United Productions of America
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United Productions of America | |
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Formation | 1944 |
Key people | John Hubley Stephen Bosustow Henry G. Saperstein |
United Productions of America, better known as UPA, was an American animation studio of the 1940s through 1970s, and a distributor of Japanese films from Toho Studios from the 1970s onward.
Its legacy in the history of animation has largely been overshadowed by the commercial success of the vast cartoon libraries of Warner Brothers and Disney. Nonetheless, UPA had a significant impact on animation style and technique, and its innovations were recognized and adopted by the other major animation studios. UPA pioneered the technique of limited animation, and though this style of animation came to be widely abused during the 1960s and 1970s as a cost-cutting measure, it was originally intended as a stylistic alternative to the growing trend (particularly at Disney) of recreating cinematic realism in animated films.
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[edit] History
[edit] Origins
UPA was founded in the wake of the Disney animators' strike of 1941, which resulted in the exodus of a number of long-time Walt Disney staff members. Among them was John Hubley, a layout artist who was unhappy with the ultra-realistic style of animation that Disney had been advocating. Along with a number of his colleagues, Hubley believed that animation did not have to be a painstakingly realistic imitation of real life; he felt that the medium of animation had been constrained by efforts to depict cinematic reality. Chuck Jones' 1942 cartoon The Dover Boys had demonstrated that animation could freely experiment with character design, depth, and perspective to create a stylized artistic vision appropriate to the subject matter. Hubley sought to produce animated films with sufficient freedom to express design ideas considered radical by other established studios.
Hubley teamed with animators Zack Schwartz, Dave Hilberman and Stephen Bosustow to form a studio called first United Film Production and later Industrial Films and Poster Service, where they were free to apply their concepts. Finding work (and income) in the then-booming field of wartime work for the government, the small studio produced a cartoon sponsored by the United Auto Workers (UAW) in 1944. This cartoon was entitled Hell-Bent for Election (directed by Chuck Jones), a film produced for the re-election campaign of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The film was a theatrical success, leading to another notable effort, Brotherhood of Man (1946), also sponsored by the UAW. The film, directed by Bobe Cannon, advocated tolerance of all people regardless of ethnicity. The short was groundbreaking not only in its message but in its very flat, stylized design, in complete defiance of the Disney approach. With its new-found fame, the studio renamed itself United Productions of America (UPA).
Initially UPA contracted with the government to produce animation, but the government contracts began to evaporate as the FBI began investigating suspected Communist activities in Hollywood in the late 1940s. No formal charges were filed against anyone at UPA in the beginnings of the Second Red Scare, but the government contracts were lost as Washington severed its ties with Hollywood.
[edit] Columbia Pictures and success
UPA moved to the crowded field of theatrical cartoons to sustain itself, and won a contract with Columbia Pictures. Columbia had historically been an also-ran in the field of animated shorts, and was not satisfied with the output of its Screen Gems cartoon studio. The UPA animators applied their stylistic concepts to Columbia's characters The Fox and the Crow with the shorts Robin Hoodlum (1948) and The Magic Fluke (1949), both directed by Hubley. Both shorts were nominated for Academy Awards and Columbia gave the studio permission to create its own new characters. UPA responded, not with another "funny animal," but a human character, a crotchety, nearsighted old man. The Ragtime Bear (1949), the first appearance of Mr. Magoo, was a box-office hit, and UPA's star quickly rose as the 1950s dawned.
With a unique, sparse drawing style that contrasted greatly with other cartoons of the day, not to mention the novelty of a human character in a field crowded with talking mice, rabbits, and bears, the Mr. Magoo series won accolades for UPA. Two Magoo cartoons won the Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Cartoons): When Magoo Flew in 1953 and Magoo's Puddle Jumper in 1955.
In 1951, UPA scored another hit with Gerald McBoing-Boing, based on a story by Dr. Seuss. Gerald McBoing-Boing won UPA another Academy Award, and several UPA cartoons would receive Oscar nominations in the next few years. Also in 1951, UPA announced plans for a feature-length film based on the work of cartoonist and humorist James Thurber, to be titled Men, Women and Dogs.[1] (Just one of the Thurber pieces intended for this feature, The Unicorn in the Garden, was eventually released as a short subject.[2]) Shorts such as The Tell-Tale Heart and Rooty Toot Toot featured striking, sophisticated designs unlike anything offered by competing studios. The "UPA style" began to influence significant changes at the other major animation studios, including Warner Bros., MGM, and even Disney, ushering in a new era of experimentation in animation.
[edit] Decline
The House Un-American Activities Committee hearings took a toll on UPA. Columbia, fearful of the investigations, pressured UPA to dismiss anyone with even the slightest hint of communist association, including writers Phil Eastman and Bill Scott (who was not himself under suspicion but tainted by association as Eastman's writing partner). Hubley, a political activist with genuine communist ties, was dismissed in May, 1952. When he left, much of the innovation and creativity of UPA left with him. The studio continued under the management of Bosustow, but the energetic, innovative quality of UPA's cartoons was irreparably damaged. UPA stopped producing theatrical cartoon shorts in 1959.
[edit] Turning to television
As the major Hollywood studios began cutting back and shutting down their animation studios in the early 1960s, UPA was in financial straits, and Steve Bosustow sold the studio to a new producer, Henry G. Saperstein. Saperstein turned UPA's focus to television to sustain itself. UPA expanded the Mr. Magoo series and brought it to television, along with other animated series, including an adaptation of the comic strip Dick Tracy. The studio continued to operate, but the tight schedules and reduced budgets had devastating effects on the product. UPA was forced to churn out cartoons at a far greater quantity than the studio had done for theatrical release; quality, particularly of the Mr. Magoo series, sank to an embarrassing level.
The UPA style of limited animation was adopted by other animation studios, and especially by TV cartoon studios such as Hanna-Barbera Productions. However, it was implemented as a cost-cutting measure rather than an artistic choice. A plethora of low-budget, cheaply made cartoons over the next twenty years effectively reduced television animation to a commodity, despite UPA's original goal to expand the boundaries of animation and create a new form of art.
One bright moment in the UPA television era came with Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol (1963), which became the first episode of an animated TV series entitled The Famous Adventures of Mr. Magoo. Christmas Carol captured the spirit of Charles Dickens' tale in a manner that few of the many re-tellings of the story would, and it is considered to be a holiday classic of the 1960s, ranking alongside A Charlie Brown Christmas and How the Grinch Stole Christmas!.[3][4]
UPA produced two full-length feature films in its tenure: a 1959 feature starring Mr. Magoo entitled 1001 Arabian Nights, directed by Jack Kinney; and Gay Purr-ee in 1962, directed by Abe Levitow.
[edit] Abandoning animation and Toho Studios
Saperstein kept UPA afloat in the 1960s and beyond by abandoning animation production completely after the animation studio closed permanently in 1964 and sold off UPA's library of cartoons, although the studio retained the licenses and copyrights on Mr. Magoo, Gerald McBoing-Boing and the other UPA characters. This led to UPA contracting with DePatie-Freleng Enterprises studio to produce a new animated series called What's New Mr. Magoo? in the 1970s. Columbia Pictures retained ownership of UPA's theatrical cartoons. The studio's TV cartoon library is currently under license by Classic Media.
Saperstein then led UPA into a contract with Toho Studios of Japan to distribute its "giant monster" (see kaiju and tokusatsu) movies in America. Theatrical releases, and especially TV syndication, of the Toho monster movies created a new cult movie market for Japanese monster movies, and such long-running television movie syndication packages such as Creature Double Feature exposed the Toho movie monsters to young American audiences, who embraced them and helped them maintain their popularity throughout the 1970s and 1980s. When Toho began producing a new generation of monster movies in the late 1980s, beginning with Godzilla 1985, UPA capitalized on its Toho contract and help introduce the new kaiju features to the Western world.
Because of its long association with Toho, UPA is better known to cult-movie fans today as Toho's American distributor rather than a pioneer of animated cartoons. But the legacy of UPA is an important chapter in the history of American animation.
UPA continues to license the American library of Godzilla movies, even today. UPA's contract with Toho also resulted in Saperstein producing Woody Allen's first feature film, What's Up Tiger Lily?. Although Classic Media now owns the ancillary rights to most of the UPA library, UPA itself continues to hold the licensing rights to Mr. Magoo, and Saperstein was executive producer to Disney's unsuccessful live-action feature Mr. Magoo in 1997.
Classic Media/Sony Wonder began issuing the Mr. Magoo cartoon series on DVD in 2001, beginning with Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol.
[edit] Theatrical filmography
The following is a complete listing of every UPA short released through Columbia Pictures from 1948 to 1959.
1948:
- Robin Hoodlum – Academy Award Nominee
1949:
- The Magic Fluke – Academy Award Nominee
- Ragtime Bear
1950:
- Punchy DeLeon
- Spellbound Hound
- The Miner's Daughter
- Giddyap
- Trouble Indemnity – Academy Award Nominee
- The Popcorn Story
- Bungled Bungalow
1951:
- Gerald McBoing Boing – Academy Award Winner
- The Family Circus
- Barefaced Flatfoot
- Georgie and the Dragon
- Fuddy Duddy Buddy
- Wonder Gloves
- Grizzly Golfer
1952:
- The Oompahs
- Sloppy Jalopy
- Rooty Toot Toot – Academy Award Nominee
- The Dog Snatcher
- Willie the Kid
- Pink and Blue Blues – Academy Award Nominee
- Pete Hothead
- Hotsy Footsy
- Madeline – Academy Award Nominee
- Captains Outrageous
1953:
- Little Boy with a Big Horn
- The Emperor's New Clothes
- Safety Spin
- Christopher Crumpet – Academy Award Nominee
- The Gerald McBoing Boing Symphony
- Magoo's Masterpiece
- The Unicorn in the Garden (based on the fable by James Thurber)[1]
- Magoo Slept Here
- The Tell-Tale Heart – Academy Award Nominee
1954:
- Bringing Up Mother
- Ballet-Oop
- Magoo Goes Skiing
- The Man on the Flying Trapeze
- Fudget's Budget
- Kangaroo Courting
- How Now Boing Boing
- Destination Magoo
1955:
- When Magoo Flew – Academy Award Winner
- Spare the Child
- Four Wheels and No Brake
- Magoo's Check-Up
- Baby Boogie
- Magoo's Express
- Madcap Magoo
- Christopher Crumpet's Playmate
- Stage Door Magoo
- Rise of Duton Lang
- Magoo Makes News
1956:
- Gerald McBoing Boing on Planet Moo – Academy Award Nominee
- Magoo's Canine Mutiny
- Magoo Goes West
- Calling Dr. Magoo
- The Jaywalker – Academy Award Nominee
- Magoo Beats the Heat
- Magoo's Puddle Jumper – Academy Award Winner
- Trailblazer Magoo
- Magoo's Problem Child
- Meet Mother Magoo
1957:
- Magoo Goes Overboard
- Matador Magoo
- Magoo Breaks Par
- Magoo's Glorious Fourth
- Magoo's Masquerade
- Magoo Saves the Bank
- Rockhound Magoo
- Magoo's Moose Hunt
- Magoo's Private War
1958:
- Trees and Jamaica Daddy – Academy Award Nominee
- Sailing and the Village Band
- Magoo's Young Manhood
- Scoutmaster Magoo
- The Explosive Mr. Magoo
- Magoo's Three-Point Landing
- Magoo's Cruise
- Love Comes to Magoo
- Spring and Saganaki
- Gumshoe Magoo
1959:
- Bwana Magoo
- Picnics Are Fun and Dino's Serenade
- Magoo's Homecoming
- Merry Minstrel Magoo
- Magoo's Lodge Brother
- Terror Faces Magoo
[edit] Theatrical features
- 1001 Arabian Nights (1959)
- Gay Purr-ee (1962)
[edit] References
- ^ Priceless Gift of Laughter. Time Archive: 1923 to the Present. Time Inc. (1951-07-09). Retrieved on 2007-01-31.
- ^ The Unicorn In The Garden. The Big Cartoon Database. Retrieved on 2007-01-31.
- ^ Hill, Jim (November 28, 2006). Scrooge U: Part VI -- Magoo's a musical miser. JimHillMedia.com. Retrieved on 2006 12-25.
- ^ Conan, Neil (host) (2006-12-25). Choose Your Favorite Scrooge (audio). Talk of the Nation. National Public Radio. Retrieved on 2007-01-03.
- Barrier, Michael (1999): Hollywood Cartoons. Oxford University Press.
- Maltin, Leonard (1987): Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons. Penguin Books.
- Solomon, Charles (1994): The History of Animation: Enchanted Drawings. Outlet Books Company.