Daily post &Hubley &Tissa David 07 Feb 2007 08:16 am
Doonesbury
- The 1977 Hubley film of Gary Trudeau‘s Doonesbury Special has just shown up on YouTube. It comes in five parts. This is the film that was the last started by John Hubley.
The Hubley Studio was an apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. It was always crowded with beautiful, framed art: paintings by John and Faith, Backgrounds from their films, and the more attractive awards given to them.
Stepping into the apartment/studio was like stepping into an art gallery brimming with modern art. I always felt like I should be whispering.
Fresh off Raggedy Ann & Andy, I was brought on board the show to assist John. I had missed the prior 18 months while John was in London working on and getting over the Watership Down debacle. ***
(One of Tissa’s 24 drawing walk cycle. Someday I’ll
post them all with rougher preliminary sketches.)
Returning to the studio was both a joy and a shock. All that great art, had Doonesbury strips ripped out of the newspapers and taped over all the framed Hubley art. I found it embarrassing given how great the art was underneath those strips.
The show was just barely getting started. Actors had just started recording. John, Faith and Gary spent many of their days at the studio recording while I started development of the film’s art from the storyboards.
Kate Wodell, one of Hubley’s talented ex-students from Yale who had worked through Everybody Rides the Carousel, was the only other person on staff; I think she started a few days after me.
(Click any image to enlarge.)
Gary and I didn’t really speak more than to say hello, but it was obvious that he and I didn’t really get along. John strongly held onto me, and wouldn’t alow me to leave or be left.
However, about a month into the work, he called me to his room. John told me that he had to lay me off for a couple of weeks. He was about to go into the hospital for an operation up at Yale, and would halt work until his return.
John Hubley didn’t return. He died on the operating table.
After a short period, Faith announced that they would finish the film in John’s honor, and she and Gary Trudeau would direct in tandem. I decided not to return. I took a job assisting R.O.Blechman direct his first one-hour special, Simple Gifts.
About a month into my work, I got a call from Tissa David. She was animating the class play in the Doonesbury Special, and she needed help. She couldn’t find an assistant who could keep up with her on the schedule she had to meet for them. About 100 feet a week of pretty full animation.
I agreed to work free lance on Tissa’s work for Faith. During the day I was an Asst. Director on one PBS Special; at night I was an Asst. Animator on another CBS Special. When I completed Tissa’s scenes – about a month’s work – I got a call from Kate Wodell. Ruth Kissane had animated a piano rotating 90 degrees with a character playing the piano on another level, but she’d left many of the drawings for an assistant. No one at the Hubley studio could do it, and they asked if I would help out. I did the scene which took about a week.
Unfortunately, that was the last time I worked for Faith, even though we remained close up to her death.
(This is Ruth Kissane‘s sequence. I have the original drawings somewhere and
I’ll eventually post them.)
*** (I’m sorry this was not written clearly. I do not think Watership Down, the film, was a debacle. John Hubley’s involvment with the film and his treatment by Producer, Martin Rosen, was. See my comment below.)
on 07 Feb 2007 at 9:19 am 1.Doug said …
Hi Michael – This is very interesting.
You said in your post “I had missed the prior 18 months while John was in London working on and getting over the Watership Down debacle”.
Would you care to elaborate on the debacle? Though I haven’t seen that film since I was a kid, its burned into my memory as a special film.
on 07 Feb 2007 at 10:01 am 2.Michael said …
I’m sorry, I wasn’t clear. I didn’t mean the film was a debacle, only John Hubley’s involvment with the film. He was originally to direct it, brought all of his closest animators into the project and was fired midway. There are obvious elements that are his work (such as the opening of the film) that show how brilliant the film might have been. As it is, the film rests solely on its story not its graphics. Martin Rosen was a gifted producer, however his direction might have lacked spark (see Plague Dogs for proof of this.)
on 07 Feb 2007 at 8:38 pm 3.Mo Willems said …
Michael,
Back when I worked for you (A.D. 1403), I picked up a copy of the “Doonesbury Special” book at The Strand.
It has the piano sequence and others in it.
I spent some time studying the boards and cycles.
I should have guessed there was Tissa in them thar hills.
Mo
on 09 Feb 2007 at 10:43 am 4.David Nethery said …
Michael,
Thanks. All the backstory on these films is fascinating. I’m wondering if you know which of Hubley’s closest animators worked on the prologue sequence from “Watership Down” ? Did they all go over to England or were they working through the mails from New York and/or L.A. ?
on 08 Aug 2007 at 3:07 pm 5.Elizabeth Battle said …
Michael,
Thank you for the information. I have been a huge fan of Doonesbury and Hubley since I was a teen. I have a question that is off-topic and I apologize up front. Years ago, at least 10, I bought 4 cells from the work described above, and several line drawings at an auction. I have a VHS copy of the animation and the cells seem to match. Would you have any suggestions to determine how to authenticate them? Zonker was my favorite, so most are of him.
Thank you,
Elizabeth
on 14 Aug 2007 at 6:36 pm 6.Kate Wodell said …
Michael,
Thanks for the walk down memory lane.
John’s passing was an event that changed my life forever-
as was working for both the Hubley’s (and yourself, of course).
Kate Wodell