Limited Animation...Unlimited Imagination

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Written by Bill BurnettCreative DirectorHanna-Barbera Cartoons, Inc. 1995

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LIMITED ANIMATION...UNLIMITED IMAGINATIONOver the years, Ive occasionally heard Hanna-Barbera criticized for cheapening the art of cartoons by inventing a technique for television called limited animation. Heres the true story: When theatrical cartoons were on deaths door, William Hanna and Joseph Barbera single-handedly (or, rather, double-handily) rescued cartoons from oblivion. As a cartoon blues man might say, If it wasnt for limited animation, we

wouldnt have no animation at all. Seven Oscars werent enough. In 1957 Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera were veteran cartoon directors with over forty years experience between them. These two men had created the cartoon cat and mouse team, Tom & Jerry. (Thats tantamount to having invented Abbot & Costello.) They had won seven Oscars with Tom & Jerry, more than anybody else in cartoon history. But in the mid fifties none of that mattered anymore. Television had arrived. The theatrical market for cartoons had dried up. And MGM, where Hanna and Barbera had risen to the rank of executive producers, suddenly closed up shop without warning. Overnight, Bill and Joe found themselves out of work, along with virtually all of their cartoon colleagues in Hollywood. Never say die. But these two cartoonists refused to go gently into th-th-th-th-thats all folks. They started a studio, and figured out a way to make cartoons viable for television. You think thats easy? Consider this: The full animation cartoons that Hanna and Barbera made at MGM took six months per seven minute episode, with budgets that often exceeded $60,000. Now they had to create thirty minutes of cartoon material every week, with budgets that were half the size of what they used to spend to make a single short! They had a plan. How did they do it? They called upon the planned animation technique they had developed to test out new Tom & Jerry cartoons at MGM. Instead of making twenty or thirty thousand drawings, a planned or limited cartoon only used 2 or 3 thousand drawings. Now Hanna and Barbera had to make this planned approach work for them on actual cartoons. They adopted the minimalist cartoon style which was becoming popular at the time, with its simple lines and suggested backgrounds, and turned it to their advantage. They made backgrounds that could be used in multiple scenes; cloud formations that worked whether the action was going up, down, or sideways; characters with muzzles so only their mouths had to be animated; characters that blinked a lot, to enhance the illusion of motion. Shooting stars. And to keep the entertainment value of their TV cartoons high, Hanna and Barbera turned up the burners on their imaginations. With Tom & Jerry they had worked with the same characters over and over, dreaming up different cat and mouse gags each time. Now these men in their late forties responded to the challenge of their careers by bringing out an avalanche of vivid, hilarious, new cartoon stars and stories. Ruff & Reddy, Pixie & Dixie, Huckleberry Hound, Yogi Bear, Quick Draw McGraw

(and his alter ego El Kabong), Topcat, Magilla Gorilla, Snagglepuss, Scooby Doo, The Jetsons, Jonny Quest, Space Ghost ...the list goes on and on. (Oh, and lets not forget the most successful television cartoon team of all time, The Flintstones.) In the list above Ive barely scratched the surface of what sprang from the imaginations of Bill Hanna, Joe Barbera, and the other great cartoon talents they assembled at their studio in the fifties and sixties. Stories, characters, ingenuity, and a dedication to the cartoon cause. Thats how Hanna-Barbera rescued cartoons from deaths door. Anybody who says different will have to answer to El Kabong! (I wouldnt risk it if I were you.) Bill Burnett Creative Director Hanna-Barbera Cartoons, Inc.