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Walt Disney
by Neal Gabler


  
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Book Description

It’s hard to grow up in the United States – indeed, the world - without having your life touched in some way by Walt Disney and his legacy. Whether it’s through the Mickey Mouse Club, films like Snow White, Fantasia and Mary Poppins, or a trip to one of his theme parks, Disney’s work and influence informs our imagination. Neal Gabler explores the man and the myth in what will surely be regarded as the standard biography for years to come in Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination. Gabler portrays Disney as a compulsive perfectionist, a visionary who labored under the burden of his sky high expectations for both himself and the people who worked for him. From his early upbringing in middle America, to his first experiments with animation, to his final triumph in Hollywood, Gabler offers insight into the man and his work, including the fact that Disney was in the habit of personally acting out the various parts in his films to give his crew a sense of what he wanted in the final product; an early list of possible names for the seven dwarfs in Snow White (including “Blabby,” “Flabby,” “Burpy,” “Wheezy,” “Lazy,” “Puffy,” “Stuffy,” “Baldy,” and “Hickey” – who was to be afflicted with hiccoughs that showed up at inconvenient times); the reaction of Carole Lombard and Clark Gable at an early screening of Disney’s first feature film (they both wept at the scene of Snow White being poisoned); and the bitter fight to unionize the Disney studio, which led to Disney’s subsequent hatred of both Communists (he became a friendly witness for the early anti-communist government committees) and Jews. Gabler’s book is a triumph of the art of biography.




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