New ‘Lion King’ Trailer Dazzles with Visuals, Wows with Music
It is time! Well, almost. Disney dropped a bomb this morning with a new trailer for its upcoming remake of The...
Read moreDetailsOnward<\/em> releases March 6, 2020. Pixar next feature is Toy Story 4<\/em>, releasing June 2019.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Edited by: Kelly Conley<\/p>\n","post_title":"Pixar Announces 2020 Original Film: 'Onward'","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"pixar-announces-2020-original-film-onward","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-12-15 15:03:31","post_modified_gmt":"2018-12-15 22:03:31","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=51229","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50937,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-23 07:00:10","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-23 14:00:10","post_content":" Pratt and Holland will play brothers, elves in a world searching if there is any magic left in it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Onward<\/em> releases March 6, 2020. Pixar next feature is Toy Story 4<\/em>, releasing June 2019.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Edited by: Kelly Conley<\/p>\n","post_title":"Pixar Announces 2020 Original Film: 'Onward'","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"pixar-announces-2020-original-film-onward","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-12-15 15:03:31","post_modified_gmt":"2018-12-15 22:03:31","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=51229","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50937,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-23 07:00:10","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-23 14:00:10","post_content":" Just announced, the cast includes Chris Pratt, Tom Holland, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and Octavia Spencer. An Avengers<\/em> reunion! And Princess Atta returns to Pixar! Here for it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Pratt and Holland will play brothers, elves in a world searching if there is any magic left in it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Onward<\/em> releases March 6, 2020. Pixar next feature is Toy Story 4<\/em>, releasing June 2019.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Edited by: Kelly Conley<\/p>\n","post_title":"Pixar Announces 2020 Original Film: 'Onward'","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"pixar-announces-2020-original-film-onward","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-12-15 15:03:31","post_modified_gmt":"2018-12-15 22:03:31","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=51229","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50937,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-23 07:00:10","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-23 14:00:10","post_content":" Directed by Dan Scanlon, who helmed\u00a0Monsters University<\/em>\u00a0in 2013, Onward<\/em>\u00a0was the film hinted at in 2017 at the D23 Expo about a \"suburban fantasy set in a fantasy world.\"<\/p>\n\n\n\n Just announced, the cast includes Chris Pratt, Tom Holland, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and Octavia Spencer. An Avengers<\/em> reunion! And Princess Atta returns to Pixar! Here for it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Pratt and Holland will play brothers, elves in a world searching if there is any magic left in it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Onward<\/em> releases March 6, 2020. Pixar next feature is Toy Story 4<\/em>, releasing June 2019.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Edited by: Kelly Conley<\/p>\n","post_title":"Pixar Announces 2020 Original Film: 'Onward'","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"pixar-announces-2020-original-film-onward","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-12-15 15:03:31","post_modified_gmt":"2018-12-15 22:03:31","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=51229","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50937,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-23 07:00:10","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-23 14:00:10","post_content":" In an entertainment industry of sequels, reboots, and re-imaginings, no matter how high quality franchises continue to be, any originality is a breath of fresh air. Pixar will bring the original\u00a0Onward<\/strong><\/em>\u00a0on March 6, 2020.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Directed by Dan Scanlon, who helmed\u00a0Monsters University<\/em>\u00a0in 2013, Onward<\/em>\u00a0was the film hinted at in 2017 at the D23 Expo about a \"suburban fantasy set in a fantasy world.\"<\/p>\n\n\n\n Just announced, the cast includes Chris Pratt, Tom Holland, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and Octavia Spencer. An Avengers<\/em> reunion! And Princess Atta returns to Pixar! Here for it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Pratt and Holland will play brothers, elves in a world searching if there is any magic left in it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Onward<\/em> releases March 6, 2020. Pixar next feature is Toy Story 4<\/em>, releasing June 2019.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Edited by: Kelly Conley<\/p>\n","post_title":"Pixar Announces 2020 Original Film: 'Onward'","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"pixar-announces-2020-original-film-onward","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-12-15 15:03:31","post_modified_gmt":"2018-12-15 22:03:31","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=51229","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50937,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-23 07:00:10","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-23 14:00:10","post_content":" In an entertainment industry of sequels, reboots, and re-imaginings, no matter how high quality franchises continue to be, any originality is a breath of fresh air. Pixar will bring the original\u00a0Onward<\/strong><\/em>\u00a0on March 6, 2020.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Directed by Dan Scanlon, who helmed\u00a0Monsters University<\/em>\u00a0in 2013, Onward<\/em>\u00a0was the film hinted at in 2017 at the D23 Expo about a \"suburban fantasy set in a fantasy world.\"<\/p>\n\n\n\n Just announced, the cast includes Chris Pratt, Tom Holland, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and Octavia Spencer. An Avengers<\/em> reunion! And Princess Atta returns to Pixar! Here for it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Pratt and Holland will play brothers, elves in a world searching if there is any magic left in it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Onward<\/em> releases March 6, 2020. Pixar next feature is Toy Story 4<\/em>, releasing June 2019.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Edited by: Kelly Conley<\/p>\n","post_title":"Pixar Announces 2020 Original Film: 'Onward'","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"pixar-announces-2020-original-film-onward","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-12-15 15:03:31","post_modified_gmt":"2018-12-15 22:03:31","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=51229","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50937,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-23 07:00:10","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-23 14:00:10","post_content":"Excited for a new Pixar original?\u00a0<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nCaptivating. Entrancing. Hypnotic. Whatever you want to call it, there was something magical in the air at Destination D as Bret Iwan and Bill Farmer took to the mics to spellbind attendees with something no one in the audience will forget anytime soon: a live table read of a script, in character as Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\nDestination D was a weekend-long event put on by D23: The Official Disney Fan Club in commemoration of Mickey's 90th birthday. One of the panels included a reading of an unmade Mickey short in which Mickey and Goofy get trapped in a candy mine. It was absolutely fascinating to observe. Voice performance is something so few are exposed to in person that much of its intricacies are shrouded in mystery. How much energy of a voice performance comes from the actor's body? What kinds of facial expressions do they make when performing? Do they easily weave in and out of character? These were questions whose answered were demonstrated firsthand before my very eyes. Considering my Disney fandom and the fact that writing scripts and conducting table reads are part of my everyday job responsibilities, this moment at D23 is easily one of my new favorite Disney memories.\r\n\r\nThe day prior, Iwan and Farmer sat down with\u00a0Star Wars<\/em> voice actress and Her Universe founder Ashley Eckstein for a more formal interview-style panel, during which they each shared how they got their jobs, what makes their characters special, and provided a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of two of animation's most iconic characters, Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nBy now, both Iwan and Farmer are pros at their characters. Iwan has been performing Mickey since 2009, while Farmer has been Goofy since 1987. Farmer described his audition process as relatively traditional, having submitted a tape he put together across a weekend going through several scenarios as Goofy. Iwan becoming Mickey is a more extraneous tale, seemingly straight out of a Disney storybook. He was an illustrator for Hallmark, coincidentally working just a few block away from where Walt Disney worked at Laugh-O-Gram Studio in Kansas City in the 1920s. Iwan received an email from an animator friend who worked at Pixar, passing along information about a virtual audition to be an understudy for Mickey's voice for when Wayne Allwine wasn't available. Despite the audition intending to be internal to The Walt Disney Company, Iwan submitted an audition voicemail to the provided hotline, and several months later received a callback. In the wake of Allwine's unexpected passing, and with no experience in radio or vocal performance, Bret became the official voice of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nHis first project was a Disney On Ice production called \"Celebrations!,\" a show I remember distinctly anticipating coming to my town because I would finally get to hear Mickey's new voice that I had read others talking so anxiously about online. Bret's Mickey brings a youthful energy to the character, something that he found from Mickey's original voice, Walt Disney himself. Iwan attests that Walt brought personality to the character, along with a sense of optimism and a desire for adventure. The opportunity to follow in such hallowed footsteps is something that Iwan doesn't take lightly, especially when he gets to hear his voice as Mickey in the Disney theme parks. Growing up,\u00a0Fantasmic!<\/em> was an important show to Bret's Disney fandom, so much so that he and his brother would act it out in their childhood backyard by spraying around the water hose. Voicing Mickey in the recent update of the show for Disneyland was a full-circle moment.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nIwan cites \"Backstage Magic with Mickey Mouse\" (sometimes also called \"Magic Words with Mickey\") as one of his favorite projects. The experience was an interactive meet & greet at Walt Disney World where guests got to carry on a real-time verbal conversation with Mickey Mouse for the first time ever. While eventually it became a standard offering available to all guests regularly, for several years the technology was in on-and-off testing mode, seemingly happening randomly every so often and going viral every time it did. Unfortunately, the experience was stripped of its talking component last spring, but it will forever be remembered as a special moment in Disney history, and perhaps a glimpse of what character interactions could look like in the future. Of the closure, Iwan remarked that most of the time when meeting guests, Mickey has to save his voice for the show,\u00a0 \"I was his vocal coach on how to talk to people and how to sometimes save his voice. He didn't listen.\"\r\n\r\nThat line is a perfect example of the way both Iwan and Farmer spoke that made it clear they have a true relationship with these characters. Farmer said he's worked as Goofy on nearly 3500 projects across 31 years. With being part of so many different things and for such different types of media, whether television or video games or theme parks, it can sometimes be overwhelming to keep track of everything. Farmer said that just the day before the panel, he saw for the first time\u00a0Mickey's Royal Friendship Faire<\/em>, a show\u00a0at Magic Kingdom that debuted over two years ago. \"You see things like that and you go, 'Oh, yeah, I remember doing that.'\" Other times, the voice actors are completely lost. \"Ask us what\u00a0Kingdom Hearts 3<\/em> is about,\" Farmer challenged, to which both he and Iwan exclaimed in unison, \"We don't know!!\" While they record television scripts in linear order parallel to the story, video games are more all over the place, jumping to different parts of the script so drastically that it's difficult to get a sense of the narrative (especially when mainly making battle sounds and erroneous noises rather than complete dialogue).\r\n\r\nStill, some projects, shall we say, stand out.\u00a0A Goofy Movie<\/em> is one that Farmer is extremely appreciative of. He even said there's \"talk of some projects\" to celebrate the film's 25th anniversary in 2020. He said he couldn't elaborate any more than that... intriguing!! He also stated that\u00a0Goof Troop\u00a0<\/em>was \"scary,\" with Goofy being the first of the fab five to receive his own full TV series.\r\n\r\nIn being the same character so often, inevitably the character becomes part of who you are, Farmer said. One moment in particular when Farmer accidentally knocked over a can of Coca-Cola all over a $100,000 soundboard is proof of Goofy sometimes taking the wheel in his actions. \"He's always in there,\" Farmer remarked, before Iwan added in Mickey's voice, \"Yeah, and sometimes waaaaaay out there.\" Pure magic.","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] Voices of Mickey and Goofy Illuminate the Magic of Voice Acting","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-voices-of-mickey-and-goofy-illuminate-the-magic-of-voice-acting","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-22 20:47:47","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-23 03:47:47","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50937","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50932,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content":"
<\/a>\r\n\r\nFor generations, the story has been passed along about the origin of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nFollowing a tragic mishap in 1928 during which most of his animators and his star character, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, were taken from him, Walt Disney rode a train from New York to Hollywood. As the legend goes, during that train ride Walt sketched a simple drawing of a plucky mouse who the world would eventually come to know and love as Mickey.\r\n\r\nBut is that\u00a0really<\/em> how it happened? As D23 celebrated Mickey's 90th birthday this past weekend during its Destination D event, panelists shared some alternate versions of the story that are decidedly different.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nAccording to the first-ever published Disney book, entitled\u00a0The Mickey Mouse Book<\/em>, Mickey actually used to live in the clouds, literally. He was Mouse #13 as part of a mouse colony in Mouse Fairy Land, a kingdom in the skies ruled by an unforgiving monarch. One day when Mickey acted up, the king was so furious with him that he threw Mickey out of Mouse Fairy Land and down to earth below, where Mickey unglamorously careened against the roof shingles of someone's house. As fate would have it, that house belonged to none other than Walt Disney. As Walt came outside to see who crashed into his home, he met Mickey for the first time, and the rest is history.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nWhile you're still reeling from this seemingly vital piece of Mickey Mouse knowledge that you've never been told until this very moment, consider this, yet another differing account of Mickey's beginnings. This version originated from a live-action\/animation hybrid short film developed in 1989 in promotion for the opening of Disney-MGM Studios (now Disney's Hollywood Studios) at Walt Disney World. It was filmed on location there, with the park's architecture doubling for the real Hollywood. The short, called\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em>, was directed by Rob Minkoff, who would later go on to direct\u00a0The Lion King<\/em> and\u00a0Stuart Little<\/em>. Mickey is the only animated figure in the piece, with everything else live-action.\r\n\r\nThe story of\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em> involves Mickey stepping off the trolley in a bustling Hollywood of the 1920s (much as he does today during the street show with news boys at Disney California Adventure). Mickey attends an audition on a soundstage, where the director immediately casts him in a seafaring epic. Hopping aboard Steamboat Willie, Mickey's ship thrashes against special-effects waves in an action sequence that eventually goes all wrong. In the aftermath of the set literally falling apart, Walt Disney (played by his nephew, Roy E. Disney) approaches the scene to see if Mickey is ok and compliment his performance, claiming that he has a big future ahead of him.\r\n\r\nIt's interesting to hear that Disney has given thought to Mickey's origins, but despite the fact that he is the studio's signature character, these stories are not widely known and only exist in such obscure productions. It was certainly a treat hearing light being shed on them during Destination D.\r\n
Which version of Mickey's origin story do you believe?<\/h2>","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] How Did Walt Disney REALLY Meet Mickey Mouse?","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-how-did-walt-disney-really-meet-mickey-mouse","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50932","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":5},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_3o3","class":"jnews_block_5"};
\nExcited for a new Pixar original?\u00a0<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nCaptivating. Entrancing. Hypnotic. Whatever you want to call it, there was something magical in the air at Destination D as Bret Iwan and Bill Farmer took to the mics to spellbind attendees with something no one in the audience will forget anytime soon: a live table read of a script, in character as Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\nDestination D was a weekend-long event put on by D23: The Official Disney Fan Club in commemoration of Mickey's 90th birthday. One of the panels included a reading of an unmade Mickey short in which Mickey and Goofy get trapped in a candy mine. It was absolutely fascinating to observe. Voice performance is something so few are exposed to in person that much of its intricacies are shrouded in mystery. How much energy of a voice performance comes from the actor's body? What kinds of facial expressions do they make when performing? Do they easily weave in and out of character? These were questions whose answered were demonstrated firsthand before my very eyes. Considering my Disney fandom and the fact that writing scripts and conducting table reads are part of my everyday job responsibilities, this moment at D23 is easily one of my new favorite Disney memories.\r\n\r\nThe day prior, Iwan and Farmer sat down with\u00a0Star Wars<\/em> voice actress and Her Universe founder Ashley Eckstein for a more formal interview-style panel, during which they each shared how they got their jobs, what makes their characters special, and provided a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of two of animation's most iconic characters, Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nBy now, both Iwan and Farmer are pros at their characters. Iwan has been performing Mickey since 2009, while Farmer has been Goofy since 1987. Farmer described his audition process as relatively traditional, having submitted a tape he put together across a weekend going through several scenarios as Goofy. Iwan becoming Mickey is a more extraneous tale, seemingly straight out of a Disney storybook. He was an illustrator for Hallmark, coincidentally working just a few block away from where Walt Disney worked at Laugh-O-Gram Studio in Kansas City in the 1920s. Iwan received an email from an animator friend who worked at Pixar, passing along information about a virtual audition to be an understudy for Mickey's voice for when Wayne Allwine wasn't available. Despite the audition intending to be internal to The Walt Disney Company, Iwan submitted an audition voicemail to the provided hotline, and several months later received a callback. In the wake of Allwine's unexpected passing, and with no experience in radio or vocal performance, Bret became the official voice of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nHis first project was a Disney On Ice production called \"Celebrations!,\" a show I remember distinctly anticipating coming to my town because I would finally get to hear Mickey's new voice that I had read others talking so anxiously about online. Bret's Mickey brings a youthful energy to the character, something that he found from Mickey's original voice, Walt Disney himself. Iwan attests that Walt brought personality to the character, along with a sense of optimism and a desire for adventure. The opportunity to follow in such hallowed footsteps is something that Iwan doesn't take lightly, especially when he gets to hear his voice as Mickey in the Disney theme parks. Growing up,\u00a0Fantasmic!<\/em> was an important show to Bret's Disney fandom, so much so that he and his brother would act it out in their childhood backyard by spraying around the water hose. Voicing Mickey in the recent update of the show for Disneyland was a full-circle moment.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nIwan cites \"Backstage Magic with Mickey Mouse\" (sometimes also called \"Magic Words with Mickey\") as one of his favorite projects. The experience was an interactive meet & greet at Walt Disney World where guests got to carry on a real-time verbal conversation with Mickey Mouse for the first time ever. While eventually it became a standard offering available to all guests regularly, for several years the technology was in on-and-off testing mode, seemingly happening randomly every so often and going viral every time it did. Unfortunately, the experience was stripped of its talking component last spring, but it will forever be remembered as a special moment in Disney history, and perhaps a glimpse of what character interactions could look like in the future. Of the closure, Iwan remarked that most of the time when meeting guests, Mickey has to save his voice for the show,\u00a0 \"I was his vocal coach on how to talk to people and how to sometimes save his voice. He didn't listen.\"\r\n\r\nThat line is a perfect example of the way both Iwan and Farmer spoke that made it clear they have a true relationship with these characters. Farmer said he's worked as Goofy on nearly 3500 projects across 31 years. With being part of so many different things and for such different types of media, whether television or video games or theme parks, it can sometimes be overwhelming to keep track of everything. Farmer said that just the day before the panel, he saw for the first time\u00a0Mickey's Royal Friendship Faire<\/em>, a show\u00a0at Magic Kingdom that debuted over two years ago. \"You see things like that and you go, 'Oh, yeah, I remember doing that.'\" Other times, the voice actors are completely lost. \"Ask us what\u00a0Kingdom Hearts 3<\/em> is about,\" Farmer challenged, to which both he and Iwan exclaimed in unison, \"We don't know!!\" While they record television scripts in linear order parallel to the story, video games are more all over the place, jumping to different parts of the script so drastically that it's difficult to get a sense of the narrative (especially when mainly making battle sounds and erroneous noises rather than complete dialogue).\r\n\r\nStill, some projects, shall we say, stand out.\u00a0A Goofy Movie<\/em> is one that Farmer is extremely appreciative of. He even said there's \"talk of some projects\" to celebrate the film's 25th anniversary in 2020. He said he couldn't elaborate any more than that... intriguing!! He also stated that\u00a0Goof Troop\u00a0<\/em>was \"scary,\" with Goofy being the first of the fab five to receive his own full TV series.\r\n\r\nIn being the same character so often, inevitably the character becomes part of who you are, Farmer said. One moment in particular when Farmer accidentally knocked over a can of Coca-Cola all over a $100,000 soundboard is proof of Goofy sometimes taking the wheel in his actions. \"He's always in there,\" Farmer remarked, before Iwan added in Mickey's voice, \"Yeah, and sometimes waaaaaay out there.\" Pure magic.","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] Voices of Mickey and Goofy Illuminate the Magic of Voice Acting","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-voices-of-mickey-and-goofy-illuminate-the-magic-of-voice-acting","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-22 20:47:47","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-23 03:47:47","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50937","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50932,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content":"
<\/a>\r\n\r\nFor generations, the story has been passed along about the origin of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nFollowing a tragic mishap in 1928 during which most of his animators and his star character, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, were taken from him, Walt Disney rode a train from New York to Hollywood. As the legend goes, during that train ride Walt sketched a simple drawing of a plucky mouse who the world would eventually come to know and love as Mickey.\r\n\r\nBut is that\u00a0really<\/em> how it happened? As D23 celebrated Mickey's 90th birthday this past weekend during its Destination D event, panelists shared some alternate versions of the story that are decidedly different.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nAccording to the first-ever published Disney book, entitled\u00a0The Mickey Mouse Book<\/em>, Mickey actually used to live in the clouds, literally. He was Mouse #13 as part of a mouse colony in Mouse Fairy Land, a kingdom in the skies ruled by an unforgiving monarch. One day when Mickey acted up, the king was so furious with him that he threw Mickey out of Mouse Fairy Land and down to earth below, where Mickey unglamorously careened against the roof shingles of someone's house. As fate would have it, that house belonged to none other than Walt Disney. As Walt came outside to see who crashed into his home, he met Mickey for the first time, and the rest is history.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nWhile you're still reeling from this seemingly vital piece of Mickey Mouse knowledge that you've never been told until this very moment, consider this, yet another differing account of Mickey's beginnings. This version originated from a live-action\/animation hybrid short film developed in 1989 in promotion for the opening of Disney-MGM Studios (now Disney's Hollywood Studios) at Walt Disney World. It was filmed on location there, with the park's architecture doubling for the real Hollywood. The short, called\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em>, was directed by Rob Minkoff, who would later go on to direct\u00a0The Lion King<\/em> and\u00a0Stuart Little<\/em>. Mickey is the only animated figure in the piece, with everything else live-action.\r\n\r\nThe story of\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em> involves Mickey stepping off the trolley in a bustling Hollywood of the 1920s (much as he does today during the street show with news boys at Disney California Adventure). Mickey attends an audition on a soundstage, where the director immediately casts him in a seafaring epic. Hopping aboard Steamboat Willie, Mickey's ship thrashes against special-effects waves in an action sequence that eventually goes all wrong. In the aftermath of the set literally falling apart, Walt Disney (played by his nephew, Roy E. Disney) approaches the scene to see if Mickey is ok and compliment his performance, claiming that he has a big future ahead of him.\r\n\r\nIt's interesting to hear that Disney has given thought to Mickey's origins, but despite the fact that he is the studio's signature character, these stories are not widely known and only exist in such obscure productions. It was certainly a treat hearing light being shed on them during Destination D.\r\n
Which version of Mickey's origin story do you believe?<\/h2>","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] How Did Walt Disney REALLY Meet Mickey Mouse?","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-how-did-walt-disney-really-meet-mickey-mouse","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50932","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":5},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_3o3","class":"jnews_block_5"};
\nExcited for a new Pixar original?\u00a0<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nCaptivating. Entrancing. Hypnotic. Whatever you want to call it, there was something magical in the air at Destination D as Bret Iwan and Bill Farmer took to the mics to spellbind attendees with something no one in the audience will forget anytime soon: a live table read of a script, in character as Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\nDestination D was a weekend-long event put on by D23: The Official Disney Fan Club in commemoration of Mickey's 90th birthday. One of the panels included a reading of an unmade Mickey short in which Mickey and Goofy get trapped in a candy mine. It was absolutely fascinating to observe. Voice performance is something so few are exposed to in person that much of its intricacies are shrouded in mystery. How much energy of a voice performance comes from the actor's body? What kinds of facial expressions do they make when performing? Do they easily weave in and out of character? These were questions whose answered were demonstrated firsthand before my very eyes. Considering my Disney fandom and the fact that writing scripts and conducting table reads are part of my everyday job responsibilities, this moment at D23 is easily one of my new favorite Disney memories.\r\n\r\nThe day prior, Iwan and Farmer sat down with\u00a0Star Wars<\/em> voice actress and Her Universe founder Ashley Eckstein for a more formal interview-style panel, during which they each shared how they got their jobs, what makes their characters special, and provided a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of two of animation's most iconic characters, Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nBy now, both Iwan and Farmer are pros at their characters. Iwan has been performing Mickey since 2009, while Farmer has been Goofy since 1987. Farmer described his audition process as relatively traditional, having submitted a tape he put together across a weekend going through several scenarios as Goofy. Iwan becoming Mickey is a more extraneous tale, seemingly straight out of a Disney storybook. He was an illustrator for Hallmark, coincidentally working just a few block away from where Walt Disney worked at Laugh-O-Gram Studio in Kansas City in the 1920s. Iwan received an email from an animator friend who worked at Pixar, passing along information about a virtual audition to be an understudy for Mickey's voice for when Wayne Allwine wasn't available. Despite the audition intending to be internal to The Walt Disney Company, Iwan submitted an audition voicemail to the provided hotline, and several months later received a callback. In the wake of Allwine's unexpected passing, and with no experience in radio or vocal performance, Bret became the official voice of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nHis first project was a Disney On Ice production called \"Celebrations!,\" a show I remember distinctly anticipating coming to my town because I would finally get to hear Mickey's new voice that I had read others talking so anxiously about online. Bret's Mickey brings a youthful energy to the character, something that he found from Mickey's original voice, Walt Disney himself. Iwan attests that Walt brought personality to the character, along with a sense of optimism and a desire for adventure. The opportunity to follow in such hallowed footsteps is something that Iwan doesn't take lightly, especially when he gets to hear his voice as Mickey in the Disney theme parks. Growing up,\u00a0Fantasmic!<\/em> was an important show to Bret's Disney fandom, so much so that he and his brother would act it out in their childhood backyard by spraying around the water hose. Voicing Mickey in the recent update of the show for Disneyland was a full-circle moment.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nIwan cites \"Backstage Magic with Mickey Mouse\" (sometimes also called \"Magic Words with Mickey\") as one of his favorite projects. The experience was an interactive meet & greet at Walt Disney World where guests got to carry on a real-time verbal conversation with Mickey Mouse for the first time ever. While eventually it became a standard offering available to all guests regularly, for several years the technology was in on-and-off testing mode, seemingly happening randomly every so often and going viral every time it did. Unfortunately, the experience was stripped of its talking component last spring, but it will forever be remembered as a special moment in Disney history, and perhaps a glimpse of what character interactions could look like in the future. Of the closure, Iwan remarked that most of the time when meeting guests, Mickey has to save his voice for the show,\u00a0 \"I was his vocal coach on how to talk to people and how to sometimes save his voice. He didn't listen.\"\r\n\r\nThat line is a perfect example of the way both Iwan and Farmer spoke that made it clear they have a true relationship with these characters. Farmer said he's worked as Goofy on nearly 3500 projects across 31 years. With being part of so many different things and for such different types of media, whether television or video games or theme parks, it can sometimes be overwhelming to keep track of everything. Farmer said that just the day before the panel, he saw for the first time\u00a0Mickey's Royal Friendship Faire<\/em>, a show\u00a0at Magic Kingdom that debuted over two years ago. \"You see things like that and you go, 'Oh, yeah, I remember doing that.'\" Other times, the voice actors are completely lost. \"Ask us what\u00a0Kingdom Hearts 3<\/em> is about,\" Farmer challenged, to which both he and Iwan exclaimed in unison, \"We don't know!!\" While they record television scripts in linear order parallel to the story, video games are more all over the place, jumping to different parts of the script so drastically that it's difficult to get a sense of the narrative (especially when mainly making battle sounds and erroneous noises rather than complete dialogue).\r\n\r\nStill, some projects, shall we say, stand out.\u00a0A Goofy Movie<\/em> is one that Farmer is extremely appreciative of. He even said there's \"talk of some projects\" to celebrate the film's 25th anniversary in 2020. He said he couldn't elaborate any more than that... intriguing!! He also stated that\u00a0Goof Troop\u00a0<\/em>was \"scary,\" with Goofy being the first of the fab five to receive his own full TV series.\r\n\r\nIn being the same character so often, inevitably the character becomes part of who you are, Farmer said. One moment in particular when Farmer accidentally knocked over a can of Coca-Cola all over a $100,000 soundboard is proof of Goofy sometimes taking the wheel in his actions. \"He's always in there,\" Farmer remarked, before Iwan added in Mickey's voice, \"Yeah, and sometimes waaaaaay out there.\" Pure magic.","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] Voices of Mickey and Goofy Illuminate the Magic of Voice Acting","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-voices-of-mickey-and-goofy-illuminate-the-magic-of-voice-acting","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-22 20:47:47","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-23 03:47:47","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50937","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50932,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content":"
<\/a>\r\n\r\nFor generations, the story has been passed along about the origin of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nFollowing a tragic mishap in 1928 during which most of his animators and his star character, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, were taken from him, Walt Disney rode a train from New York to Hollywood. As the legend goes, during that train ride Walt sketched a simple drawing of a plucky mouse who the world would eventually come to know and love as Mickey.\r\n\r\nBut is that\u00a0really<\/em> how it happened? As D23 celebrated Mickey's 90th birthday this past weekend during its Destination D event, panelists shared some alternate versions of the story that are decidedly different.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nAccording to the first-ever published Disney book, entitled\u00a0The Mickey Mouse Book<\/em>, Mickey actually used to live in the clouds, literally. He was Mouse #13 as part of a mouse colony in Mouse Fairy Land, a kingdom in the skies ruled by an unforgiving monarch. One day when Mickey acted up, the king was so furious with him that he threw Mickey out of Mouse Fairy Land and down to earth below, where Mickey unglamorously careened against the roof shingles of someone's house. As fate would have it, that house belonged to none other than Walt Disney. As Walt came outside to see who crashed into his home, he met Mickey for the first time, and the rest is history.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nWhile you're still reeling from this seemingly vital piece of Mickey Mouse knowledge that you've never been told until this very moment, consider this, yet another differing account of Mickey's beginnings. This version originated from a live-action\/animation hybrid short film developed in 1989 in promotion for the opening of Disney-MGM Studios (now Disney's Hollywood Studios) at Walt Disney World. It was filmed on location there, with the park's architecture doubling for the real Hollywood. The short, called\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em>, was directed by Rob Minkoff, who would later go on to direct\u00a0The Lion King<\/em> and\u00a0Stuart Little<\/em>. Mickey is the only animated figure in the piece, with everything else live-action.\r\n\r\nThe story of\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em> involves Mickey stepping off the trolley in a bustling Hollywood of the 1920s (much as he does today during the street show with news boys at Disney California Adventure). Mickey attends an audition on a soundstage, where the director immediately casts him in a seafaring epic. Hopping aboard Steamboat Willie, Mickey's ship thrashes against special-effects waves in an action sequence that eventually goes all wrong. In the aftermath of the set literally falling apart, Walt Disney (played by his nephew, Roy E. Disney) approaches the scene to see if Mickey is ok and compliment his performance, claiming that he has a big future ahead of him.\r\n\r\nIt's interesting to hear that Disney has given thought to Mickey's origins, but despite the fact that he is the studio's signature character, these stories are not widely known and only exist in such obscure productions. It was certainly a treat hearing light being shed on them during Destination D.\r\n
Which version of Mickey's origin story do you believe?<\/h2>","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] How Did Walt Disney REALLY Meet Mickey Mouse?","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-how-did-walt-disney-really-meet-mickey-mouse","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50932","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":5},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_3o3","class":"jnews_block_5"};
\nExcited for a new Pixar original?\u00a0<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nCaptivating. Entrancing. Hypnotic. Whatever you want to call it, there was something magical in the air at Destination D as Bret Iwan and Bill Farmer took to the mics to spellbind attendees with something no one in the audience will forget anytime soon: a live table read of a script, in character as Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\nDestination D was a weekend-long event put on by D23: The Official Disney Fan Club in commemoration of Mickey's 90th birthday. One of the panels included a reading of an unmade Mickey short in which Mickey and Goofy get trapped in a candy mine. It was absolutely fascinating to observe. Voice performance is something so few are exposed to in person that much of its intricacies are shrouded in mystery. How much energy of a voice performance comes from the actor's body? What kinds of facial expressions do they make when performing? Do they easily weave in and out of character? These were questions whose answered were demonstrated firsthand before my very eyes. Considering my Disney fandom and the fact that writing scripts and conducting table reads are part of my everyday job responsibilities, this moment at D23 is easily one of my new favorite Disney memories.\r\n\r\nThe day prior, Iwan and Farmer sat down with\u00a0Star Wars<\/em> voice actress and Her Universe founder Ashley Eckstein for a more formal interview-style panel, during which they each shared how they got their jobs, what makes their characters special, and provided a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of two of animation's most iconic characters, Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nBy now, both Iwan and Farmer are pros at their characters. Iwan has been performing Mickey since 2009, while Farmer has been Goofy since 1987. Farmer described his audition process as relatively traditional, having submitted a tape he put together across a weekend going through several scenarios as Goofy. Iwan becoming Mickey is a more extraneous tale, seemingly straight out of a Disney storybook. He was an illustrator for Hallmark, coincidentally working just a few block away from where Walt Disney worked at Laugh-O-Gram Studio in Kansas City in the 1920s. Iwan received an email from an animator friend who worked at Pixar, passing along information about a virtual audition to be an understudy for Mickey's voice for when Wayne Allwine wasn't available. Despite the audition intending to be internal to The Walt Disney Company, Iwan submitted an audition voicemail to the provided hotline, and several months later received a callback. In the wake of Allwine's unexpected passing, and with no experience in radio or vocal performance, Bret became the official voice of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nHis first project was a Disney On Ice production called \"Celebrations!,\" a show I remember distinctly anticipating coming to my town because I would finally get to hear Mickey's new voice that I had read others talking so anxiously about online. Bret's Mickey brings a youthful energy to the character, something that he found from Mickey's original voice, Walt Disney himself. Iwan attests that Walt brought personality to the character, along with a sense of optimism and a desire for adventure. The opportunity to follow in such hallowed footsteps is something that Iwan doesn't take lightly, especially when he gets to hear his voice as Mickey in the Disney theme parks. Growing up,\u00a0Fantasmic!<\/em> was an important show to Bret's Disney fandom, so much so that he and his brother would act it out in their childhood backyard by spraying around the water hose. Voicing Mickey in the recent update of the show for Disneyland was a full-circle moment.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nIwan cites \"Backstage Magic with Mickey Mouse\" (sometimes also called \"Magic Words with Mickey\") as one of his favorite projects. The experience was an interactive meet & greet at Walt Disney World where guests got to carry on a real-time verbal conversation with Mickey Mouse for the first time ever. While eventually it became a standard offering available to all guests regularly, for several years the technology was in on-and-off testing mode, seemingly happening randomly every so often and going viral every time it did. Unfortunately, the experience was stripped of its talking component last spring, but it will forever be remembered as a special moment in Disney history, and perhaps a glimpse of what character interactions could look like in the future. Of the closure, Iwan remarked that most of the time when meeting guests, Mickey has to save his voice for the show,\u00a0 \"I was his vocal coach on how to talk to people and how to sometimes save his voice. He didn't listen.\"\r\n\r\nThat line is a perfect example of the way both Iwan and Farmer spoke that made it clear they have a true relationship with these characters. Farmer said he's worked as Goofy on nearly 3500 projects across 31 years. With being part of so many different things and for such different types of media, whether television or video games or theme parks, it can sometimes be overwhelming to keep track of everything. Farmer said that just the day before the panel, he saw for the first time\u00a0Mickey's Royal Friendship Faire<\/em>, a show\u00a0at Magic Kingdom that debuted over two years ago. \"You see things like that and you go, 'Oh, yeah, I remember doing that.'\" Other times, the voice actors are completely lost. \"Ask us what\u00a0Kingdom Hearts 3<\/em> is about,\" Farmer challenged, to which both he and Iwan exclaimed in unison, \"We don't know!!\" While they record television scripts in linear order parallel to the story, video games are more all over the place, jumping to different parts of the script so drastically that it's difficult to get a sense of the narrative (especially when mainly making battle sounds and erroneous noises rather than complete dialogue).\r\n\r\nStill, some projects, shall we say, stand out.\u00a0A Goofy Movie<\/em> is one that Farmer is extremely appreciative of. He even said there's \"talk of some projects\" to celebrate the film's 25th anniversary in 2020. He said he couldn't elaborate any more than that... intriguing!! He also stated that\u00a0Goof Troop\u00a0<\/em>was \"scary,\" with Goofy being the first of the fab five to receive his own full TV series.\r\n\r\nIn being the same character so often, inevitably the character becomes part of who you are, Farmer said. One moment in particular when Farmer accidentally knocked over a can of Coca-Cola all over a $100,000 soundboard is proof of Goofy sometimes taking the wheel in his actions. \"He's always in there,\" Farmer remarked, before Iwan added in Mickey's voice, \"Yeah, and sometimes waaaaaay out there.\" Pure magic.","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] Voices of Mickey and Goofy Illuminate the Magic of Voice Acting","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-voices-of-mickey-and-goofy-illuminate-the-magic-of-voice-acting","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-22 20:47:47","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-23 03:47:47","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50937","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50932,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content":"
<\/a>\r\n\r\nFor generations, the story has been passed along about the origin of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nFollowing a tragic mishap in 1928 during which most of his animators and his star character, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, were taken from him, Walt Disney rode a train from New York to Hollywood. As the legend goes, during that train ride Walt sketched a simple drawing of a plucky mouse who the world would eventually come to know and love as Mickey.\r\n\r\nBut is that\u00a0really<\/em> how it happened? As D23 celebrated Mickey's 90th birthday this past weekend during its Destination D event, panelists shared some alternate versions of the story that are decidedly different.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nAccording to the first-ever published Disney book, entitled\u00a0The Mickey Mouse Book<\/em>, Mickey actually used to live in the clouds, literally. He was Mouse #13 as part of a mouse colony in Mouse Fairy Land, a kingdom in the skies ruled by an unforgiving monarch. One day when Mickey acted up, the king was so furious with him that he threw Mickey out of Mouse Fairy Land and down to earth below, where Mickey unglamorously careened against the roof shingles of someone's house. As fate would have it, that house belonged to none other than Walt Disney. As Walt came outside to see who crashed into his home, he met Mickey for the first time, and the rest is history.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nWhile you're still reeling from this seemingly vital piece of Mickey Mouse knowledge that you've never been told until this very moment, consider this, yet another differing account of Mickey's beginnings. This version originated from a live-action\/animation hybrid short film developed in 1989 in promotion for the opening of Disney-MGM Studios (now Disney's Hollywood Studios) at Walt Disney World. It was filmed on location there, with the park's architecture doubling for the real Hollywood. The short, called\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em>, was directed by Rob Minkoff, who would later go on to direct\u00a0The Lion King<\/em> and\u00a0Stuart Little<\/em>. Mickey is the only animated figure in the piece, with everything else live-action.\r\n\r\nThe story of\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em> involves Mickey stepping off the trolley in a bustling Hollywood of the 1920s (much as he does today during the street show with news boys at Disney California Adventure). Mickey attends an audition on a soundstage, where the director immediately casts him in a seafaring epic. Hopping aboard Steamboat Willie, Mickey's ship thrashes against special-effects waves in an action sequence that eventually goes all wrong. In the aftermath of the set literally falling apart, Walt Disney (played by his nephew, Roy E. Disney) approaches the scene to see if Mickey is ok and compliment his performance, claiming that he has a big future ahead of him.\r\n\r\nIt's interesting to hear that Disney has given thought to Mickey's origins, but despite the fact that he is the studio's signature character, these stories are not widely known and only exist in such obscure productions. It was certainly a treat hearing light being shed on them during Destination D.\r\n
Which version of Mickey's origin story do you believe?<\/h2>","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] How Did Walt Disney REALLY Meet Mickey Mouse?","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-how-did-walt-disney-really-meet-mickey-mouse","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50932","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":5},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_3o3","class":"jnews_block_5"};
\nExcited for a new Pixar original?\u00a0<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nCaptivating. Entrancing. Hypnotic. Whatever you want to call it, there was something magical in the air at Destination D as Bret Iwan and Bill Farmer took to the mics to spellbind attendees with something no one in the audience will forget anytime soon: a live table read of a script, in character as Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\nDestination D was a weekend-long event put on by D23: The Official Disney Fan Club in commemoration of Mickey's 90th birthday. One of the panels included a reading of an unmade Mickey short in which Mickey and Goofy get trapped in a candy mine. It was absolutely fascinating to observe. Voice performance is something so few are exposed to in person that much of its intricacies are shrouded in mystery. How much energy of a voice performance comes from the actor's body? What kinds of facial expressions do they make when performing? Do they easily weave in and out of character? These were questions whose answered were demonstrated firsthand before my very eyes. Considering my Disney fandom and the fact that writing scripts and conducting table reads are part of my everyday job responsibilities, this moment at D23 is easily one of my new favorite Disney memories.\r\n\r\nThe day prior, Iwan and Farmer sat down with\u00a0Star Wars<\/em> voice actress and Her Universe founder Ashley Eckstein for a more formal interview-style panel, during which they each shared how they got their jobs, what makes their characters special, and provided a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of two of animation's most iconic characters, Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nBy now, both Iwan and Farmer are pros at their characters. Iwan has been performing Mickey since 2009, while Farmer has been Goofy since 1987. Farmer described his audition process as relatively traditional, having submitted a tape he put together across a weekend going through several scenarios as Goofy. Iwan becoming Mickey is a more extraneous tale, seemingly straight out of a Disney storybook. He was an illustrator for Hallmark, coincidentally working just a few block away from where Walt Disney worked at Laugh-O-Gram Studio in Kansas City in the 1920s. Iwan received an email from an animator friend who worked at Pixar, passing along information about a virtual audition to be an understudy for Mickey's voice for when Wayne Allwine wasn't available. Despite the audition intending to be internal to The Walt Disney Company, Iwan submitted an audition voicemail to the provided hotline, and several months later received a callback. In the wake of Allwine's unexpected passing, and with no experience in radio or vocal performance, Bret became the official voice of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nHis first project was a Disney On Ice production called \"Celebrations!,\" a show I remember distinctly anticipating coming to my town because I would finally get to hear Mickey's new voice that I had read others talking so anxiously about online. Bret's Mickey brings a youthful energy to the character, something that he found from Mickey's original voice, Walt Disney himself. Iwan attests that Walt brought personality to the character, along with a sense of optimism and a desire for adventure. The opportunity to follow in such hallowed footsteps is something that Iwan doesn't take lightly, especially when he gets to hear his voice as Mickey in the Disney theme parks. Growing up,\u00a0Fantasmic!<\/em> was an important show to Bret's Disney fandom, so much so that he and his brother would act it out in their childhood backyard by spraying around the water hose. Voicing Mickey in the recent update of the show for Disneyland was a full-circle moment.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nIwan cites \"Backstage Magic with Mickey Mouse\" (sometimes also called \"Magic Words with Mickey\") as one of his favorite projects. The experience was an interactive meet & greet at Walt Disney World where guests got to carry on a real-time verbal conversation with Mickey Mouse for the first time ever. While eventually it became a standard offering available to all guests regularly, for several years the technology was in on-and-off testing mode, seemingly happening randomly every so often and going viral every time it did. Unfortunately, the experience was stripped of its talking component last spring, but it will forever be remembered as a special moment in Disney history, and perhaps a glimpse of what character interactions could look like in the future. Of the closure, Iwan remarked that most of the time when meeting guests, Mickey has to save his voice for the show,\u00a0 \"I was his vocal coach on how to talk to people and how to sometimes save his voice. He didn't listen.\"\r\n\r\nThat line is a perfect example of the way both Iwan and Farmer spoke that made it clear they have a true relationship with these characters. Farmer said he's worked as Goofy on nearly 3500 projects across 31 years. With being part of so many different things and for such different types of media, whether television or video games or theme parks, it can sometimes be overwhelming to keep track of everything. Farmer said that just the day before the panel, he saw for the first time\u00a0Mickey's Royal Friendship Faire<\/em>, a show\u00a0at Magic Kingdom that debuted over two years ago. \"You see things like that and you go, 'Oh, yeah, I remember doing that.'\" Other times, the voice actors are completely lost. \"Ask us what\u00a0Kingdom Hearts 3<\/em> is about,\" Farmer challenged, to which both he and Iwan exclaimed in unison, \"We don't know!!\" While they record television scripts in linear order parallel to the story, video games are more all over the place, jumping to different parts of the script so drastically that it's difficult to get a sense of the narrative (especially when mainly making battle sounds and erroneous noises rather than complete dialogue).\r\n\r\nStill, some projects, shall we say, stand out.\u00a0A Goofy Movie<\/em> is one that Farmer is extremely appreciative of. He even said there's \"talk of some projects\" to celebrate the film's 25th anniversary in 2020. He said he couldn't elaborate any more than that... intriguing!! He also stated that\u00a0Goof Troop\u00a0<\/em>was \"scary,\" with Goofy being the first of the fab five to receive his own full TV series.\r\n\r\nIn being the same character so often, inevitably the character becomes part of who you are, Farmer said. One moment in particular when Farmer accidentally knocked over a can of Coca-Cola all over a $100,000 soundboard is proof of Goofy sometimes taking the wheel in his actions. \"He's always in there,\" Farmer remarked, before Iwan added in Mickey's voice, \"Yeah, and sometimes waaaaaay out there.\" Pure magic.","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] Voices of Mickey and Goofy Illuminate the Magic of Voice Acting","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-voices-of-mickey-and-goofy-illuminate-the-magic-of-voice-acting","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-22 20:47:47","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-23 03:47:47","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50937","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50932,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content":"
<\/a>\r\n\r\nFor generations, the story has been passed along about the origin of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nFollowing a tragic mishap in 1928 during which most of his animators and his star character, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, were taken from him, Walt Disney rode a train from New York to Hollywood. As the legend goes, during that train ride Walt sketched a simple drawing of a plucky mouse who the world would eventually come to know and love as Mickey.\r\n\r\nBut is that\u00a0really<\/em> how it happened? As D23 celebrated Mickey's 90th birthday this past weekend during its Destination D event, panelists shared some alternate versions of the story that are decidedly different.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nAccording to the first-ever published Disney book, entitled\u00a0The Mickey Mouse Book<\/em>, Mickey actually used to live in the clouds, literally. He was Mouse #13 as part of a mouse colony in Mouse Fairy Land, a kingdom in the skies ruled by an unforgiving monarch. One day when Mickey acted up, the king was so furious with him that he threw Mickey out of Mouse Fairy Land and down to earth below, where Mickey unglamorously careened against the roof shingles of someone's house. As fate would have it, that house belonged to none other than Walt Disney. As Walt came outside to see who crashed into his home, he met Mickey for the first time, and the rest is history.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nWhile you're still reeling from this seemingly vital piece of Mickey Mouse knowledge that you've never been told until this very moment, consider this, yet another differing account of Mickey's beginnings. This version originated from a live-action\/animation hybrid short film developed in 1989 in promotion for the opening of Disney-MGM Studios (now Disney's Hollywood Studios) at Walt Disney World. It was filmed on location there, with the park's architecture doubling for the real Hollywood. The short, called\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em>, was directed by Rob Minkoff, who would later go on to direct\u00a0The Lion King<\/em> and\u00a0Stuart Little<\/em>. Mickey is the only animated figure in the piece, with everything else live-action.\r\n\r\nThe story of\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em> involves Mickey stepping off the trolley in a bustling Hollywood of the 1920s (much as he does today during the street show with news boys at Disney California Adventure). Mickey attends an audition on a soundstage, where the director immediately casts him in a seafaring epic. Hopping aboard Steamboat Willie, Mickey's ship thrashes against special-effects waves in an action sequence that eventually goes all wrong. In the aftermath of the set literally falling apart, Walt Disney (played by his nephew, Roy E. Disney) approaches the scene to see if Mickey is ok and compliment his performance, claiming that he has a big future ahead of him.\r\n\r\nIt's interesting to hear that Disney has given thought to Mickey's origins, but despite the fact that he is the studio's signature character, these stories are not widely known and only exist in such obscure productions. It was certainly a treat hearing light being shed on them during Destination D.\r\n
Which version of Mickey's origin story do you believe?<\/h2>","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] How Did Walt Disney REALLY Meet Mickey Mouse?","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-how-did-walt-disney-really-meet-mickey-mouse","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50932","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":5},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_3o3","class":"jnews_block_5"};
\n<\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n\n
Excited for a new Pixar original?\u00a0<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nCaptivating. Entrancing. Hypnotic. Whatever you want to call it, there was something magical in the air at Destination D as Bret Iwan and Bill Farmer took to the mics to spellbind attendees with something no one in the audience will forget anytime soon: a live table read of a script, in character as Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\nDestination D was a weekend-long event put on by D23: The Official Disney Fan Club in commemoration of Mickey's 90th birthday. One of the panels included a reading of an unmade Mickey short in which Mickey and Goofy get trapped in a candy mine. It was absolutely fascinating to observe. Voice performance is something so few are exposed to in person that much of its intricacies are shrouded in mystery. How much energy of a voice performance comes from the actor's body? What kinds of facial expressions do they make when performing? Do they easily weave in and out of character? These were questions whose answered were demonstrated firsthand before my very eyes. Considering my Disney fandom and the fact that writing scripts and conducting table reads are part of my everyday job responsibilities, this moment at D23 is easily one of my new favorite Disney memories.\r\n\r\nThe day prior, Iwan and Farmer sat down with\u00a0Star Wars<\/em> voice actress and Her Universe founder Ashley Eckstein for a more formal interview-style panel, during which they each shared how they got their jobs, what makes their characters special, and provided a fascinating glimpse behind the scenes of two of animation's most iconic characters, Mickey Mouse and Goofy.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nBy now, both Iwan and Farmer are pros at their characters. Iwan has been performing Mickey since 2009, while Farmer has been Goofy since 1987. Farmer described his audition process as relatively traditional, having submitted a tape he put together across a weekend going through several scenarios as Goofy. Iwan becoming Mickey is a more extraneous tale, seemingly straight out of a Disney storybook. He was an illustrator for Hallmark, coincidentally working just a few block away from where Walt Disney worked at Laugh-O-Gram Studio in Kansas City in the 1920s. Iwan received an email from an animator friend who worked at Pixar, passing along information about a virtual audition to be an understudy for Mickey's voice for when Wayne Allwine wasn't available. Despite the audition intending to be internal to The Walt Disney Company, Iwan submitted an audition voicemail to the provided hotline, and several months later received a callback. In the wake of Allwine's unexpected passing, and with no experience in radio or vocal performance, Bret became the official voice of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nHis first project was a Disney On Ice production called \"Celebrations!,\" a show I remember distinctly anticipating coming to my town because I would finally get to hear Mickey's new voice that I had read others talking so anxiously about online. Bret's Mickey brings a youthful energy to the character, something that he found from Mickey's original voice, Walt Disney himself. Iwan attests that Walt brought personality to the character, along with a sense of optimism and a desire for adventure. The opportunity to follow in such hallowed footsteps is something that Iwan doesn't take lightly, especially when he gets to hear his voice as Mickey in the Disney theme parks. Growing up,\u00a0Fantasmic!<\/em> was an important show to Bret's Disney fandom, so much so that he and his brother would act it out in their childhood backyard by spraying around the water hose. Voicing Mickey in the recent update of the show for Disneyland was a full-circle moment.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nIwan cites \"Backstage Magic with Mickey Mouse\" (sometimes also called \"Magic Words with Mickey\") as one of his favorite projects. The experience was an interactive meet & greet at Walt Disney World where guests got to carry on a real-time verbal conversation with Mickey Mouse for the first time ever. While eventually it became a standard offering available to all guests regularly, for several years the technology was in on-and-off testing mode, seemingly happening randomly every so often and going viral every time it did. Unfortunately, the experience was stripped of its talking component last spring, but it will forever be remembered as a special moment in Disney history, and perhaps a glimpse of what character interactions could look like in the future. Of the closure, Iwan remarked that most of the time when meeting guests, Mickey has to save his voice for the show,\u00a0 \"I was his vocal coach on how to talk to people and how to sometimes save his voice. He didn't listen.\"\r\n\r\nThat line is a perfect example of the way both Iwan and Farmer spoke that made it clear they have a true relationship with these characters. Farmer said he's worked as Goofy on nearly 3500 projects across 31 years. With being part of so many different things and for such different types of media, whether television or video games or theme parks, it can sometimes be overwhelming to keep track of everything. Farmer said that just the day before the panel, he saw for the first time\u00a0Mickey's Royal Friendship Faire<\/em>, a show\u00a0at Magic Kingdom that debuted over two years ago. \"You see things like that and you go, 'Oh, yeah, I remember doing that.'\" Other times, the voice actors are completely lost. \"Ask us what\u00a0Kingdom Hearts 3<\/em> is about,\" Farmer challenged, to which both he and Iwan exclaimed in unison, \"We don't know!!\" While they record television scripts in linear order parallel to the story, video games are more all over the place, jumping to different parts of the script so drastically that it's difficult to get a sense of the narrative (especially when mainly making battle sounds and erroneous noises rather than complete dialogue).\r\n\r\nStill, some projects, shall we say, stand out.\u00a0A Goofy Movie<\/em> is one that Farmer is extremely appreciative of. He even said there's \"talk of some projects\" to celebrate the film's 25th anniversary in 2020. He said he couldn't elaborate any more than that... intriguing!! He also stated that\u00a0Goof Troop\u00a0<\/em>was \"scary,\" with Goofy being the first of the fab five to receive his own full TV series.\r\n\r\nIn being the same character so often, inevitably the character becomes part of who you are, Farmer said. One moment in particular when Farmer accidentally knocked over a can of Coca-Cola all over a $100,000 soundboard is proof of Goofy sometimes taking the wheel in his actions. \"He's always in there,\" Farmer remarked, before Iwan added in Mickey's voice, \"Yeah, and sometimes waaaaaay out there.\" Pure magic.","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] Voices of Mickey and Goofy Illuminate the Magic of Voice Acting","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-voices-of-mickey-and-goofy-illuminate-the-magic-of-voice-acting","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-22 20:47:47","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-23 03:47:47","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50937","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":50932,"post_author":"10","post_date":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_date_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content":"
<\/a>\r\n\r\nFor generations, the story has been passed along about the origin of Mickey Mouse.\r\n\r\nFollowing a tragic mishap in 1928 during which most of his animators and his star character, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, were taken from him, Walt Disney rode a train from New York to Hollywood. As the legend goes, during that train ride Walt sketched a simple drawing of a plucky mouse who the world would eventually come to know and love as Mickey.\r\n\r\nBut is that\u00a0really<\/em> how it happened? As D23 celebrated Mickey's 90th birthday this past weekend during its Destination D event, panelists shared some alternate versions of the story that are decidedly different.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nAccording to the first-ever published Disney book, entitled\u00a0The Mickey Mouse Book<\/em>, Mickey actually used to live in the clouds, literally. He was Mouse #13 as part of a mouse colony in Mouse Fairy Land, a kingdom in the skies ruled by an unforgiving monarch. One day when Mickey acted up, the king was so furious with him that he threw Mickey out of Mouse Fairy Land and down to earth below, where Mickey unglamorously careened against the roof shingles of someone's house. As fate would have it, that house belonged to none other than Walt Disney. As Walt came outside to see who crashed into his home, he met Mickey for the first time, and the rest is history.\r\n\r\n
<\/a>\r\n\r\nWhile you're still reeling from this seemingly vital piece of Mickey Mouse knowledge that you've never been told until this very moment, consider this, yet another differing account of Mickey's beginnings. This version originated from a live-action\/animation hybrid short film developed in 1989 in promotion for the opening of Disney-MGM Studios (now Disney's Hollywood Studios) at Walt Disney World. It was filmed on location there, with the park's architecture doubling for the real Hollywood. The short, called\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em>, was directed by Rob Minkoff, who would later go on to direct\u00a0The Lion King<\/em> and\u00a0Stuart Little<\/em>. Mickey is the only animated figure in the piece, with everything else live-action.\r\n\r\nThe story of\u00a0Mickey's Audition<\/em> involves Mickey stepping off the trolley in a bustling Hollywood of the 1920s (much as he does today during the street show with news boys at Disney California Adventure). Mickey attends an audition on a soundstage, where the director immediately casts him in a seafaring epic. Hopping aboard Steamboat Willie, Mickey's ship thrashes against special-effects waves in an action sequence that eventually goes all wrong. In the aftermath of the set literally falling apart, Walt Disney (played by his nephew, Roy E. Disney) approaches the scene to see if Mickey is ok and compliment his performance, claiming that he has a big future ahead of him.\r\n\r\nIt's interesting to hear that Disney has given thought to Mickey's origins, but despite the fact that he is the studio's signature character, these stories are not widely known and only exist in such obscure productions. It was certainly a treat hearing light being shed on them during Destination D.\r\n
Which version of Mickey's origin story do you believe?<\/h2>","post_title":"[DESTINATION D] How Did Walt Disney REALLY Meet Mickey Mouse?","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"destination-d-how-did-walt-disney-really-meet-mickey-mouse","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-20 16:15:51","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-20 23:15:51","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"http:\/\/rotoscopers.com\/?p=50932","menu_order":0,"post_type":"post","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}],"next":false,"prev":true,"total_page":5},"paged":1,"column_class":"jeg_col_3o3","class":"jnews_block_5"};