Saturday, 22 July 2023

George Cannata

One of the crimes of the Golden Age of Animation is a decision by someone at Warner Bros. to shear off the original credits of a cartoon when re-releasing it as a Blue Ribbon (this policy was later changed). Unless original prints or title cards turn up, we don’t know who got animation or story credits. A great example is From Hand to Mouse, where a title card turned up and the credited animator is Ray Patin! As far as anyone knows, it’s the only time he was credited at Warners.

On rare occasion, a pre-Blue Ribbon credit is mentioned in a review in a trade publication. To the right, you see Showman’s Trade Review’s look at The Stupid Cupid in its Dec. 30, 1944 edition. It tells us the animator is George Cannata, whose name doesn’t appear on the Blue Ribbon release of Sept. 1, 1951.1

Cannata was only credited on one other Warners cartoon (that we know of), and that’s The Swooner Crooner, also released in 1944.

If there’s anyone who is puzzle in the Golden Age of Animation, it’s George Cannata. That’s because his son, George Baldwin Cannata, went into animation and publications also refer to HIM as George Cannata, as well as George Cannata, Jr. So which one is which? That’s the puzzling part.

This post may gum up things even more. I can’t guarantee everything here is correct; I suspect others have looked into this and can provide corrections and insight in the comments section. We’re pretty positive we have the right guy through World War Two.

George Henry Cannata was born in Union City, N.J. on July 8, 1908 to Alexander and Margerite Cannata. His father was an insurance salesman. In 1910, George and his mother lived with her parents in Weehauken then, in 1920, the family resided in Cliffside Park, N.J. In 1926, the Cannatas were in Glens Falls, N.Y.; George was working with his father in the local Met Life office.2 That’s also the year he got into animation, as he was in town from New York for the Christmas holidays and would be making “a trip to the movie colony in California to do special film work.”3



John Canemaker’s book on Felix the Cat contains the photo above of the staff of the Pat Sullivan studio, circa 1926. Cannata is the little guy way in the back.



This 1928 photo from the roof of the Sullivan studio gives you a better shot of Cannata. He is second from the left, between Rudy Zamora and Hal Walker (Al Eugster and Tom Byrne are to the right).

Cannata was rooming in a place on West 143rd Street in Manhattan in 19304 and working for Max and Dave Fleischer. Shamus Culhane, in his book Talking Animals and Other People, states that when most of the animators left in May 1930, Cannata and others were suddenly promoted to temporary animators and told they would get permanent jobs depending on how well they did on Swing You Sinners. “Even cocky little George Cannata was subdued,” Culhane observed, and went on to say:

George Cannata was a problem both for me and [Bill] Gilmartin, the production manager. Barely five feet tall, he was like so many short men: feisty and defensive. Apparently he had been somewhat neglected as a child. According to George, his mother had been Woodrow Wilson’s secretary, and it seems she had little time for George during his childhood; at least, that was George’s version of his background.
He always wore a hat while working, because newspaper cartoonists did that, and George thought of himself as a very serious cartoonist. He had snappy drawing style and could easily have created a comic strip except for one thing—George was indolent.
Anyone who was late more than once a week received a little printed card from Max. There was a space for comments from Max, and another area for the reason for lateness. One time, Max sent George a card and wrote in his space, “Slipping?” George’s response was, “No, sleeping.”


Cannata got a screen credit on one Fleischer short, the Screen Song I Wonder Who’s Kissing Her Now, copyright 1930 but released in Feb. 1931. He spent the 1930s back and forth between both coasts. Cannata was hired by Walter Lantz and animated the Pooch the Pub cartoons The Athlete (Aug. 1932), The Butcher Boy (Sept. 1932), The Crowd Snores (Oct. 1932), Cats and Dogs (Dec. 1932) and The Merry Dog (Jan. 1933).5

Cannata married M. Dorothy Baldwin in Los Angeles on June 25, 1932.6 Daughter Dolores was born in California in 1933, but George Jr. was born in New York City after the family returned there by 1935.



The photo above from the Motion Picture Herald of April 11, 1936 shows the newly-expanded staff of Terry-Toons.7 Cannata is in the front, second from the left.8

When Cannata returned to the West Coast is unclear. His WW2 Draft card registered on Oct. 16, 1940 says he was employed at the Walt Disney studio in Burbank; the Census that year said he had only completed the first grade of high school. He and Dorothy are found on Voters Lists in the Los Angeles area from 1942 to 1950.

Cannata animated Baggage Buster with Goofy (Apr. 18, 1941), then after his stint at Warners worked on cartoons at Famous Studios in New York—Just Curious (Sept. 1944), Gabriel Church Kitten (Dec. 1944) and Magicalulu (Mar. 1945).5

Cannata’s name can be found on the credits of the John Sutherland Productions auto-of-the-future film Your Safety First, the studio’s great oil industry-sponsored outer space cartoon Destination Earth, Working Dollars (all 1956) and The Story of Creative Capital (1957, screen credit to the right).

Things start to get a little murky now. Business Screen Magazine of May 15, 1958 reports:

George Cannata has joined Robert Lawrence Productions as Storyman and Creative Designer. He most recently was employed with Ray Patin Productions in Hollywood and prior to that was with TV Spots. He studied art at the Instatuto Allende in Mexico and graduated from the Chouinard Art Institute in California. His paintings have been exhibited on several occasions at the Los Angeles Art Museum.

Is this Cannata or his son, who would be about 22 at this time? The Lawrence operation was based in New York and, as mentioned above, there’s no indication Cannata ever got past the first grade of high school. The New York Cannata was cited in 1959 at the International Advertising Film Festival at Cannes for designing a Lestoil commercial.9 He also co-designed a pilot for a half-hour animated kid series for Lawrence called “Toy Box Time” with animation by Grim Natwick, and voices by Sid Raymond and John Astin.10 I’m not convinced this is Cannata, Sr.

Back Stage of April 6, 1962, reports George Cannata was an employee of the fairly-new Ed Graham Productions in New York. That’s Jr., as the same trade paper about a year later gives the suffix, stating he was now working for Pelican Films.11 Ed Graham produced the Linus the Lionhearted series, where Jr. was a designer. The younger Cannata had got his start at MGM12 and he and his wife Agnes ended up at Elektra Film Productions in New York,13 where he won an award for the famous animated “Talking Stomach” commercial for Alka Seltzer.14

Meanwhile, George Cannata is credited on the 1967 Spiderman TV cartoons. These were made at Grantray-Lawrence in Los Angeles. As George Jr. was on the East Coast at the time, it seems this was George, Sr. And in 1974, Cannata is called the head of FilmFair’s Animation department. He designed an Eastern Airlines commercial for Gus Jekel’s company using Disney characters.15 Jr. was still in New York16 so this, again, is George, Sr. And his name appears on various series at Hanna-Barbera along with other old-timers who had worked on far better things in years past.

George Henry Cannata died in Los Angeles on February 8, 1978. There was no newspaper obituary.


1 The US government's Copyright Catalog for that year only lists director Frank Tashlin, musical director Carl Stalling and writer Warren Foster
2 Glens Falls Post-Star, June 28, 1926
3 Glens Falls Post-Star, Dec. 27, 1926
4 1930 U.S. Government Census
5 The Animated Film Encyclopedia, Graham Webb, 2nd ed., McFarland & Company, Inc., 2011
6 New York records show the marriage license was granted in that state>
7 Paul Terry is wearing glasses, front and centre, between animator Jerry Shields and musical director Phil Scheib
8 This is before Van Beuren closed in June that year, so Carlo Vinci, Dan Gordon, Joe Barbera and others from that studio are not in the photo
9 Television Age, May 16, 1960
10 Variety, July 13, 1960
11 Back Stage, March 29, 1963
12 Back Stage, Dec. 8, 1978
13 Back Stage, Sep. 29, 1967
14 Back Stage, Apr. 12, 1968
15 Back Stage, Jan. 11, 1974
16 Back Stage, Dec. 1, 1973

3 comments:

  1. Here's what Gerard Baldwin said about his cousin, George Cannata, Jr. in my piece on Linus the Lionhearted for Cartoon Research: Gerard Baldwin’s cousin, George Cannata, Jr., designed all the main characters in the Linus show and drew some of the storyboards Gerard worked from. Sadly, George Cannata Jr. had a very low opinion of animation and was really a fine arts painter at heart. He was married three times and had children to support, so he had to crank out a lot of storyboards, designs and layouts. Toward the end of his life, George was living in a small apartment in New York City, surrounded by his paintings and drinking heavily. He had a sad life making cartoons to keep children happy. from Mark Kausler

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    1. Yes, I remember that from some Cartoon Brew articles on Linus.

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  2. Leaving you some tidbits and dates from Top Cel, the NY animation union newsletter - hope it fills a few gaps:

    March 1944: Cannata leaves Warners and moves to Famous Studios.
    July 1950: Currently working at Fletcher Smith Studios in NYC [George started at Fletcher in 1949.]
    August 1950: Now at Famous Studios.
    December 1951: Moved to Detroit to work at Jam Handy.
    April 1952: Now working at Shamus Culhane’s studio.
    October 1957: In from California to animate in New York.
    September 1958: With Le Ora Thompson Associates [commercial studio on the West Coast.]
    May 1959: Now working at HFH [NYC animation firm headed by Howard H. Henkin, Ronald Fritz, and Daniel Hunn.]

    [September 1959: Cannata Jr. left Robert Lawrence to join Elektra.]
    [February 1960: Dolores is now working at Elektra.]

    June 1960: Cannata is now working at Paramount.

    [March 1963: Cannata Jr. currently working at Pelican Pictures - as previously mentioned in your post.]

    (Cannata Sr. helped animate the 1964 Return to Oz special for Crawley Films in Canada, as did veteran NY animators, such as George Rufle and George Germanetti.)

    [March 1964: Cannata Jr. works at Ed Graham Productions.]
    [April 1966: Cannata Jr. works at Elektra.]

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