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06/15/2004 Archives: "The Lion King Tenth Anniversary Reunion"

pic7 (3k image)Animated News had the privilege last night of attending The Lion King Tenth Anniversary Reunion held at the Glendale Public Library and sponsored by ASIFA-Hollywood. The event gathered together a number of people who worked on the film and honored the regal animated feature as a benchmark in animation, one that successfully combined comedy and drama, action and song, and even computer-generated imagery with traditional hand-drawn elements. The panel consisted of Jeffrey Katzenberg, producer Don Hahn, co-directors Roger Allers and Rob Minkoff, co-writer Irene Mecchi, supervising animator for Scar Andreas Deja, supervising animator for Pumbaa Tony Bancroft, creator of the CGI wildebeest stampede Scott Johnston, and was moderated by story artist Tom Sito.

Follow this link for some of Christian's thoughts on the evening, photos and a link to a corroborative account:



Jeffrey Katzenberg

First off, it should be noted that basically everyone in attendance at the event must've been acutely aware of all the controversies swarming around the animation industry today. Seeing as how Jeffrey Katzenberg is/was involved directly or indirectly with some of them I had a preconceived notion that his mere presence at the event could be volatile in some way but it turned out that nothing could be further from the truth. Everybody behaved by all the rules of good sportsmanship. Nobody brought up or asked him about feuds with Michael Eisner or Roy Disney. Nobody brought up any real or perceived DreamWorks vs. Disney or DreamWorks vs. Pixar issues. This was surprising to me since at previous press events people in the audience always seemed more than ready to bring up the controversial topics even if they had nothing to do with the topic of the event. Katzenberg even at one point while discussing the genesis of the story of The Lion King respectfully mentioned Roy Disney and at another point praised Pixar's hit Finding Nemo as a timeless fable. He also never tooted his own horn about the recent and overwhelming financial success of Dreamworks' Shrek 2, an achievement of which he can be justly proud.


Kimba the White Lion

During the Q&A segment, a question was posed asking if there was any truth to the rumor that The Lion King was in any way plagiarizing Osamu Tezuka's Kimba the White Lion. The question itself got a big laugh from the audience and with nothing to hide co-director Rob Minkoff explained that production of The Lion King was well under way when someone at the Disney studio discovered some Kimba art and took it around to show everyone, who all got a kick out of the fact that were several similarities between both stories.


Tidbits

Following are brief little tidbits giving insight into the production process for The Lion King.

Wrap Up

The evening wrapped up with a showing of the Don Hahn-produced video that was shown at the employee wrap party for the movie back in 1994, featuring all the employees at work looking like they were having more fun than working. I've always known that The Lion King was a particularly collaborative project but from this event learned even more of how much it really was, with many of the workers contributing significant ideas beyond the scope of their appointed positions. The event celebrated hand-drawn animation in general and a prime example of it specifically. There was more to report but Jim Hill was there and I'm sure he will cover ground I haven't.


tlkreunion2 (98k image)

tlkreunion2 (98k image)

Photos courtesy of Brian Tiemann - Read Brian's Account of the Event

Posted by Christian at 2:50 am ET



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