 by
Stephen Schochet
| | In 1923, twenty-one-year-old Walt Disney
arrived in Los Angeles fresh from the disappointment of his first
cartoon studio going bankrupt in Kansas City. He went to see his
twenty-nine-year-old brother Roy in the Veteran's Hospital were he was
recovering from tuberculosis. Roy, a former bank teller and Navy man was
concerned about his brother's skinniness. "Hey kid, haven't you
been eating? I'm supposed to be the sick one. So now that you're in L.A.
what are you are going to do with yourself?"
"I don't know.
I've given up on animation. But I've got to get into show business
somehow. I'll think I'll try and become a director."
Walt
who had filmed some newsreel footage in Kansas City, printed a business
card stating he was a member of the press, which he used to finagle his
way onto studio lots. He had a meeting with a secretary at Metro.
"Yes, I had my own studio in Kansas City, I made cartoons and live
action films perhaps you heard of me?" "No I can't say that I
have. And we really have a lot of people coming here looking for work
and no jobs." Metro was in a state of chaos, Rudolph Valentino was
demanding more money and they had frozen his salary. Because of the
movie The Four Horseman Of The Apocalypse (1921) Valentino was now an
international star who was surviving by hunting rabbits in the Santa
Monica Mountains. Walt, who would later know great fame combined with
money trouble could have identified, but he had his own problems.
Turned away at Metro Walt decided to go to Charlie Chaplin's studio
in Hollywood and ask the great star for work personally. Chaplin had
been Walt's hero, when Disney was thirteen he had won a two dollar prize
imitating the tramp on stage, not an easy trick. One time Charlie
Chaplin had entered a similar contest and lost.
Walt waited all
day on the sidewalk for Chaplin to come out but he never did. Disney
didn't know that Chaplin buried himself in his work, afraid to go home
where his 16 year old pregnant wife Lita and her mother were filling his
mansion with unwanted relatives, turning the Beverly Hills estate into
the 1923 version of The Jerry Springer Show. Or that the liberal Chaplin
was infuriating his United Artist partner the conservative Mary Pickford
by taking forever to finish his films, sometimes emerging from his
editing room with a long beard looking like Robinson Crusoe. Walt had
his own concerns.
Once again, Walt used his makeshift press pass
to sneak into Universal Studios. This was exciting filmmaking! Men
dressed like cowboys pretending to shoot at each other and falling over.
And a castle. It reminded him of Paris where he had driven an ambulance
for the Red Cross after World War I. Curious, he walked over to question
some workmen about the structure. It turned out they were building the
Court Of Miracles set for The Hunchback Of Notre Dame (1925), starring Lon
Chaney. Walt who remained star struck all his life, began looking around
for the famous actor who was known for playing characters who were
deformed, sometimes armless and legless with incredible body
contortions. Back in the twenties there was a saying, "If you see
something unusual on the floor, don't step on it, it might be Lon
Chaney."
Suddenly Walt felt a tap on his shoulder. Sitting
on a horse behind him was the famous Austrian director Eric Von
Stroheim, known as the man you love to hate. Completely bald with a
monocle, riding crop and thick boots, which early film directors working
in the Hollywood hills wore to protect from snakes, Von Stroheim made an
imposing figure. "What are you doing here". Walt confessed he
snuck in and asked if there was any work. But he was talking to a man
who used to twist the arms of his leading ladies when he wanted them to
cry in his films. "Get out now and never come back." Years
later, when he had his own studio, Walt went out of his way to give
young people a chance to show what they could do.
With no other
prospects Walt decided to get back into animation but this time he would
get some help. One night in 1923 he returned to the Veteran's Hospital
where Roy was feeling better. Excitedly Walt told his brother about his
plans awakening other patients in the ward," But I can't do it
alone. I don't have your head for numbers."
"I don't know kid,
cartoons that's risky. I was thinking about getting a safe job at a
bank, getting married. I mean I think your talented but. . ."
"Ah come on Roy, forget about a job. We'll work for ourselves. This
is better than a job, we can do this thing."
"I don't know. .
."
"Ah please."
Walt would not take no for an answer. Roy
finally agreed to the new venture when one of the soldiers in a nearby
bed sat up and said, "Roy will you go with him already so we can
get some sleep!"
| | Stephen Schochet is the author of the upcoming book
Hollywood Stories: Short, Entertaining Stories About the Stars and Legends of the Movies.
He is also the author of two acclaimed
audiobooks
Tales of Hollywood and Fascinating Walt
Disney.
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