the young guys could shine and
learn as well as learn from him and such veterans as Mel Shaw, Vance Gerry, and Cliff Nordberg. However as
Burny Mattinson explains, So we came in on Friday, everything was happy. Monday, everything in our
rooms was gone. Everything! Every storyboard, every drawing we had on it. The rooms were wiped out. We
found out that management had over night decided to turn over the project to Don Bluth to direct. It was a
horrible thing to do. It originated with Eric. It was for Erics use and then these guys just moved in. Eric
stayed teaching but things were never the same. Many people blame Bluth taking over the Small One as
the event that broke the piece at the Disney studio and began all the politics and battles that would extend
well after Don Bluth departed in 1979. Whosever side you were on the family, college campus feel to the
studio was over and Eric, who wasnt happy at all with the politics, had to constantly tell people to
concentrate on the art. However 7 years later he again had hard feelings towards management when the
takeover took place and he was forced off the Disney lot alongside the rest of the animation staff to a
warehouse in Glendale. Larson wasnt at all happy with the new management and after the move felt very
depressed in his enclosed office with no windows contrasting his sunny, nice office he had worked in for 40
years. At the age of 80 he retired in 1986 although he went into a deep depression after and felt very
homesick for Disney. On October 25, 1988 Eric Larson passed away at the age of 83. The prince in the Little
Mermaid was named Eric in his memory.
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Style wise Eric Larsons greatest asset as an animator was without question his great sincerity that was to an
extent that is almost never found in people. Although he wasnt a flashy or phenomenal draftsman there is a
warmth touch and great amount of personality and understanding of character in his work that is heart
warming and beautiful. You love these characters because Eric was so submerged and focused on the
character in a way almost no other animator has ever been. When you see his stuff up on the screen it feels
very intuitive and the character is always very rich and complete. To understand his characters and figure

out his animation Larson would not only act out the scenes but he would imagine the scene in his head.
Everything he drew and animated he first saw in his head. After imagining the scene he would analyze and
think very thoroughly about the character and their feelings and personality. In terms of design Erics stuff
is very round and appealing looking with more curved, sparse lines than an animator such as Marc Davis or
Milt Kahl. His designs were always in the Disney style but were more conventional and not very stylized. As
I mentioned before Larson was particularly gifted at timing and worked his scenes out on diagrams and
exposure sheets and timed it out expertly before actually animating it. Assisting him was rather easy
because he animated relatively evenly. Erics scenes are on fours instead of twos, giving and organic, even
feel to the movement and lacking the complicated, sometimes overdone technical animation of some other
people. Theres only two things that limit animation, the animator explained. One is the ability to
imagine and the other is the ability to draw what you imagine. The basic thing that animation has to have is
a change of shape. When you change the perspective of the shape, the charm of animation is how you time
that after youve gotten all the character into pose drawings. Thats weight to be concerned with. We dont
take steps, we fall into them. You take what you know is real and honest and you exaggerate it, you
caricature it for all its worth. Then you begin to get the humor, whether its an action, expression
whatever. The interpretation the animator gives as an action will depend on the quality of the animator. If
we cant relate to the audience, we might as well give up. This is what Walt wanted.
[37]

[38]
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Without question the influence Eric Larson has had on Disney animation is immense and is still very
influential today. As an animator his warm, believable work and intimacy between animator and character

is something anyone should be inspired to do thats in the field. Erics work has a very sincere quality and it
is very true to what the heart of Disney animation is about. When he was animating he was a great
inspiration in that he helped keep the animators together and was vital to mentoring younger guys as well
as counseling and helping solve problems always in a patient, gentle way. Larson deserves a lot of credit for
his excellent performances in the Disney films and it is sad to be that oftentimes his contributions are
ignored. For example Im shocked at how rarely it is mentioned that he was the main animator on
Cinderella! His animation on her is some of the best stuff ever done with a Disney heroine but no one even
acknowledges that he was the key to her.As for his inspiration as a mentor and impact on preserving the
Disney legacy it is indescribable the impact and influence he has had on the second generation. You could
even say quality Disney animation could very well have died if it werent for the passionate, talented artists
Eric mentored and nurtured to their highest potential.
[41]

[42]

Eric Larson is one of my biggest inspirations and heroes not just in the realms of animation but also in life.
His sincerity, love for his work, and sweet, gentle nature is something I want to emulate and strive to stay
true to everyday of my life. In terms of animation his richness and indulgence into the character and expert
use of timing is inspirational to me in a very strong way. Larson is for the lack of a better word an idol to
me: I look up to him and want to emulate him both as an artist and as a man. I will always remember this
great quote the animator said: All an artist has is sincerity. Perhaps no single quote has spoken to me in
such a way as this one. It reminds me that we need to set down out egos and instead give animation our fully
heart, passion, and take out the best in us to do the best possible work we can. Thank you Eric Larson for
your contributions to the art of Disney animation and its legacy as well as for being a great hero and
inspiration to me as well as so many other people!

[43]

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