Winsor McCay(1871-1934)
- Writer
- Director
- Producer
Like many pioneers, the work of 'Winsor McCay' has been largely
superseded by successors such as Walt Disney and Max Fleischer but he more than
earns a place in film history for being the American cinema's first
great cartoon animator. He started out as a newspaper cartoonist,
achieving a national reputation for his strips 'Little Nemo in
Slumberland' and 'Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend'. Inspired by his son's
flick-books, he spent four years and produced four thousand individual
drawings in making his first animated cartoon 'Little Nemo', completing
it in 1911. But his biggest cartoon success was 'Gertie the Dinosaur'
(1913), which was the centrepiece of a vaudeville act in which the live
McCay would interact with his cartoon character. For this, he
single-handedly produced ten thousand individual drawings, laboriously
re-drawing the background every time. It is often wrongly cited as the
first animated cartoon, but it was certainly the first successful one,
and influenced dozens of imitators. His 1918 production 'The Sinking of
the Lusitania' was even more ambitious: comprising 25,000 drawings, it
was the first feature-length American cartoon, and the second one made
anywhere. He retired from film-making in the 1920s, but would
subsequently describe himself as "the creator of animated cartoons".
This honour, strictly speaking, belongs to the Frenchman Emile Cohl -
but McCay was certainly the first to bring them to a wide
audience.