Friday, January 17, 2025

Tom Sito's animation almanac for Jan 17, 2025

 Quiz: What is the difference between a university and a polytechnic university?

 

Yesterday’s Quiz answered below: What do you mean when you refer to something as “small c catholic”?

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History for January 17, 2025

Birthdays: Benjamin Franklin, Max Sennett-1880, Al Capone, Ethan G. Hodell 1883- the inventor of the Tow-Truck, Constantin Stanislavsky, Moira Shearer, Shari Lewis, Vidal Sassoon, Claude Coats, Denny Doyle, Kevin Reynolds, Muhammad Ali, Betty White, Jim Carrey is 63, Michelle Obama is 61, Zooey Deschanel is 45, James Earl Jones, 



animator Genndy Tartakovsky

 

 

1775- Sheridan's Restoration comedy The Rivals premiered at Covent Garden Theater, London. 

 

 

1904- Chekov's The Cherry Orchard opened in St. Petersburg.

 

 

1926- FATS WALLER KIDNAPPED- Harlem Jazz great Fats Waller was in Chicago for a gig. Suddenly several gunmen grabbed him off the street, shoved him into their limo, and drove to the lair of mob boss Al Capone. When they arrived there, the terrified Waller was reassured that it was Big Al’s birthday. All he wanted was for Fats to perform at his party. The bash went on for three days and the joint was really jumpin! After a song Big Al would stuff another $100 bill into a beer mug on his piano. Fats Waller left unharmed, and with a very fat wallet as well, but resolved to go back to Harlem where it was safe.

 

1926- George Burns married Gracie Allen.

 

1929- Happy Birthday Popeye! Elzie Segar was drawing a comic strip for Hearst’s NY Journal called The Thimble Theatre. It featured Olive Oyl, her brother Castor Oyl, and her boyfriend Ham Gravy. In this day’s strip, Ham meets an odd-looking sailor. He was based on a neighbor of Segar’s, Frank Fiegel, a funny little man who liked to get into fights. 


 

1949- The first Volkswagen beetle automobiles arrived in North America. 

 

1949- The Goldbergs, a radio comedy show about a Jewish family in the Bronx, moved to television and became the first true sitcom. The show ended when Mrs. Goldberg was accused by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee of being a Communist.

 

1964- The first Porsche Carrera sports cars arrived in L.A.  

 

1994-The Great Northridge Earthquake rocked Los Angeles. 72 deaths and 20 billion dollars in damage.  It was officially listed as 6.8 on the Richter Scale, that was an average. Many persist that in some areas it was as high as 7.2. The epicenter was in the San Fernando Valley, so the valleys two major industries, animated cartoons and pornography, were temporarily disrupted.

 

2000- A Complete Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton was offered for sale on E-Bay.

 


 

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Tom Sito's Animation Fun Facts for Jan 15, 2025


Birthdays: Dr. Martin Luther King, Moliere, Gamal Abdel Nasser, Cole Younger, Charro, Matthew Brady, drummer Gene Krupa, Lloyd Bridges, Mario Van Peebles, Josef Broyer the mentor of Sigmund Freud, Margaret O’Brien, Aristotle Onassis, Captain Beefheart, Dr. Edward Teller, Regina King is 54, Phyllis Coates, Disney animator-educator Dave Pruiksma 


 

1919- Hollywood celebrities Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin and D.W. Griffith formed United Artists Studio. Newspapers wrote “ The Lunatics have taken over the asylum.”

 

1927- The Dumbarton Bridge carried the first auto traffic across San Francisco Bay.

 

1936-THE DGA- Several top Hollywood directors including Lewis Milestone, Ruben Mamoulian and William Wellman met at King Vidor’s house and pledged $100 dollars each to form the Screen Director’s Guild, later the Director’s Guild of America. It was a risky thing to do, previous attempts to form a director’s union were broken up a threat by the producers of perpetual blacklisting. Final recognition and contracts were signed by President Frank Capra in 1940. One provision insisted on in the contract was that the director’s credit always be the final name in the opening titles before the movie began. And so it remains.

 

1942- THE GREEN LIGHT LETTER. Major League Baseball Commissioner Judge Kennesaw Mountain Landis wrote President Franklin Roosevelt that in light of the Pearl Harbor attack, perhaps big-league play be suspended until the war ended? 
The president responded in what’s known as “the green light letter,” encouraging Landis go ahead with the baseball season.  “I honestly feel that it would be best for the country to keep baseball going,” Roosevelt wrote. “There will be fewer people unemployed, and everybody will work longer hours, and harder than ever before. And that means that they ought to have a chance for recreation, and for taking their minds off their work, even more than before.”
 

1943- Walt Disney released
Education for Death, a wartime short directed by Clyde Geromini and animated principally by Ward Kimball.

 

1960- Walt Disney presents Leslie Nielsen as Revolutionary War hero Francis Marion in the adventure series Swamp Fox. 

 

1961- Berry Gordy of Motown Records signed a new group called The Supremes. 

 

1967- THE FIRST SUPER BOWL- After a decade of professional football conference title games, the AFL and NFL combined to make a single championship game- Vince Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers defeated the Kansas City Chiefs 35-10 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The half-time show was the University of Arizona and Grambling State University marching bands. The telecast was blacked out in LA because the coliseum was not sold out, But if you attached a coat hanger to your rooftop TV antenna you could watch via an out-of-town station like Bakersfield or San Diego. 

 

1974- The first episode of Happy Days premiered with Ron Howard as Richie Cunningham and Henry Winkler as Da Fonz.

 

2009- THE MIRACLE ON THE HUDSON- Capt. Sully Sullenberger safely ditched his disabled airliner in the Hudson River, saving all his passengers. 

 

2021- Wandavision premiered streaming on Disney+

 


 

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Tom Sito's Animation Fun Facts for Jan. 14, 2025


Birthdays: Mark Anthony 82 BC, Dr. Albert Schweitzer, Benedict Arnold, Hal Roach, Richard F. Outcault, Cecil Beaton, John Dos Passos, Lawrence Kasdan, William Bendix, Guy Williams- born Armando Catalano, Andy Rooney, Julian Bond, “Big Daddy” Don Garlits is 94, Steven Soderbergh is 62, LL Cool J, Faye Dunaway is 84, Emily Watson is 58

 

 

1699- The Pilgrims of Salem held a day of fasting and prayer to atone for any people they may have unjustly executed as witches. 

 

 

1831- Victor Hugo’s novel The Hunchback of Notre Dame first published.

 

 

1900- Giacomo Puccini's opera "Tosca" premiere in Rome.

 

1952-The NBC "Today" show debuts with Dave Garroway, Jim Fleming and J. Fred Muggs the chimp.

 

1954- Marilyn Monroe married baseball star Joe DiMaggio.

 

1957- Humphrey Bogart died of esophageal cancer at age 57. When he was buried at Forrest Lawn, wife Lauren Bacall put in with his ashes a solid gold whistle inscribed with the famous line from "To Have and To Have Not"- 'If you ever need me, just whistle.'

 

1964- Hanna- Barbera's ' The Magilla Gorilla' cartoon show.

 

 


1969- At the Academy Awards, Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day won best animated short. It is the last award credited to Walt Disney. Although he had died at the end of 1966, he had greenlit it and worked on it. Woolie Reitherman accepted the award.

 

1972- Norman Lear’s hit TV comedy series Sanford & Son premiered. Starring Red Fox, it was based on the English show Steptoe & Son.  

 

 1974-  Sylvia Holland, British born story/concept artist at Disney on Fantasia/ Make Mine Music, died at age 74.

 

2005- The Cassini-Huygens Probe landed on Saturn’s moon Titan.

 

2016- Actor Alan Rickman passed away at age 69 of pancreatic cancer.

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Sunday, January 12, 2025

Tom Sito's Animation Almanac for Jan 13, 2025


Birthdays: Salmon P. Chase, Horatio Alger-1834, Sophie Tucker, Gwen Verdon, Robert Stack, Charles Nelson Reilly, Rip Taylor, Brandon Tartikoff, Julie Louise Dreyfus is 64, T. Bone Burnett, Patrick Dempsey, Orlando Bloom is 48

 

1854- The modern accordion is patented by Anthony Faas. Polka fans rejoice!

 

 1864- Stephen Foster, the composer of "My Old Kentucky Home" and "Camptown Races" was found dead, a penniless drunk in New York's Bowery slum. In his hand was a piece of paper with the words "Dear friends and gentle hearts... ". A Pennsylvania Yankee, despite writing a lot of music about the South, he only visited it once, to New Orleans in 1852.

 

1895- Oscar Wilde’s play The Ideal Husband, premiered in London.

 

 

1906- The first ad for a radio appeared in an American Science Magazine. It boasted an effective range of over one mile !

 

1910- Dr. Lee Deforest, experimenting with his new radio vacuum tubes broadcast singers from New York's Metropolitan Opera for the first time. The regular Texaco 'Live from the Met' broadcasts wouldn't get going until 1934.

 

1930-   The Mickey Mouse comic strip first appeared in US newspapers. Originally Walt Disney himself wrote them, Ub Iwerks penciled and Winn Smith inked.

 

1939- Col. Jacob Ruppert died, the brewing tycoon and owner of the NY Yankees during their glory years of Babe Ruth, and Lou Gehrig. His will left his millions to a chorus girl Helen Weyant. She said “ they were just friends.”

 

1943- Movie star Frances Farmer was dragged out of a Hollywood hotel in a straightjacket. She screamed Rats! Rats! and listed her occupation on her arrest record as “c**ksucker”. Her career was ruined and she spent years in asylums. But it’s inconclusive whether she had actually suffered mental illness, or it was her mother overreacting to her sullen, temperamental nature.

 

1945- Sergei Prokoviev’s 5th Symphony (Classical) premiered in Moscow.

 


1946- In his comic strip, Dick Tracy first uses his two-way wrist radio. 

 

1947- The comic strip “Steve Canyon”, by Milt Caniff first premiered in newspapers.

 

1957-THE FRISBEE went into production today. Two World War II fighter pilots who met in a German prison camp, Warren Fransconi and Walter Morrison, invented the plastic platter in a San Luis Obisbo home. Originally called Flying Saucers and Pluto’s Platters, they got the name Frisbee when they demonstrated it at Yale University. The students there were used to flipping pie plates at each other from the local Frisbee Pie Company, so when they played with the new disc, they cried “Frisbee, Frisbee!” which seemed to Walter a better name. 

When Walt Morrison died in 2002, his family obeyed his last request, to have his body cremated, his ashes mixed with plastic, and molded into a Frisbee.

 

1958- Actress Jayne Mansfield married weightlifter Mickey Hargitay. Their daughter was Marisa Hargitay.

 

1962- In the wee hours of a rainy night, TV pioneer Ernie Kovacs died when he plowed his Corvair into a power pole at Beverly Glen and Santa Monica Blvd. He was attending a baby shower Billy Widler threw for Milton Berle and his wife. But it was also known that Ernie had a weakness for screwdrivers, vodka and orange juice. At the funeral, the pastor said Ernie wanted his life summed up like this,” "I was born in Trenton, New Jersey in 1919 to a Hungarian couple. I've been smoking cigars ever since."

 

1979- The Young Men’s Christian Association filed a lawsuit against the rock group the Village People over their hit song “YMCA”.  

 

1979- Russian animator Yuri Norstein’s masterpiece Tale of Tales premiered.

 

1985- Carol Wayne, an actress who played sexy blonde roles on comedy shows like Johnny Carson, drowned while swimming in Mexico. She was 41.


Tom Sito's Animation Fun Facts for Jan 12, 2025


Birthdays: Pilgrim leader John Winthrop, Charles Perrault (Mother Goose), John Hancock, Edmund Burke, John Singer Sargent, Jack London, James Farmer the founder of CORE, Herman Goering, Eddie Selzer, "Smokin' Joe" Frazier, Tex Ritter, Martin Agronsky, animator John Sibley, animator Ray Aragon, Howard Stern is 70, Rush Limbaugh, Oliver Platt is 65, Wayne Wang, Tiffany, Kirstie Alley, John Lasseter is 68


John Sibley animation



1928- NY police raid Alfred Knopf publishing offices and seized 852 copies of the novel “The Well of Loneliness” by Radclyffe Hall, because reading it was thought to turn young girls into lesbians.

 

1960-” The Scent of Mystery”- the first film in Smell-O-Vision.

 

 

1965- NBC TV premiered Hullabaloo, a Rock & Roll dance show with lots of mini-skirted go-go dancers. ABC responded with Shindig.

 

1966- Holy Cult Classic! The TV show "Batman" with Adam West and Burt Ward,  premiered.

 

1969- Super Bowl III at the Orange Bowl, Broadway Joe Namath and the underdog NY Jets upset the Baltimore Colts led by the legendary Johnny Unitas 16-7.

 

1971- “ALL IN THE FAMILY” Norman Lear's TV sitcom debuted. Based on a popular British show Till Death Do Us Part, it broke new ground for American sitcoms by frankly discussing working class prejudice, menopause, rape and other taboo subjects. The first show featured the sound of a toilet flushing. The networks were so worried about its explosive content ABC rejected the show twice, and CBS ran the first episodes with a long apologetic disclaimer. Carrol O’Connor, the actor who played Archie Bunker, was so convinced the show would flop, he demanded as part of his contract a round trip plane ticket home. The show ran for 13 years, a bushel of Emmy Awards and made the name Archie Bunker famous.

 

 

1987- No mystery, Agatha Christie died at 88 of natural causes.

 

1995- Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen announced the name of their new partnership would be 'Dreamworks SKG'. Someone in Florida immediately bought the domain name “Dreamworks.com” and waited for their buyout offer.  I heard it was $5,000. 

 

1997-According to Arthur C. Clarkes 1968 book "2001, a Space Odyssey", the HAL-9000 computer was booted up today.

 

2004- Disney animation president David Stainton announced The Florida unit of Walt Disney Feature Animation was shutting down. Originally set up as an attraction at Walt Disney World theme park, they grew into a viable studio in their own right. They created hits like Trail Mixup, Mulan, Lilo & Stitch, and Brother Bear.

 

 

Saturday, January 11, 2025

Tom Sito's Animation almanac for Jan 11, 2025


Birthdays: Roman Emperor Theodosius I, Alexander Hamilton, Gliere, Domenico Ghirlandaio, Harry Selfridge the London department store guy, Rod Taylor, David Wolper, Lyle Lovett, Ben Crenshaw, Naomi Judd, Joan Baez, Stanley Tucci, Disney animator Prez Romanillos, Amanda Peet

 

 

1892- French impressionist painter Paul Gaughin, aged 44, married a 13 year old Tahitian girl named Teha’amana who he called Tehura. His previous marriage to a Danish lady who gave him 5 children had broken up. 

 

1922- Insulin first used to treat diabetes.

 

1934- COMIC BOOKS- Illustrated light fiction stories had been around for decades, and some publishers printed collections of popular newspaper comic strips. This day Major Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson published Issue #1 (February) of Fun Magazine, which featured all original comic stories, including action stories, and took in advertising. The modern comic book is born. A few years later Major Nicholson’s company National Allied Publications would change its name to Detective Comics, DC Comics. They published Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman.

 

 

1949- The first recorded snowfall in Los Angeles.

 

 

1963- A record was released in Britain called “Please, Please Me” recorded by a working class rock & roll band from Liverpool called The Beatles. It was their first hit.

 

1965- Whisky-A-Go-Go, the first Disco opened on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles. Discotecque is French for record library. An earlier Whisky had opened in Chicago. The LA Whisky a Go Go opened with a live band led by Johnny Rivers, featuring a mini-skirted female DJ spinning records between sets from a suspended cage at the right of the stage. That July, the DJ danced during Rivers' set. The audience thought it was part of the act and the concept of Go-Go dancers was born. Groovy!

 

1995- After the Feds de-regulation of media ownership and the seeing the success of the Fox Network, Warner Bros collected up six independent television stations around the US and this day started them off as the WB Network, today called the CW.

 

1999- John Stewart became the anchor of the Daily Show on Comedy Central. 

 

2004- Harvard students Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin, Dustin Moskovitz, and Chris Hughes, registered the domain name Facebook.com. It originally was a way for them and their classmates to rate female students they knew to be, “hot or not”.

 

2013- Disney animated series Sofia the First premiered.

 


 

Friday, January 10, 2025

Tom Sito's Animation Almanac for Jan 10, 2025


Birthdays: Ethan Allen, Marshal Michel Ney, Frank James -Jesse's brother, Francois Poulenc, Ray Bolger (the Scarecrow in the Wizard of Oz), Stephen Ambrose, Sherrill Milnes, Pat Benatar, Sal Mineo, Jim Croce, Rod Stewart, Walter Hill, George Foreman, Linda Lovelace, Roy E Disney Jr, Jermaine Clement of Flight of the Concords is 51

 

 

1863-The world's first Subway Train line opened in London at Baker's Street Station.

 

1888-date of LOUIS LePRINCE's claim of a patent on Motion Pictures, predating Edison 1893 and the Lumiere Brothers-1895. LePrince even had as proof a film he shot of his mother, who had died in 1887. Despite this, LePrince could get no one to take him seriously.  One day he boarded a train from Dijon to Paris and disappeared from the face of the Earth. 

 

 

1910- Joyce Clyde Hall with two shoeboxes full of picture postcards started the company that became Hallmark Cards.

 

1924- Columbia Pictures created, ruled by Harry Cohn, whose motto was "I don't get ulcers, I give them!"

 

1927- Fritz Lang’s silent Metropolis premiered. Screenplay by his wife/collaborator Thea von Harbou. Despite the opinion of H.G. Wells in the London Times, “ Foolishness, cliche’, platitude and muddlement.” It is considered a classic of film science fiction. 

 

1929- Herge’s comic character Tin Tin first appeared in a Belgian newspaper XXe Siecle. Tintin’s dog Snowy, in French Milou, he named for his girlfriend. 

 

1939- Science fiction writer Isaac Asimov sold his first story to Amazing Stories Magazine "Marooned off Vesta".

 

 

1941- The comedy play ARSENIC AND OLD LACE opened on Broadway.  Playwright Joseph Kesselring originally wrote it as a drama based on true events, until he was advised - and, wisely so - to turn it into a dark comedy instead, guaranteeing a larger audience. He made the title a joke on a popular turn of the century romance novel, Lavender and Old Lace. When someone joked that Mortimer’s evil brother looked like Boris Karloff, the character was indeed played by famous horror movie star Boris Karloff. He was an investor in the play. When buying the movie rights Warner Bros agreed to wait until the play ended its theatrical run. They thought plays usually are done in a few months so they had Frank Capra make it into a classic screwball comedy with Cary Grant and Raymond Massey. The play Arsenic and Old Lace ran on Broadway for three years, until 1944. Then Warner Bros could finally release the movie. 

 


1947- Happy Birthday Kitty Litter!  Returned WWII veteran Ed Lowe was working at his dad’s sand and gravel pit in Michigan. This day a neighbor asked if she could borrow some sand for her cat to do his business in. This gave Lowe an idea to use a clay mineral mixture called Fuller’s Earth. It absorbs twice its weight in water and is odorless. He invented Kitty Litter, and made millions.

 

1949- For years the recording industry had been working on ways to improve the 78 RPM record –RPM means Rotations Per Minute. RCA records announced the invention of the 45 RPM record. Columbia (CBS) had announced the LP (Long Playing) 33 rpm record and originally offered to share the technology but RCA (NBC) was having none of it. But the 33 stored more music and could use old 78 rpm turntables adapted so the 45 soon became a vehicle for hit singles.

 

1958- Jerry Lee Lewis single "Great Balls of Fire" topped the pop charts.

 

1958- GET MARRIED, OR ELSE!  Blond actress Kim Novak had starred in Hitchcock’s Vertigo and was touted as the new Marilyn Monroe. In 1957 she began dating black entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. Davis was a member of Sinatra’s Ratpack and he challenged America’s racial barriers with his great talent. But this high profile interracial match was just too much for Hollywood society to handle. Columbia’s studio head Harry Cohn said of Novak-"That fat Polack Bitch! How could she do this to me? " 

Legend has it Cohn called the Chicago Mafia and put a contract out on Sammy Davis. L.A. mobster Mickey Cohen told Davis’ father that if Sammy didn’t marry a black girl in 24 hours, he would have his legs broken, and his remaining good eye poked out.  

      On this day in Las Vegas’ Sands Hotel, Sammy Davis Jr. married black actress Loray White. Harry Belafonte was the best man. The couple honeymooned separately and divorced 6 months later. But the affair with Novak was over and Harry Cohn died of a heart attack the same year. In 1960 Sammy Davis married blonde German actress May Britt.

 

1961- Writer Dashell Hammett died.

 

1971-Stanford Calderwood, the president of WGBH Boston, got a good reaction for a season of a British drama he ran on American TV called The Forsythe Saga. He soon  returned from a trip to England having purchased a bushel of BBC dramas. Period pieces, Called “Frock Dramas”. This day Masterpiece Theater debuted on US TV with host Alastair Cooke. The first show was the BBC series The First Churchills. Elizabeth R, I Claudius, Poldark and Upstairs Downstairs followed. These shows were so popular that for awhile people thought PBS meant Preferably British Shows. 

 

1972- The liner Queen Elizabeth 1, on her retirement journey to the scrap yard, mysteriously caught fire and sank in Hong Kong harbor. 

 

1992- The GREAT RUBBER DUCKY DISASTER- A North Pacific storm causes a ship to lose 29,000 plastic rubber duck toys overboard. They joined 61,000 Nike sneakers already bobbing in the water from a similar maritime accident. Scientists used the rubber ducky migration to track Pacific Ocean currents around Alaska.

 

1999- HBO’s The Sopranos premiered. Howyadoin..?

 

2000- AOL and Time Warner announced a $165 billion dollar merger that made it the world’s largest media company. Considered now one of the worst business deals in history, the company lost $80 billion in one year. The deal almost sank both companies, uprooted both chairmen, and they detached permanently in 2009. Today Warner Bros is merged with Discovery with equally chaotic results.

 

2004- NY based writer and actor Spaulding Gray spent the day taking his kids to the movies. They saw Tim Burton’s movie Big Fish. Gray put his kids into a taxi home and from the Staten Island Ferry Terminal, called his wife to say he would be home soon and that he loved her. Then he took the ferry, jumped into the harbor and drowned himself in New York Harbor. He had waged a long battle with depression and his mother had commit suicide. His body did not resurface until March 9.