Ub Iwerks


 

Ub Iwerks (Ubbe Ert Iwwerks) (March 24, 1901July 7, 1971), was an animator and cartoonist, who was famous for his work for Walt Disney. He was born in Kansas City, Missouri. His name is explained by his east-frisian roots: his father Eert Ubbe Iwwerks from the village Uttum in East Frisia (northwest Germany) emigrated to the USA in 1869.

Related Topics:
March 24 - 1901 - July 7 - 1971 - Animator - Cartoonist - Walt Disney - Kansas City, Missouri - East-frisian

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Iwerks was responsible for the distinctive style of the earliest Disney cartoons. The first few Mickey Mouse cartoons were animated almost entirely by Iwerks. He was considered by many to be Walt Disney's oldest friend, and spent most of his career with Disney. Iwerks and Disney had a falling-out, and their friendship was severed when Iwerks accepted a contract with a competitor to leave Disney and start an animation studio under his own name. Disney was most likely the cause of this falling out, as he steadfastly refused to give due recognition to Iwerks for being Mickey's real creator.

Related Topics:
Cartoon - Mickey Mouse

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The Iwerks Studio opened in 1930. Financial backers led by Pat Powers suspected that Iwerks was responsible for much of Disney's early success. However, while animation for a time suffered at Disney from Iwerks' departure, it soon rebounded as Disney brought in talented new young animators. The Iwerks Studio enjoyed no great success and failed to rival the top Disney and Fleischer Studios. The backers withdrew further financial support from Iwerks Studio in 1936, and it soon folded. After this, Ub Iwerks worked for a time for Columbia Pictures, before returning to work for Disney in 1940.

Related Topics:
1930 - Pat Powers - Fleischer Studios - 1936 - Columbia Pictures - 1940

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After his return to Disney Studios, Iwerks mainly worked on developing special visual effects. He is credited as developing the processes for combining live action and animation used in Song of the South.

Related Topics:
Disney Studios - Song of the South

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Iwerks's most famous work outside animating Mickey Mouse was Flip the Frog for his own studio. Flip bears more than a small resemblance to the characters Iwerks drew earlier, Mickey Mouse and Oswald the Lucky Rabbit.

Related Topics:
Mickey Mouse - Flip the Frog - Oswald the Lucky Rabbit

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Iwerks was known for his fast work at drawing and animation and his wacky sense of humor. Animator Chuck Jones, who worked for Iwerks' studio in his youth, said "Iwerks is Screwy spelled backwards." Ub Iwerks died of a heart attack in Burbank, California.

Related Topics:
Chuck Jones - Heart attack - Burbank, California

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A documentary film, ' was released in 1999.

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Latest news on ub iwerks

Are images of the early Mickey Mouse still copyrighted?

The LA Times's Joseph Menn has a great, well-researched feature article on the history of the copyright for the image of Mickey Mouse as portrayed in the earliest Disney cartoons -- and the theory that Disney made mistakes early on with its copyright registration, placing images of that specific Mickey (not the Mickey we know today) in the public domain. Prominent legal scholars like Peter Jaszi agree, but who will shell out the millions in legal fees to prove it? After all, the company's already threatened legal action against law-students who publish papers investigating the question! Brown went searching for flawed formalities -- and found one. It was on the title card at the beginning of a "Steamboat Willie" cartoon that had just been rereleased on a 1993 LaserDisc honoring Mickey's 65th birthday. It said in full: "Disney Cartoons Present A Mickey Mouse Sound Cartoon Steamboat Willie A Walt Disney Comic By Ub Iwerks Recorded by Cinephone Powers System Copyright MCMXXIX." [...] The authoritative legal treatise "Nimmer on Copyright" says that a copyright is void if multiple names create uncertainty, and courts have agreed. In 1961, a federal judge in Massachusetts cited the "accompanied by" rule in throwing out a copyright claim by newspaper cartoonist Art Moger. Moger's name was included in the title above his panels, but the name of another artist ran inside the boxes. Disney's rights to young Mickey Mouse may be wrong (Thanks, Xeni!)...