Robert McKimson(1910-1977)
- Director
- Animation Department
- Writer
Robert McKimson was born on October 13, 1910. He started his career in
animation, along with many others, as an artist for Walt Disney's
Oswald the Rabbit in 1928. After Disney went to produce Mickey Mouse
cartoons, Hugh Harman & Rudolph Ising went to Warner Brothers to direct
and co-produce cartoon shorts, along with producer Leon Schlesinger.
McKimson was one of the many artists who tagged along. During his
career at Warner Brothers, Robert McKimson developed into one of the
most gifted artists ever. In fact, he was an animator under nearly all
the major WB directors. They include Hugh Harman & Rudolph Ising
(1930-1933), Friz Freleng (1933-1937), Frank Tashlin (1937-1938), Chuck
Jones (1938-1940), Tex Avery (1940-1941), and Bob Clampett (1942-1946;
animating under Clampett's supervision was when McKimson's drawing
talents truly began to blossom). Robert McKimson was in part
responsible for developing Bugs Bunny's popularity during the 1940's.
Between 1942 & 1943, Bob Clampett gave a Bugs Bunny modeling assignment
to McKimson, which soon became the basic Bugs Bunny model for all
Warner Brothers animators. The models are still in use for WB animators
of today. He also designed the familiar design in which Bugs Bunny
leans on a tree while eating a carrot, which was originally on display
at a Los Angeles department store for a holiday sale. McKimson finally
got his chance to direct in 1943, in the WWII short, "Return of Mr.
Hook, The". His premiere short, "Daffy Doodles", was released in 1946.
His earlier supervising efforts was influenced by none other than Bob
Clampett, the last director he worked for. During his earlier directing
efforts, Robert McKimson's brother, Charles McKimson, became his
leading animator, who had previously been working at Warner Brothers as
an animator under Tex Avery's supervision. Thomas McKimson, Robert's
second brother, was also an animator for Warner Brothers, mainly under
Bob Clampett's supervision; he was also a background & layout artist
for Clampett's later WB cartoons. Drawing had apparently ran in the
McKimson family. As director, Robert McKimson was responsible for the
creation of such WB characters as Foghorn Leghorn, Barnyard Dog,
Hippity Hopper, Bobo the Elephant, Tasmanian Devil, Sylvester Jr., and
Speedy Gonzales, and helped develop the personality of other characters
like Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, and Elmer Fudd. He only
directed two Oscar-nominated toons; "Walky Talky Hawky" (1946), and
"Tobassco Road" (1957). Robert McKimson's supervising success was
partially because of the writing efforts of Warren Foster. However,
when Foster was 'permanently' placed under Friz Freleng's writing unit
in 1956, McKimson's writing unit was replaced by Tedd Pierce. That was
when his supervising talents began to slip. In addition, he lost all
his original animators (not nearly having the same dramatic effects for
the other Warner Brother directors), including Charles McKimson. Robert
did some of the animating under his supervision for a while between
1955 & 1956, until he got a new team of directors, which completely
changed his stylization. Along with the change of writers & artists,
Robert McKimson soon developed a 'squarer style', which from that point
on scarred his cartooning career as his quality began to fall behind
the other WB directors. The close-up of the original Warner Brothers'
Cartoon Studio in 1963 was when Robert McKimson's career started to hit
rock bottom. When the original WB Cartoon Studio closed, Friz Freleng
quickly teamed up with David DePatie to form DePatie-Freleng
Enterprises, in hopes of creating more WB cartoons. McKimson naturally
tagged along, directing most of the less popular toon shorts of the
1960's, even the ones under Billy Hendrick's WB production in the
latter of the 60's after DePatie-Freleng left WB in 1967. After the
Warner Brothers cartoons' second diminishment in 1970, McKimson
returned to DePatie-Freleng Enterprises to direct some Pink Panther
cartoons. At that point, the careers of a lot of the remaining
cartoonists, whom were once well-known during the 40's & 50's, had been
detracted as well. In 1977, on his 66th birthday, McKimson had a
doctor's appointment, when he was listed in good health. He decided to
celebrate that evening. Unfortunately, while he was dining at a Burbank
restaurant with Friz Freleng and other colleagues, Robert McKimson died
of a massive heart attack (known as coronary). This came only years
before his cartoons became part of the Warner Brothers' 'Looney Tunes
renaissance' of the 1980's. Robert McKimson's cartooning career since
its decline in the early 1960's, and his relatively early death in 1977
had mostly been pushed in the background from true recognition. But
among many of today's cartoonists, McKimson still remains one of the
most influential artists ever.