My Reaction That Frank Thomas Died In September 8, 2004
Oh, dear! Frank Thomas died in September 8, 2004. In 1934, he joined Walt Disney Studios and quickly rose through the artistic ranks. He did his first animation for the short "Mickey's Elephant (1936)" and another Mickey Mouse short, "The Brave Little Trailer (1938)". Although he did noteworthy animation in various shorts, he is primarily known for his work on the Disney features, starting with his animation of the seven dwarfs in "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)" he shared the animation of the title characters in "Pinocchio (1940)" and "Bambi (1942)". He created such memorable characters as the wicked stepmother, Lady Tremaine in "Cinderella (1950)", The Queen of Hearts in "Alice in Wonderland (1951)", Captain Hook in "Peter Pan (1953)", the title characters in "Lady and the Tramp (1955)" and the three Good Fairies in "Sleeping Beauty (1959)". His later work included "One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961)", "The Sword in the Stone (1961)", "The Jungle Book (1967)", "The Aristocats (1970)", "Robin Hood (1973)", "The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977)", "The Rescuers (1977)" and "The Fox and the Hound (1981)". After retiring from the studio in 1978, he with Co-Disney animator and his friend Ollie Johnston wrote four books, "Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life (1981)", "Too Funny For Words (1987)", "Walt Disney's Bambi: The Story and the Film (1990)" and "The Disney Villain (1993)". Because he died quietly at his home in La Cañada Flintridge, three days after his 92nd birthday and he is no longer with us anymore since 18 years ago. R.I.P., Frank.
Clips/Years/Companies:
SpongeBob SquarePants (Model Sponge; @1999- Nickelodeon)
Please, NO rude comments and/or dislikes.
I OWN NOTHING!