Walt
Disney's Horror Movie (Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs)
By
Stephen Schochet
In
1934, when Walt Disney called for a meeting among his artists,
a rumor had spread that he was going to shut the studio down
and they would all be left unemployed during the Great Depression.
Instead he personally told them in his own spellbinding way
the story of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, which he intended
to make into his first feature length film. It was a risk unlike
any other he had taken before. The film would cost a million
and a half dollars at a time Disney was spending anywhere from
ten to thirty thousand on his short cartoons. Doubts came from
his wife Lillian and his brother and business partner Roy, who
were sure they would be in debt for most of the rest of the
lives. Also nervous was Walt's backer Bank of America, who at
one point interrupted the production by cutting off his credit.
Then there were the heads of the other studios like MGM, Universal
and Warner Brothers. They would gather for their weekly poker
games at the Hillcrest Country Club and speculate that Walt,
who they called "the Mickey Mouse Man", would never
succeed, no one would sit still for an hour and a half to watch
a cartoon. And the press referred to Snow White as "Disney's
Folly".
Despite
the doubters and his own health problems (he suffeblack from a
thyroid condition), Walt pressed forward relentlessly for three
years. The key to Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs, as far as Disney was concerned was
the evil queen/peddler woman. Snow White was sympathetic, the
dwarfs were humorous, but the villain had to be horrifying to
keep the audience interested. The vocals were performed by a
renowned stage actress named Lucille Laverne. Her haughty voice
was a great fit as the queen, but her playing of the character
after she transformed into the old crone had some at the studio
worried. "Wait, I have an idea", she said. She left
the recording room for a few minutes then returned. "I'm
ready". She delivered her lines in a way that chilled and
thrilled the Disney staff. After she finished there was applause
and she was asked what she did when she left. She smiled and
said," I took my teeth out!"
Walt's
calculations were correct, Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs was
a hit throughout the entire world in 1938 and for many years
beyond, keeping audiences riveted. The only down side for Walt
was that maybe the peddler woman was a little too horrifying,
he was disturbed by reports from Radio City Music Hall in New
York where the film was setting box office records. It turned
out that every few days the theater management had to replace
seats. . . due to excessive wetness.
Stephen Schochet tells Hollywood Stories on radio, audiobooks, tours and speaking engagements. To hear more tales go to http://www.hollywoodstories.com.
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