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I'm not entirely sure but the rabbit may have been animated by Eric Larsen who was known for animating cute little animals, but it has been confirmed that all of Goofy's scenes in this cartoon were done by Art Babbitt.
Cartoon_central said:
I'm not entirely sure but the rabbit may have been animated by Eric Larsen who was known for animating cute little animals, but it has been confirmed that all of Goofy's scenes in this cartoon were done by Art Babbitt.
Can you post the confirmation? I know it has been assumed for a long time that all Goofy's scenes were done by Babbitt, but I haven't found any /actual/ confirmation about it.
Ashita said:
Can you post the confirmation? I know it has been assumed for a long time that all Goofy's scenes were done by Babbitt, but I haven't found any /actual/ confirmation about it.
Here it is: Jack Kinney wrote:
”Art had won the courtcase with Disney. He came back to the studio and was assigned to work on my new Goofys. He demanded [a Goofy with] shoulders and five fingers, because otherwise he could not use the live action he always shot of Pinto Colvig, I gave him a whole Goofy to do as his very own “The Baggage Buster” That would keep him peaceful for awhile. And in the meantime I could make two, three or four Goofys without having him f**k them up”
okay, here is more insight about Babbit's work on Baggage Buster: "Babbitt animated all of Goofy in the latter cartoon [BB], over a span of about four months in 1940. He shot live action as an aid to his animation, but it turned into a crutch—the animation has a deadly literalness. Goofy's proportions are distinctly human, and there's very little caricature in the drawing or the movement."