World Famous Comics NetworkWorld Famous Comics Network World Famous Comics CommunityComic Book ClassifiedsSketchCards.com
WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Shop
SHOP >> David Mack | Andy Lee | Amy Allen | Michonne | Dean Haglund | Virginia Hey | WFC Published | WFC Auctions



ScheduleUPDATED TODAY! Sat, 4-Jul-2009
Anything Goes TriviaAnything Goes Trivia
Bob Rozakis
TrevorTrevor
Piper & Lee
Megaton ManMegaton Man
Don Simpson


NewsNEWS 4-Jul-2009 12:43pm
Comic book fan writes happy ending
Angela Merkel morphs into comic-book her...
X-Men and Xenophobia
Punisher: No Mercy added to PlayStation ...

Comic Book - Movie - Video Game - Anime 

ThinkGeek - Cool Stuff for Geeks and Technophiles
Please Support
CBLDF
Hero Initiative

Friends & Affiliates
Adobe Store
Amazon.com
Anime Studio
Apple Store
Dick Blick Art Materials
eBay
GoDaddy.com

StarWarsShop.com
TFAW
World Famous Comics: Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination (Vintage)
Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination (Vintage)
By: Neal Gabler
Publisher: Vintage
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars
Binding: Paperback
Label: Vintage
Number of Items: 1
Number of Pages: 912
Publication Date: October 09, 2007
Release Date: October 09, 2007

Enlarge Image
Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination (Vintage)
List Price: $20.00
Used Price: $7.99
3rd Party New: $11.50
Amazon's Price: $13.60

You Save: $6.40 (32%)
Usually ships in 24 hours


Similar Items

WALT DISNEY: AN AMERICAN ORIGINAL

The Animated Man: A Life of Walt Disney

How to Be Like Walt: Capturing the Disney Magic Every Day of Your Life

Walt - The Man Behind the Myth

Walt Disney's Imagineering Legends and the Genesis of the Disney Theme Park
More Similar Items...

Editorial Comments

Product Description:
The definitive portrait of one of the most important cultural figures in American history.

Walt Disney was a true visionary whose desire for escape, iron determination and obsessive perfectionism transformed animation from a novelty to an art form, first with Mickey Mouse and then with his feature films–most notably Snow White, Fantasia, and Bambi. In his superb biography, Neal Gabler shows us how, over the course of two decades, Disney revolutionized the entertainment industry. In a way that was unprecedented and later widely imitated, he built a synergistic empire that combined film, television, theme parks, music, book publishing, and merchandise. Walt Disney is a revelation of both the work and the man–of both the remarkable accomplishment and the hidden life.

Amazon.com Review:
Neal Gabler's meticulously researched biography, Walt Disney offers the full story (Gabler is the first writer to gain complete access to the Disney archives) of the American icon. Readers will discover the whole story, witnessing Disney's invention of a "synergistic empire that combined film, television, theme parks, music, book publishing, and merchandise." What fans don't know could fill a book (this book in fact), and we asked Gabler to point out a few of the juicy bits. Read our interview with him, and his "10 Things That May Surprise You" list below. --Daphne Durham


10 Second Interview: A Few Words with Neal Gabler

Q: Why Walt Disney?
A: When you write about someone as grandiose as Walt Disney, you may tend to get a little grandiose yourself, so forgive me. But I had always set the task for myself to examine the forces that helped define American culture in the twentieth century and those individuals who might be regarded as the architects of the American consciousness. Walt Disney was certainly one of those forces and one of those architects. His visual sensibility is arguably one of the two most important in the last century, along with Picasso's, yet Picasso has received dozens of biographies and Walt Disney had, when I began, not received a single full-scale, fully-annotated biography. I wanted to fill that gap in our cultural studies. I thought that if one could understand Walt Disney, one could go a long way to understanding American popular culture.

Q: One thing that strikes you when reading the book is that Walt Disney never had any money. With all his success how is that possible?
A: It is astonishing that Walt Disney was always--and I do mean always--in dire financial straits until the opening of Disneyland. The primary reason wasn't that his cartoons weren't making money, because they were--at least until the war in Europe when the loss of that market meant disaster for the features. But even as they were making money, the studio was losing money because Walt was constitutionally incapable of cutting corners, enforcing economies, laying off staff. The only thing about which Walt Disney cared was quality. He thought that quality was the way to maintain his preeminence, though quality also had the psychological advantage of letting him perfect his world. The problem was that quality was expensive. To cite just one example, Walt spent more than a hundred thousand dollars setting up a training program for would-be animators, though even then the return was small because Walt was so picky that very few of the candidates actually qualified to work at the studio. Money meant very little to Walt Disney. It was only a means to an end, never an end in itself.

Q: When did Walt first conceive of the idea for Disneyland and what were the initial reactions to the idea?
A: It is very difficult to determine exactly when Walt hatched the idea for Disneyland, though he seems to have been thinking about it for a long time, at least since the early 1930s. Certainly by the time he was taking his daughters, Diane and Sharon, to amusement parks on Sunday afternoons in the late 1940s, he had formulated the idea to establish a park that was clean and wholesome and where parents wouldn't be afraid to take their children. The original plan was to build the park on a plot adjacent to the studio in Burbank, where there would be a train, a town square, an Indian village and kiddieland rides, but as Walt's ideas expanded, so did the need for a bigger plot. As for the reactions to his idea, Roy was initially reluctant, as usual, and Walt's wife, Lillian, was firmly opposed, though she had also been opposed to his making Snow White. Still, Walt exaggerated the opposition as a way, I think of elevating his own foresight and determination. In fact, as the plan grew closer to realization, corporations sought to be included as lessees, and even banks, that had been skeptical, became more receptive. When the park opened, it was an instant success.

Q: What do you think has been Walt's most lasting impact/legacy on American culture?
A: One could answer this question in a dozen different ways depending on one's priorities, but I think his largest bequest is a matter of the American mind. Walt Disney helped change the national consciousness. He got people to believe in the power of wish fulfillment--in their own ability to impose their wills on a recalcitrant reality. That's what Walt Disney did all his life. He managed to replace reality with his illusions--what some people now refer to disparagingly as Disneyfication. He sold us on the idea of control because Walt Disney was himself a master of control. We see the results everywhere--from film to theme parks to virtual reality to virtual politics.


You Don't Know Disney: 10 Things That May Surprise You

1. He is not frozen. His body was cremated, and his ashes are interred at the Forest Lawn Cemetery in Glendale, California, near his studio.
2. Mickey Mouse's original name allegedly was Mortimer but Disney's wife Lillian objected because she thought it too "sissified."
3. Some of the names originally considered for the dwarfs in Snow White were: Deafy, Dirty, Awful, Blabby, Burpy, Gabby, Puffy, Stuffy, Nifty, Tubby, Biggo Ego, Flabby, Jaunty, Baldy, Lazy, Dizzy, Cranky and Chesty.
4. Walt Disney suffered a nervous breakdown in 1931 and descended into depression after the war, concentrating his attention on model trains rather than on motion pictures.
5.Fantasia was the result of a chance meeting between Walt Disney and symphony conductor Leopold Stokowski at Chasen's restaurant.
6. During World War II the Disney studio became a war factory with well over 90% of its production in the service of government training, education and propaganda films.
7. The studio stopped production for six months on Pinocchio because Walt felt the title character wasn't likable enough. During this time he devised the idea of introducing Jiminy Cricket as Pinocchio's conscience.
8. Walt Disney received more Academy Awards than any other individual--32.
9. Disney modeled Mickey Mouse on Charlie Chaplin and that Chaplin later assisted the Disneys by loaning them his financial books so they could determine what kind of proceeds they should be getting from their distributor on Snow White.
10. MGM head Louis B. Mayer once rejected the opportunity to distribute Mickey Mouse cartoons shortly after Walt had invented the character because Mayer said that pregnant women would be frightened by a giant mouse on screen.





Customer Reviews
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars

5 out of 5 starsOne of my favorites reads of the last year!
As a life-long fan of all things Disney, I was delighted to read this book and found it to be extremely well-written and despite so many names, dates, and details it was an easy, enjoyable read and I couldn't stand to put it down in anticipation of getting to my favorite periods in Walt's life - his development of the parks and EPCOT. Having read the book, I will have so much more insight into the parks and pictures now.

My only frustration with the book was its pointless use of very obscure words, some of which were not even to be found in the dictionary. Certainly nothing to keep me from recommending it to others though.



5 out of 5 starsWALT'S WORLD -Not always living the dream!
We talk about someone as being in their own world -well if there was ever a person who spent most of their life in their own private world it's Walt Disney. Just looking at the reviews for this one book on him, you can see just how divided people are. To this day, Walt is held in the same reverance as a saint. A perfect man who never did anything wrong or hurt anyone. So when any author let alone Neal Gabler, tries to flesh out the man beyond his carefully crafted immaculate image -well it's seen as something unholy and something they used to call "un-american".

Neal Gabler's book is quite a defining work, as researched and written. Gabler had the backing of Walt's immediate relatives namely Dianne Disney Miller (Walt's oldest and only biological daughter) and her husband Ron Miller. Now not to jump too far ahead, there is a complete dividing rift between Walt's side of the family and his brother Roy. That said, well you'll find that out in the book, but Dianne disowned Gabler for not painting her father as a complete saint. You have to remember of course, that she saw and grew up with a man who was her loving and devoted father.
He raised her as a princess with a life of great wealth and privilege. She didn't have to work for him, like her husband Ron Miller. Walt Disney never praised any of his artists or employees and he certainly didn't believe in giving due credit either. There was only one single shining star at the Disney studio -and it wasn't Mickey Mouse!

Walt Disney was unique in that as one of his animator's once said -"He had a genius for using someone elses genius." You'll discover that early on in the book, when you read about Ub Iwerks -the "hand" behind the mouse. When you see the famed "nine old men" on various DVD's and documentaries talking about Walt, it's all about praise and inspiration.
But in private, that is talking with an author, you get to hear the real story, warts and all. Every great person has a real story and Walt Disney is a great man. But we don't have to have revisionist and edited history to remind us of that. No other Hollywood studio keeps it's one and only star and principle asset, so wrapped in devine illusion and mythology. They even delete the names of prominent and skilled artists who struck the studio in the 1941 strike. The studio has even fallen victim to political correctness, by deleting all mention of "Song Of The South", let alone having pulled it from US distribution for the last twenty years.

The more you know about someone or something the better, but only if there's room for discussion and not a dictatorial public relations campaign style reference. Gabler's book is a good read and he likes and admires Walt Disney -he just also happens to point out, that he did have a lot of other geniuses around to help him become and stay such an ever illuminant star!



5 out of 5 starsTHE BEST BIOGRAPHY OF WALT
I believe this is the best ever, definitive biography of Walt Disney. All I can say is that I could not put it down and just wanted to read more and more.
Mr. Gabler did such an excellent job. I've always loved Walt Disney and this book is so insightful into the life and mind of a tried and true genius.



1 out of 5 starsWhat Would Walt Do? Not read this book, that's for sure!
Where to begin? How about a book about Walt Disney that devotes more pages to an internecine union fracas in the 1930's than to the creation of Disneyland? The author, Neal Gabler, simply fails, in my opinion, to understand Disney's peculiar genius. Here's a spoiler for you, at the end of the book, Gabler says that Disney only attained perfection in death. What! Geez! What pretentious drivel. I am absolutely convinced that Gabler's research never involved walking through Disneyland or even for a moment imagining himself in Walt Disney's shoes. Someone with such a lack of imagination should NOT be writing a biography about the King of Imagination...



4 out of 5 starsAwesome Book but Glosses Over the 50s and 60s
This book is a fantastic read for anyone who is a fan of Disney and wants to learn the real story. I had just one complaint: the book concentrates on the 1930s and 1940s. The book rushes through the 1950s and there's barely any in-depth discussion of the 1960s. The author would do well to go back and write another 100 pages.


Related Categories:Similar Items

WALT DISNEY: AN AMERICAN ORIGINAL

The Animated Man: A Life of Walt Disney

How to Be Like Walt: Capturing the Disney Magic Every Day of Your Life

Walt - The Man Behind the Myth

Walt Disney's Imagineering Legends and the Genesis of the Disney Theme Park
More Similar Items...

Books
 Comics
  Comic Strips
  How to Draw Comics
  How to Draw Manga

 Graphic Novels
  AiT/Planet Lar
  Alternative Comics
  Archie Comics
  Avatar Press
  DC Comics
    Batman
    Justice League
    Superman
  Dark Horse Comics
    Hellboy
    Sin City
    Star Wars
  Drawn & Quarterly
  Devil's Due Publishing
  Dreamwave
  Fantagraphics Books
  Gemstone/Gladstone
  IDW Publishing
  Image Comics
  Kitchen Sink Press
  Marvel Comics
    Fantastic Four
    Spider-Man
    Wolverine
    X-Men
  Oni Press
  SLG/Slave Labor
  TwoMorrows
  Top Shelf Productions

 Manga
  ADV Manga
  Antarctic Press
  Central Park Media
  Digital Manga
  Gutsoon
  TokyoPop
  Viz Communications

 Books
  Animation
  Antiques & Collectibles
  Art Instruction & Ref.
  Art Reference
  Arts
  Business
  Cartooning
  Children's
  Computer Graphics
  Computers & Internet
  Digital Business
  Drawing (general)
  Entertainment
  Entrepreneurship
  Figure Drawing
  Games
  Graphic Design
  Horror
  Humor
  Literature & Fiction
  Movies
  Music
  Mystery & Thrillers
  Nonfiction
  Photography
  Pop Culture Collectibles
  Popular Culture
  Publishing & Books
  Reference
  Role Playing & Fantasy
  Sci-Fi & Fantasy
  Screenwriting Film
  Screenwriting TV
  Sketchbooks/Journals
  Stationary
  Teens
  Television
  Toys
  Video Games
  Writing

 Calendars


WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Shop



World Famous Comics Network
World Famous Comics Community
ComicsCommunity.com
Comic Book Classifieds
ComicBookClassifieds.com
SketchCards.com
SketchCards.com

GO SHOPPING >>

© 1995 - 2009 World Famous Comics. All rights reserved. All other © & ™ belong to their respective owners.
Advertiser Info . Terms of Use . Privacy Policy . Contact Info
World Famous Comics Network