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Monday, December 9, 2013

Animated News: Big changes for 'Women in Animation'

At the end of October, Women in Animation (WiA) elected two new co-presidents: Margaret Dean and Kristy Scanlan. Additionally, WiA has seen the creation of a new executive committee, board of directors, and advisory committee. The following Animation Magazine news article summarizes the changes along with more info about the new co-Presidents, committee members, and board of directors. Cartoon Brew has also posted an article about this change to WiA that's worth a look.

Additionally, WiA has relaunched their website (womeninanimation.org). I can verify that the new website makes it much easier to join WiA and renew your membership. However, it also lists upcoming events, links to chapters of WiA outside of the main Los Angeles branch, as well as press releases and articles on WiA.

For those interested in learning more about the history of Women in Animation, a non-profit organization started by Rita Street, Executive Producer and President of Radar Cartoons, I encourge you to read the following article: "Women In Animation: Changing the World: Person by Person, Cel by Cel" written by Rita Street for Animation World Magazine Vol 1, Issue 2 published back in May 1996. The article starts on page 23 in the PDF magazine.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Animated News: Joanna Quinn animates ident for the 2013 Bradford Animation Festival

Back in November, Thomas Coleman posted on Skwigly Animation Magazine, and Neil Emmett posted on Cartoon Brew, that Joanna Quinn has returned with Beryl, one of the recurring characters from her 1986 short film 'Girls Night Out'. This time, Beryl is baking an animation cake for the 2013 Bradford Animation Festival's ident film. If you look closely at the ingredients, you can see some familiar characters--most of whom are listed in Mr. Emmett's and Mr. Coleman's posts.

For more information on Joanna Quinn's work and career, visit her webpage 'Beryl Productions International Ltd' which she shares with business partner Les Mills.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Animated News: Rebecca Sugar and 'Steven Universe'

Just in case you missed it:

According to Animation Magazine, the 'Steven Universe' premiere on November 4th became the network's "most watched series premiere to date in 2013 among kids 6-11 and boys 6-11...".

You can read the entire article here. on Animation Magazine's website where they summarize the show's Nielsen ratings and discuss a little bit about Rebecca Sugar's show.

Additionally, Cartoon Brew has an article on Rebecca Sugar, Cartoon Network's "First Solo Woman Show Creator" which can be read on their website at the following link.

To read more about her show, Cartoon Brew has an article that discusses it here, and they are doing recaps of each episode every Tuesday (Steven Universe screens on Cartoon Network Monday nights at 8 p.m.

I'm not going to wade into the discussion about how it took CN twenty years to greenlight a show by a woman creator. I'm sure that there are others who could discuss the issue far better than I. However, I do want to draw attention to a comment that Amid Amidi made in his Cartoon Brew post on October 5th, 2012:

"Sugar is also among the new generation of creators who established a reputation online before attracting the attention of the animation industry. Contrast this to the path of animation creators past (Seth MacFarlane, Genndy Tartakovsky, John Kricfalusi) when artists remained largely anonymous to the public before being made famous by their shows. It’s a turning point in animation culture—artists no longer need the reach of a network to establish a fanbase, and further, networks now mostly react to trending artists instead of launch new careers."

In my personal opinion, Ms. Sugar's success is just more evidence that with the cost of tools decreasing, the proliferation of schools teaching animation skills and software, and the opportunity to reach a world-wide audience for pennies via the Internet, there has never been a better time for women to create animated films and share with the world their unique voice, stories, and perspectives. Hopefully, we'll see more shows with a woman at the helm sooner rather than later.

The thing that I picked up on immediately in the pilot--and found very refreshing--is the love for their little brother that the three older sisters display on the show. In the pilot episodes, Steven was not treated like the typical annoying kid brother who always gets in the way. Rather, the way in which Ms. Sugar is writing the show portrays Steven and his sisters in a far less cynical light and with a warmth and humanity that is really missing from television. These four characters seem more like a family as opposed to a series of random individuals who backstab each other when it suits their own purposes. I do hope that Ms. Sugar continues this theme of being siblings without the sibling rivalry as the series progresses. We have enough snarky, selfish characters on television as it is.

One last note: Cartoon Network has released the Preview and first episode of "Steven Universe" for free on iTunes if you'd like to see what the show's all about for yourself.

* image linked to from Animation Magazine's article:
"Steven Universe Premiere Reaches the Stars", November 7, 2013.
http://www.animationmagazine.net/tv/steven-universe-premiere-reaches-stars/

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Animated News: Rocky, Bullwinkle, and June Foray

Back on November 4th, it was reported on Animation Magazine that June Foray will be voice acting for an 'Rocky & Bullwinkle' short film. Ms. Foray will be reprising her role as Rocket J. Squirrel and the short will screen before Dreamworks Animation SKG's film 'Mr. Peabody and Sherman'.

The entire article can be read on the Animation Magazine website.

* image linked to from Animation Magazine's article:
 "June Foray Voices New Rocky & Bullwinkle Short", November 4, 2013.
http://www.animationmagazine.net/features/june-foray-voices-new-rocky-bullwinkle-short/

Monday, November 18, 2013

"MacPherson" by Martine Chartrand

It's been a busy fall for Women in Animation. So over the next week, I'm going to try to catch up with as much news as possible. Sorry about the data dump, but I've been really busy!

To start out, from now until the end of November, as part of their Get Animated program, the National Film Board of Canada is streaming Martine Chartrand's award winning paint-on-glass animation "MacPherson" for free.

MacPherson tells a story of the friendship between Félix Leclerc and Frank Randolph Macpherson.

According to the NFB's synopsis: "An inveterate jazz fan, Macpherson inspired Leclerc, who wrote a song about the log drives and entitled it “MacPherson” in honour of his friend."

The video can be viewed at on the NFB website: "http://www.nfb.ca/getanimated/macpherson_en/"

and the trailer can be viewed below:



MacPherson will be availble online for free viewing until November 30th.

MacPherson is currently available for Home and Classroom use on the NFB website for $3.95 CAD for an SD version and $5.95 for an HD version at the following link: http://www.nfb.ca/film/macpherson_fr/download/.

* Image used in this post copyright National Film Board of Canada