by Dottie Grimes
Emery County lays claim on Disney Legend Eric
Larson, who was an animator for 53 years. He was part of a group of animators hired by Walt Disney himself, who later referred to the original group of artists as his
''Nine Old Men.''Click Here for a photo of Eric Larson and some characters he created.
Eric was born in
Cleveland, Utah in 1905. His parents are Lars Peter Larson and Alganora
(Nora) Oveson Larson. His grandparents were also from Emery County. His Maternal Grandparents are Lars Peter Oveson and Louisa Otterstrom. Paternal Grandparents are Erik Larson and Anna Elizabeth Erikson.
An Internet blog 50 Most Influential Animators tells us:
Eric Larson was born on September 3, 1905 in Cleveland, Utah... He was born into a Mormon family and would continue to be devout and active in the faith all through his life although he didn’t talk much about his beliefs at the studio. Larson grew up on a ranch and became fascinated by the animals that live there and their personalities. “I was born and raised on a ranch,” he remembered in an interview. “And I always wanted to be a rancher up to the time of my second year in college. It’s still a life I love, would still like to do. (Click on the link at the top to read his whole story.)
Eric Larson was born on September 3, 1905 in Cleveland, Utah... He was born into a Mormon family and would continue to be devout and active in the faith all through his life although he didn’t talk much about his beliefs at the studio. Larson grew up on a ranch and became fascinated by the animals that live there and their personalities. “I was born and raised on a ranch,” he remembered in an interview. “And I always wanted to be a rancher up to the time of my second year in college. It’s still a life I love, would still like to do. (Click on the link at the top to read his whole story.)
Eric
attended the University of Utah and majored in journalism. He moved to
California and was talked into applying at the Disney Studios. He was
hired at the time Mickey Mouse was still evolving. Disneyland and
major movies had not even been thought about. When Disney's first
feature-length cartoon was created, he was among the major animators. He
was responsible for the forest animals which are in most scenes of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, which was released in 1937.
See Disney Family Album 2 you can hear Eric talk about getting the animation of animals to look like real animals by the time the story of Bambi was ready to be told. They studied the bones and the movement of real deer to get the realistic look of all of the animals in Bambi. Eric was the supervising animator for Bambi and created the beloved character of Thumper. That attention to anatomy carried on with 101 Dalmathions.
Eric Larson |
A Partial List from Wikipedia of The Characters Eric Larson Created:
- Forest Animals, Whistle While You Work Sequence (Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs)
- Figaro, Cleo (Figaro lick Cleo and Cleo going into castle), French Can-can dancers marionettes and Russian girl marionette, Donkeys (Pinocchio)
- Pegasus, Centaurs, Centaurettes (The Pastoral Symphony) (Fantasia)
- Lullabye sequence "baby animals" (Dumbo) (uncredited)
- Bambi (Bambi)
- Cinderella, Prince Charming (Cinderella)
- Alice, Dinah, The Caterpillar, The Cheshire Cat, The Queen of Hearts, Flamingo (Alice in Wonderland)
- Flying to London Sequence (Peter Pan)
- Peg, Puppies in Pound (Lady and the Tramp)
- Pongo, Perdita, Puppies, Colonel, Tibbs (101 Dalmatians)
- The Vultures, some of the Wolves (The Jungle Book)
- Little John, Vultures (Robin Hood)
- Kanga and Roo (The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh)
- Mr. Toad (The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad)
- 3 Little Pigs (The Three Little Pigs)
- Roquefort, Scat Cat (The Aristocats)
- Brer Rabbit, Brer Fox and Brer Bear (Song of the South)
- Barn Animals (Mary Poppins)
Eric |
“Eric was very, very gentle and he knew timing like nobody’s business,” said animator and dancer Betsy Baytos. In real life Eric was a very giving, gentle, and unselfish human being who always helped mentor others and for decades was largely responsible for keeping together the sometimes egocentric and hyper aggressive top animators at the studio. He had no ego and people always felt comfortable asking him for advice and guidance. Larson for the last 16 years of his career worked pretty much exclusively on running the training program at the Disney studio and was very successful at finding talent. (http://50mostinfluentialdisneyanimators.wordpress.com/)
His death left only four of Disney's "Nine Old Men." Headlines remarked that another link to the Golden Age was gone.