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...to here?
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Obviously, the answer is “in-betweens.” To the best of my knowledge, at the time this cartoon was released in 1953, director Tex Avery would assign animators to a scene and determine the timing. The animator would handle key drawings or extremes (like you see above) and someone in the in-between pool would come up with the drawings linking the two. I suspect the character movement would be indicated on a layout.
There are five in-betweens in this scene from Three Little Pups. Avery decided to use one drawing per frame. While in-betweeners were below animators in the studio pecking order, their drawings could be funny and attractive, though in movement this fast, no one in the audience would ever see them.
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Innumerable posts on the internet identify animators and their specific work, but let us, on this occasion, pay tribute to the anonymous in-betweeners and their role in the Golden Age of Animation.
Daws’ voicing of “ Wolf “, along with the animation never failed to make me laugh uncontrollably as a kid. Today, they are still hilarious. Funny is funny.
ReplyDeleteHe was the forerunner for Huckleberry Hound. Daws Butler’s voice still makes me laugh, ya hereherehere
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