Friday, April 11, 2014
Land of Oz Workshops Blog: The Power of the Creative Process
Land of Oz Workshops Blog: The Power of the Creative Process: With the Academy Awards airing a few weeks ago, it spurred my interest in who holds the record for most Oscar nominations and wins. I was s...
The Power of the Creative Process
With the Academy Awards airing a few weeks ago,
it spurred my interest in who holds the record for most Oscar nominations and
wins. I was surprised to find out it is Walt Disney. Over the course of his
illustrious career, Disney was nominated for 59 Oscars and won 22. In addition,
he received 4 special Oscars.
Disney was a very unusual student. When his
elementary school teacher asked the class to sketch the flower vase she placed
on her desk, young Walt sketched it with added arms, legs, and a smiling flower
at the top. His teacher scolded him for not paying attention to her
instructions to just draw the vase! Walt
courteously listened to her complaints but continued to draw what he saw in his
vivid imagination. Years later, animals,
plants and objects with human voices and attributes became a Disney trademark.
By age twenty, Walt Disney was hired to draw
cartoons for the Kansas City Film Ad Company. Within a short time he was
drawing cartoons that moved but they still didn’t move in the way he envisioned
they could. He studied and worked tirelessly towards making drawings move in
more graceful and sophisticated ways so they would have greater realism. These
drawings and experiments took thousands of hours to perfect.
Disney was the first person to sell the idea of
having a cartoon open for a feature film. As a door to door salesman, he sold
cartoons by the linear foot to local movie theatres. Most theatre owners didn’t
understand why a movie-goer would want to watch this new form of entertainment.
Walt was not put off. His focus, determination, and passion for animation and
creating laugh-out-loud characters won over all opposition and eventually made
him a legend.
When he was 28, he came up with the idea of a
little character named Mortimer Mouse. His wife thought that it was a dreadful name
and suggested something more enticing like Mickey Mouse. The name really stuck
a chord within Disney. Intrigued by the new talking films that were beginning
to gain in popularity, Disney worked tirelessly to synchronize Mickey’s movements
to sound, making it the first carton of its kind. He named his first animated
talking cartoon Steamboat Willie. The year was 1927. Most theatre owners told
him that the public would not be interested in a mouse that talked. Disney
pushed ahead despite their cynicism. Within a few years, Mickey Mouse was the
most popular cartoon character in the country. By 1935, the Mickey Mouse Club
had over 1.5 million members.
As Abraham
Maslow once described it, the creative process has a right brain inspirational
phase and a left brain planning and work phase. Disney was a man with remarkable
creativity, determination, tenacity, and follow through. Reading about Disney’s
life is deeply inspiring. It is inspiring because we can create on our own unique
level of creativity and make our artistic stirrings tangible. We may never
achieve what Disney achieved but we can accomplish something we can be delighted
with and very proud of.
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