Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Creator / RichardWilliams

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/richard_williams.jpeg]]
2
3->''"It's a craft, isn't it? A proper craft. And craft can be an art."''
4-->-- '''Richard Williams''' about animation
5
6Richard Edmund Williams (19 March 1933 – 16 August 2019) was a prominent Canadian-British artist and animator born in Toronto. One of the most respected animators who ever lived, he was famous for his [[AuthorAppeal exhaustive, silky smooth, seamless animation]] and his [[ShownTheirWork vast knowledge of classical animation techniques]], which he had learned from his predecessors and later shared with others interested in learning the medium.
7
8Williams got his start as a commercial illustrator in his teens and later made a couple of independent short films, including ''WesternAnimation/TheLittleIsland'' and ''Love Me, Love Me, Love Me.'' He later had the pleasure of meeting and training under veterans from UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation such as Creator/DisneysNineOldMen, as well as Warner Bros. animator [[UsefulNotes/NoteworthyLooneyTunesStaff Ken Harris]] and industry drifter Creator/GrimNatwick. Already a skilled draftsman, Williams' animation skills flourished under their guidance. Harris and Natwick would later migrate to his London-based studio.
9
10In the early 1960s, Williams worked at George Dunning's animation studio TV Cartoons Ltd. (TVC) in London, animating television commercials. Shortly thereafter, he founded his own company, Richard Williams Studios, which produced several acclaimed commercials, {{artistic title}}s and {{animated credits opening}}s, including ''Film/WhatsNewPussycat'' and ''Film/TheReturnOfThePinkPanther'', the latter of which is considered the best of its series.
11
12In 1971, Williams directed an acclaimed, Creator/ChuckJones-produced AnimatedAdaptation of ''Literature/AChristmasCarol'', which earned him his first UsefulNotes/AcademyAward. Six years later he had his feature directorial debut with ''WesternAnimation/RaggedyAnnAndAndyAMusicalAdventure'', a [[DerangedAnimation truly bonkers]] movie created by a staff consisting of many of Williams' mentors, including Warner Bros. animators Art Babbitt, Emery Hawkins, and Gerry Chiniquy and MGM animator Irv Spence, along with such future-famous animators as Creator/EricGoldberg and Tom Sito.
13
14Williams achieved his biggest mainstream success in 1988 as the animation director of ''Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit'', bringing to life ([[RogerRabbitEffect amid live actors]]) over ninety beloved characters from classic Disney, Warner Bros. and MGM cartoons. He also earned both the Best Visual Effects Award ''and'' a Special Achievement Award at the 1989 Oscars.
15
16Throughout his professional career, Williams and a core team of artists also worked on a legendarily ambitious project, which was to be not only Williams' masterpiece[[note]] In the traditional sense, ie "The piece you create once you've mastered your medium." [[/note]] but [[EpicMovie a grand artistic display]] of [[StarringSpecialEffects the potential of classical animation]], what Williams described simply as "the greatest animated film ever made": ''WesternAnimation/TheThiefAndTheCobbler''. Williams' studio [[OneForTheMoneyOneForTheArt funneled profits of its many projects to fund bits of the feature]], which were all heavily re-re-re-animated over the better part of nearly thirty years from the '60s to the late '80s to ensure their perfection. Tragically, through a combination of time and money problems, the film was never completed as Williams had intended. After receiving funding from Warner Bros. after the success of ''Roger Rabbit'' but falling short of their enforced deadline (something that Williams had enjoyed the luxury of ignoring while working on the film independently), he and his studio were fired from production and the film was hastily completed without them. All of the animation completed by Williams' studio was later compiled by Garrett Gilchrist and released onto the internet as ''The Recobbled Cut'' in 2015, awing future generations of animators with a glimpse of Williams' ultimate vision.
17
18After the failure of ''Thief,'' Williams' studio closed down and he semi-retired for animation production, largely busying himself with teaching through his acclaimed masterclasses at various animation studios and events. In 2008, he became "artist in residence" at Creator/AardmanAnimations, where he worked on personal projects[[note]]sitting at his prize possession: one of the last remaining animation desks Creator/WaltDisney purchased for his fledgling studio in 1938[[/note]] and became a fixture who shared ideas and gave tips to younger animators and entertained staff and visitors with a bottomless well of stories from his life and career.
19
20Outside of the films he's created, Williams' greatest claim to fame is probably his instructional book ''Literature/TheAnimatorsSurvivalKit'', a culmination of the countless tips and tricks he had learned from his experiences and studying under many Golden Age animators of note. Since its publication in 2002, it has become widely used as a reliable reference for both animation schools and animators of all skill levels. A 16-DVD set version, featuring clips from his live classes, and a more condensed and affordable app version of the book have both since been released.
21
22In 1999, Williams secretly began work on a new masterpiece project, sardonically titled ''I Hope I Live To Finish This'', a planned series of shorts animated entirely by himself to eventually be linked together into a feature. The first part, ''Prologue'', premiered at Annecy in 2015. That same year, he [[https://twitter.com/RWAnimator joined Twitter]].
23
24Williams continued to write and draw literally up until the day he died, succumbing to kidney cancer at his home in Bristol on the night of August 16, 2019, at the age of 86. He was survived by his fourth wife, Imogen Sutton, who also produced several of his projects, and six children, including his son Alex, who is also an animator, and his daughter Holly Williams-Brock, a painter.
25
26He was no relation to Creator/RobinWilliams, by the way, although [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hk7yxJVI254&list=FLxe61f5GeKWRoTC9YtTt11w&index=6 Robin did present Richard with his Special Achievement Oscar for ''Roger Rabbit'']]. Also not to be confused with Richard Williams, the father of tennis superstars Venus and Serena Williams.
27
28----
29
30[[AC:Films he has been involved with include:]]
31* ''The Wardrobe'' (1958): a lost cartoon he co-directed
32* ''WesternAnimation/TheLittleIsland'' (1958)
33* ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QFjJSG87es The Apple]]'' (1959): credited as a producer
34* ''[[https://www.cartoonbrew.com/classic/a-rare-early-short-by-richard-williams-55948.html Love Me, Love Me, Love Me]]'' (1962)
35* ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W7l_o7LcwYI A Lecture on Man]]'' (1962)
36* ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAAPjA_omzY The Ever-Changing Motor Car]]'' (1965): wrote the screenplay
37* ''Film/WhatsNewPussycat'' (1965): contributed the [[AnimatedCreditsOpening animated sequences]]
38* ''Theatre/AFunnyThingHappenedOnTheWayToTheForum'' (1966): animated the CreativeClosingCredits
39* ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JhzyExlUW5c The Sailor and the Devil]]'' (1967): partially lost cartoon he produced
40* ''Film/CasinoRoyale1967'': contributed the [[AnimatedCreditsOpening animated sequences]]
41* ''Film/TheChargeOfTheLightBrigade'' (1968): contributed the [[AnimatedCreditsOpening animated sequences]]
42* ''Film/PrudenceAndThePill'' (1968): contributed the [[AnimatedCreditsOpening animated sequences]]
43* ''[[WesternAnimation/AChristmasCarol1971 A Christmas Carol]]'' (1971)
44* ''[[Film/MurderOnTheOrientExpress1974 Murder on the Orient Express]]'' (1974): contributed the [[ArtisticTitle montage prologue]]
45* ''Film/TheReturnOfThePinkPanther'' (1975): contributed the [[AnimatedCreditsOpening animated sequences]]
46* ''Film/ThePinkPantherStrikesAgain'' (1976): contributed the [[AnimatedCreditsOpening animated sequences]] as well as the CreativeClosingCredits
47* ''WesternAnimation/RaggedyAnnAndAndyAMusicalAdventure'' (1977)
48* ''Advertising/SupermanVsNickOTeen'' (early 1980's)
49* ''[[ComicStrip/{{Ziggy}} Ziggy's Gift]]'' (1982)
50* ''Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit'' (1988)
51* ''WesternAnimation/TheThiefAndTheCobbler'' (1993, 1995)
52* ''Circus Drawings'' (1965-2010): A short film that Williams based on a series of drawings he made, twelve years after he drew them at a circus in 1953.
53* ''I Hope I Live to Finish This'' (TBA): A planned series of shorts intended to interlink into a feature film, in top-secret production since 1999. Only first part, ''Prologue'', was released during Williams' lifetime in 2015.
54
55-------------------------------
56!!Richard Williams and his works provide examples of:
57
58* ArtEvolution: Compare ''WesternAnimation/TheLittleIsland'' from 1958 to his final film ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wy552LOHtxU Prologue]]'' from 2015, [[AnimationBump just wow]]!
59* ArtisticTitle: Williams did these for several films, including ''Theatre/AFunnyThingHappenedOnTheWayToTheForum'', ''Film/TheChargeOfTheLightBrigade'' (1968) and ''Film/MurderOnTheOrientExpress1974''. He also did two for ''Franchise/ThePinkPanther'' films, both of which are considered the best. Even his own film, ''WesternAnimation/RaggedyAnnAndAndyAMusicalAdventure'', had these, which he animated himself.
60* CreatorKiller: Richard's studio went under following the takeover and failure of ''Thief'' with Richard going into hiatus from directing to focus on teaching animation [[CareerResurrection up until his return]] with ''Circus Drawings'' in 2010.
61* CreatorsOddball: ''Ziggy's Gift'' and ''Love Me, Love Me'' are both generally straight forward with their narratives, as appose to the more [[RandomEventsPlot loose plotlines]] Richard used in his other cartoons.
62* DerangedAnimation: Some... nah, ALL of his work is pretty surreal in one way or another.
63* DiedDuringProduction: His last long-term project, titled ''I Hope I Live To Finish This,'' was planned as a series of shorts so that, should the trope come into play before its completion, he'd have ''something'' to show for it. It turned out to be a SelfFulfillingProphecy, as only the first part, ''Prologue'', was released before his death in 2019.
64* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: His earliest films were made before he was able to get firsthand education from veteran animators, so they feature heavy use of LimitedAnimation, and bear little resemblance to his future work.
65* ExtremelyLengthyCreation: 28 years making a movie. It's really quite humbling.
66* HeAlsoDid:
67** At least one piece of promotional art for ''Film/TheGraduate''.
68** He also did some uncredited work for ''WesternAnimation/YellowSubmarine''.
69* GodDoesNotOwnThisWorld: After ''Thief'' was taken away from him, Williams spent the next several years [[CreatorBacklash refusing to acknowledge the film or what became of it]]. There was even a story circulating on the web that Richard once broke down in tears after someone mentioned the movie by name at a panel, and afterwards began hiring security to escort anyone who does so out of the room. He's since opened up more about the film and even praised the ''Recobbled Cut'' for attempting to restore the movie [[WhatCouldHaveBeen to his initial vision]]; although he admitted to not having watched all of it.
70* MissingEpisode:
71** His first cartoon ''The Wardrobe'' appears to have been completely lost to time, as there's no information regarding the short other than ''WesternAnimation/YellowSubmarine'' director George Dunning co-directing it.
72** The first six minutes of ''The Sailor and the Devil'' has been accounted for thanks to an airing on Creator/{{HBO}} during the late 80s. However the rest of the short remains missing.
73* OneForTheMoneyOneForTheArt: Agreed to do ''WesternAnimation/RaggedyAnnAndAndyAMusicalAdventure'' to get funding for his passion project ''WesternAnimation/TheThiefAndTheCobbler''.
74* ThePerfectionist: Williams is noted for being an extreme perfectionist in his animation, which is best exemplified with his desire for ''The Thief and the Cobbler'' to be "the best animated film that has ever been made", which is why that film took so long. While this results in usually great and very fluid animation, it also had the unfortunate side effect of him being notoriously difficult to work with, with animators frequently being overworked and fired due to his strict standards. This attitude is what ultimately caused the downfall of ''The Thief and the Cobbler'', as his desire to make it the best animated film would cause the film to go over budget and behind schedule, which culminated in him being ousted from his film by a completion bond company, who, unlike Williams, prioritized getting the film finished.
75* PromotedFanboy: Not only did he have the pleasure of learning all of his animation techniques from the top animators of UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfAnimation, but managed to get several of them to work for him.
76* RandomEventsPlot: Due to his emphasis on quality animation, Richard's directing credits tend to have rather loose narratives with sequences that usually have nothing to with the overall film.
77* ShownTheirWork: In ''The Animator's Survival Kit'', Williams discussed his vast knowledge of animation techniques from the Golden Age.
78* SignatureStyle: Works from him and his studio often use moving perspective shots. Easy in film, very tricky in animation.
79* TheTwelvePrinciplesOfAnimation: Knew these and a lot more.

Top