Sun Rise In Life - Walt Disney -DISNEYLAND
Anupam Kher fulfilled his dream to become an actor. And when it is a question of dream how can we forget Dream Land of million, billions of children around the World.
Can you imagine or think the World without THE DISNEY LAND…….? NEVER……..it is difficult or perhaps impossible to find a child, a young or an old, who have never heard about Disney Land. Whether it is china, America, England or India or Russia or Japan, no human being will found who is not influenced by mickie mouse, Donald duck, tom and jerry and many more cartoons around the child World. We can see today, success of Disney Land but it is a result of a long long Dark Night of life. Like never ending Dark Night of Walt.
Walt was born on December 5, 1901 in Chicago, in a large family of Irish immigrants Elias and Flora Disney. His father was engaged in small construction business, but his family was stricken. Elias struggled at work and when he came home, he took out his anger on the children and wife. In 1909 he was in search of work and decided to move to Kansas City. When Walt was eight, On July 1, 1911, Elias purchased a newspaper delivery route for The Kansas City Star. It extended from the Twenty-seventh Street to the Thirty-first Street, and from Prospect Avenue to Indiana Avenue. Roy and Walt were put to work delivering the newspapers. The Disneys delivered the morning newspaper Kansas City Times to about 700 customers and the evening and Sunday Star to more than 600. The number of customers they had increased with time. Walt woke up at 4:30 AM and worked delivering newspapers until the school bell rang. He resumed working the paper trail at 4PM and continued to supper time. He found the work exhausting and often received poor grades from dozing off in class. He continued his paper routine for more than six years. In 1917, he began his freshman year at McKinley High School and took Night courses at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. He became the cartoonist for the school newspaper, drawing patriotic topics on World War I. With a hope to join the army, Disney dropped out of high school at the age of sixteen, but was rejected for being under-age. Afterwards, Disney and a friend joined the Red Cross. He was soon sent to France for a year, where he drove an ambulance, but only after the armistice was signed on November 11, 1918.
Hoping to find work outside the Chicago O-Zell factory, Walt moved back to Kansas City in 1919 to begin his artistic career. He considered becoming an actor, but decided to draw political caricatures or comic strips for a newspaper. When nobody wanted to hire him as either an artist or as an ambulance driver, Walt got a temporary job with his brother's help at the Pesmen-Rubin Art Studio, where he created advertisements for newspapers, magazines, and movie theatres. At Pesmen-Rubin he met cartoonist Ubbe Iwerks and, when their time at the studio expired, they decided to start their own commercial company together.
Well, Here the Night session of Walt Disney Ends, if you are thinking so, then you are wrong. Walt had struggled for a period of time as a Dark Night of life. He was trying to light up and fed up darkness many times, but result remains the same, Night still not over. How many efforts Walt made to clear his Night? Take a look in brief.
Walt formed his first animation company in Kansas City in 1921. He made a deal with a distribution company in New York, in which he would ship them his cartoons and get paid six months down the road. He was forced to dissolve his company and at one point could not pay his rent and was surviving by eating Dog Food.
Walt created a mildly successful cartoon character in 1926 called Oswald the Rabbit. When he tried to negotiate with his distributor, Universal Studios, for better rates for each cartoon, he was informed that Universal had obtained ownership of the Oswald character and they had hired Disney's artists out from under him.
When Walt tried to get MGM studios to distribute Mickey Mouse in 1927 he was told that the idea would never work-- a giant mouse on the screen would terrify women.
The Three Little Pigs was rejected by distributors in 1933 because it only had four characters; it was felt at that time that cartoons should have as many figures on the screen as possible. It later became very successful and played at one theatre so long that the poster outside featured the pigs with long white beards.
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was sneak previewed to college students in 1937 who left halfway during the film causing Disney great despair. It turned out the students had to leave early because of dorm curfew.
Pinocchio in 1940 became extra expensive because Walt shut down the production to make the puppet more sympathetic than the lying juvenile delinquent as presented in the original Carlo Collodi story. He also resurrected a minor character, an unnamed cricket who tried to tell Pinocchio the difference between right and wrong until the puppet killed him with the mallet. Excited by the development of Jiminy Cricket plus the revamped, misguided rather than rotten Pinocchio, Walt poured extra money into the film's special effects and it ended up losing a million dollars in its first release.
For the premiere of Pinocchio Walt hired 11 midgets, dressed them up like the little puppet and put them on top of Radio City Music Hall in New York with a full day's supply of food and wine. The idea was they would wave hello to the little children entering into the theatre. By the middle of the hot afternoon, there were 11 drunken naked midgets running around the top of the marquee, screaming obscenities at the crowd below. The most embarrassed people were the police who had to climb up ladders and take the little fellows off in pillowcases.
Walt was human; he suffered through many fits of anger and depression through his many trials.
After a long fight with darken and darken Nights, there was a time, with grand success of Mickey Mouse and other characters in animation world, he found that-
SUN
RISE
IN
HIS LIFE
On July 17, 1955, Walt Disney dedicated DISNEYLAND before a television audience of millions. The result was that Disneyland became a phenomenal success, spawning other parks, and creating a critical component of the Walt Disney Company.
So beyond all that disappointment and learning got fantastic success. Walt would say, "Get a good idea, and stay with it. Dug it, and work at it until it's done, and done right."
Walt Disney left (?) this World on 15 December, 1966 with being attached to World forever.
All the adversity I've had in my life, all my troubles and obstacles have strengthened me... You may not realize it when it happens, but a kick in the teeth may be the best thing in the World for you. Mickey Mouse popped out of my mind onto a drawing pad 20 years ago on a train ride from Manhattan to Hollywood at a time when business fortunes of my brother Roy and me were at lowest ebb and disaster seemed right around the corner. Walt Disney
Can you imagine or think the World without THE DISNEY LAND…….? NEVER……..it is difficult or perhaps impossible to find a child, a young or an old, who have never heard about Disney Land. Whether it is china, America, England or India or Russia or Japan, no human being will found who is not influenced by mickie mouse, Donald duck, tom and jerry and many more cartoons around the child World. We can see today, success of Disney Land but it is a result of a long long Dark Night of life. Like never ending Dark Night of Walt.
Walt was born on December 5, 1901 in Chicago, in a large family of Irish immigrants Elias and Flora Disney. His father was engaged in small construction business, but his family was stricken. Elias struggled at work and when he came home, he took out his anger on the children and wife. In 1909 he was in search of work and decided to move to Kansas City. When Walt was eight, On July 1, 1911, Elias purchased a newspaper delivery route for The Kansas City Star. It extended from the Twenty-seventh Street to the Thirty-first Street, and from Prospect Avenue to Indiana Avenue. Roy and Walt were put to work delivering the newspapers. The Disneys delivered the morning newspaper Kansas City Times to about 700 customers and the evening and Sunday Star to more than 600. The number of customers they had increased with time. Walt woke up at 4:30 AM and worked delivering newspapers until the school bell rang. He resumed working the paper trail at 4PM and continued to supper time. He found the work exhausting and often received poor grades from dozing off in class. He continued his paper routine for more than six years. In 1917, he began his freshman year at McKinley High School and took Night courses at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. He became the cartoonist for the school newspaper, drawing patriotic topics on World War I. With a hope to join the army, Disney dropped out of high school at the age of sixteen, but was rejected for being under-age. Afterwards, Disney and a friend joined the Red Cross. He was soon sent to France for a year, where he drove an ambulance, but only after the armistice was signed on November 11, 1918.
Hoping to find work outside the Chicago O-Zell factory, Walt moved back to Kansas City in 1919 to begin his artistic career. He considered becoming an actor, but decided to draw political caricatures or comic strips for a newspaper. When nobody wanted to hire him as either an artist or as an ambulance driver, Walt got a temporary job with his brother's help at the Pesmen-Rubin Art Studio, where he created advertisements for newspapers, magazines, and movie theatres. At Pesmen-Rubin he met cartoonist Ubbe Iwerks and, when their time at the studio expired, they decided to start their own commercial company together.
Well, Here the Night session of Walt Disney Ends, if you are thinking so, then you are wrong. Walt had struggled for a period of time as a Dark Night of life. He was trying to light up and fed up darkness many times, but result remains the same, Night still not over. How many efforts Walt made to clear his Night? Take a look in brief.
Walt formed his first animation company in Kansas City in 1921. He made a deal with a distribution company in New York, in which he would ship them his cartoons and get paid six months down the road. He was forced to dissolve his company and at one point could not pay his rent and was surviving by eating Dog Food.
Walt created a mildly successful cartoon character in 1926 called Oswald the Rabbit. When he tried to negotiate with his distributor, Universal Studios, for better rates for each cartoon, he was informed that Universal had obtained ownership of the Oswald character and they had hired Disney's artists out from under him.
When Walt tried to get MGM studios to distribute Mickey Mouse in 1927 he was told that the idea would never work-- a giant mouse on the screen would terrify women.
The Three Little Pigs was rejected by distributors in 1933 because it only had four characters; it was felt at that time that cartoons should have as many figures on the screen as possible. It later became very successful and played at one theatre so long that the poster outside featured the pigs with long white beards.
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was sneak previewed to college students in 1937 who left halfway during the film causing Disney great despair. It turned out the students had to leave early because of dorm curfew.
Pinocchio in 1940 became extra expensive because Walt shut down the production to make the puppet more sympathetic than the lying juvenile delinquent as presented in the original Carlo Collodi story. He also resurrected a minor character, an unnamed cricket who tried to tell Pinocchio the difference between right and wrong until the puppet killed him with the mallet. Excited by the development of Jiminy Cricket plus the revamped, misguided rather than rotten Pinocchio, Walt poured extra money into the film's special effects and it ended up losing a million dollars in its first release.
For the premiere of Pinocchio Walt hired 11 midgets, dressed them up like the little puppet and put them on top of Radio City Music Hall in New York with a full day's supply of food and wine. The idea was they would wave hello to the little children entering into the theatre. By the middle of the hot afternoon, there were 11 drunken naked midgets running around the top of the marquee, screaming obscenities at the crowd below. The most embarrassed people were the police who had to climb up ladders and take the little fellows off in pillowcases.
Walt was human; he suffered through many fits of anger and depression through his many trials.
After a long fight with darken and darken Nights, there was a time, with grand success of Mickey Mouse and other characters in animation world, he found that-
SUN
RISE
IN
HIS LIFE
On July 17, 1955, Walt Disney dedicated DISNEYLAND before a television audience of millions. The result was that Disneyland became a phenomenal success, spawning other parks, and creating a critical component of the Walt Disney Company.
So beyond all that disappointment and learning got fantastic success. Walt would say, "Get a good idea, and stay with it. Dug it, and work at it until it's done, and done right."
Walt Disney left (?) this World on 15 December, 1966 with being attached to World forever.
All the adversity I've had in my life, all my troubles and obstacles have strengthened me... You may not realize it when it happens, but a kick in the teeth may be the best thing in the World for you. Mickey Mouse popped out of my mind onto a drawing pad 20 years ago on a train ride from Manhattan to Hollywood at a time when business fortunes of my brother Roy and me were at lowest ebb and disaster seemed right around the corner. Walt Disney
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