Art Stevens

Nascimento : 1915-05-01, Roy, Montana, USA

Morte : 2007-05-22

História

Art Stevens was an animator at Walt Disney Productions during the Golden Age of American Animation. Stevens began as an In-Betweener on the 1940 film Fantasia. After doing in-between work on several films, he received his first screen credit as a character animator was on Peter Pan in 1953. During his career, Stevens contributed to the storyboards and animation in many Disney cartoon shorts and feature films including Ward Kimball's critically acclaimed 1950s television documentaries Man in Space, Man and the Moon and Mars and Beyond. Stevens was also an animator on the Oscar-winning shorts Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom (1953) and It's Tough to Be a Bird (1969). In 1977, Stevens co-directed The Rescuers. He then co-produced and co-directed The Fox and the Hound (1981) and contributed story work during early production of The Black Cauldron (1985). Stevens retired in 1983 after forty-three years at the Disney animation studio. -Wikipedia

Filmes

O Cão e a Raposa
Co-Producer
Raposa e cão crescem juntos como amigos, mas descobrem aos poucos que são inimigos na ordem natural das coisas. Quando adultos, põe a amizade em jogo.
O Cão e a Raposa
Director
Raposa e cão crescem juntos como amigos, mas descobrem aos poucos que são inimigos na ordem natural das coisas. Quando adultos, põe a amizade em jogo.
Bernardo e Bianca
Director
A Sociedade de Proteção e Ajuda, formada por camundongos de diversos países, se reúne no prédio da ONU devido à descoberta de uma garrafa que contém uma mensagem de ajuda, enviada pela garota Penny (Michelle Stacy). Bianca (Eva Gabor), uma das representantes da reunião, se oferece para investigar o caso. Para que ela não parta sozinha nesta missão é enviado também Bernardo (Bob Newhart), o porteiro da reunião, que está atraído por Bianca. Juntos eles partem para o orfanato em que Penny morava, para descobrir pistas sobre seu paradeiro atual.
As Muitas Aventuras do Ursinho Puff
Animation
Em três deliciosas aventuras, Puff e seus amigos enfrentam uma enchente, se envolvem com um enxame de abelhas e se divertem com um tigre saltador!
It's Tough to Be a Bird
Animation
Part cartoon and part documentary, this film offers a humorous look at birds and the ways people perceive them.
Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day
Animation
Winnie the Pooh and his friends experience high winds, heavy rains, and a flood in Hundred Acre Wood.
Steps Towards Maturity and Health
Animation
There is a focus on the need for physical, mental and social health to be fully developed in order for humans to function properly within society. The film is aimed at an adolescent audience who are independently confronting developments in these aspects of their well-being for the first time.
A Symposium on Popular Songs
Animation
Professor Ludwig von Drake plays a variety of popular music, all of which he wrote. First, ragtime: the Rutabaga Rag, with vegetables dancing in stop-motion. Next, the Charleston, with cut-out animation of a singer and dancers. Dixieland and more cut-out animation; the crooner/love ballad; 50's doo-wop; and finally, rockabilly.
Aquamania
Animation
Mr. X buys a boat and inadvertantly enters the water skiing race. With Junior driving, with no experience, he's a bit out of his league.
The Saga of Windwagon Smith
Animation
Sea Captain Windwagon Smith hits Westport, Kansas, the starting point of the old Oregon and Santa Fe Trails, and is quickly the laughing stock of the town; instead of traveling in the usual oxen-drawn covered wagon, he is at the helm and wheel of a Contestoga-type wagon with a full set of sails. He plans to go to Oregon by taking advantage of the prairie winds. First, he wins over the town mayor, falls in love with the mayor's beautiful daughter, Molly Crum, and then secures financial backing from the townspeople. He sets sail across the plains, with Molly Crum as a covered-wagon stowaway, and a Kansas twister looming on the horizon. And, then, the wind hits the sails. And the fan, too, if he had had one.
Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom
Animation
In this short subject (which mostly represents a departure from Disney's traditional approach to animation), a stuffy owl teacher lectures his feathered flock on the origins of Western musical instruments. Starting with cavepeople, whose crude implements could only "toot, whistle, plunk and boom," the owl explains how these beginnings led to the development of the four basic types of Western musical instruments: brass, woodwinds, strings, and percussion.