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Robert Fred Moore (September 7, 1911 – November 23, 1952), was an American artist and character animator for Walt Disney Productions. Often called "Freddie," he was born and raised in Los Angeles, California. Despite limited formal art training, he rose to prominence at Disney very quickly in the early thirties due to his great natural talent and the tremendous appeal of his drawings, which is still greatly admired by animators and animation fans. ==Early life== Moore was born in Los Angeles and is best known for being the resident specialist in the animation of Mickey Mouse. He is most notable for redesigning the character in 1938 for his landmark role in "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" in ''Fantasia'', a look which remains Mickey's official look to this day. His animation of the earlier Mickey design was especially memorable in the 1938 short "Brave Little Tailor", the last significant appearance of the "pie-eyed" Mickey. Moore's other significant work at the studio included ''The Three Little Pigs'', on which he was the principal animator; animation supervision of the dwarfs in ''Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs''; most of Lampwick in ''Pinocchio'' (all of the poolroom scene and until halfway through his transformation to a donkey); and Timothy the mouse in ''Dumbo''. Moore animated some scenes of the mice from ''Cinderella'', some of the later scenes of the White Rabbit in ''Alice In Wonderland'', and did the mermaids in the Mermaid Lagoon for ''Peter Pan''. Moore was well-known around the studio for his drawings of innocently sexy, often nude, women, referred to as "Freddie Moore Girls." Some of his girl designs found their way into Disney films: for example, the centaurettes in ''Fantasia'' and the teenage girls in the "All the Cats Join In" segment of ''Make Mine Music''. (In "All The Cats Join In", Moore personally animated the sequence at the beginning, when the girl answers the telephone and then quickly showers and dresses, through to her scene putting on lipstick in front of her mirror). Moore's enduring influence can also be seen in the design of Casey's daughters in the 1954 short "Casey Bats Again". His good girl art remains iconic and influential. A model sheet for Ariel in the 1989 Disney film ''The Little Mermaid'' made specific distinctions between the design of that character and a "Freddie Moore Girl." Moore's drawings and design style have come to epitomize the formative years of the studio in between Ub Iwerks' departure in 1931 and the ascension of the "Nine Old Men," after which studio design was dominated by animator Milt Kahl, along with storyboard artist Bill Peet, and later production designer Ken Anderson. During the 1930s, Moore, Art Babbitt, Norm Ferguson, Bill Tytla, and Ham Luske were the dominant Disney animators whose pioneering work culminated in 1937 with the breakthrough of ''Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs''. Moore was a close friend of fellow animators Ward Kimball and Walt Kelly, though he apparently had a quieter and more reserved nature than either of them. Many surviving gag drawings by Kelly from the period of ''Pinocchio'' show Kimball as the corrupt Lampwick, with boyish Moore as Pinocchio. Moore and Kimball were also caricatured as song and dance men in the 1941 Mickey Mouse short "The Nifty Nineties." Moore makes a brief (and quiet) live-action appearance in the 1941 feature ''The Reluctant Dragon'', along with Kimball and animator Norm Ferguson during one of the studio tour sequences. He talked little about his family. His daughters were Sue Moore and Melinda Moore. Later on, his daughter Sue had married and had another daughter named Kelly Hall, who now resides in Tacoma, Washington with her two children. Melinda married and had two children; her son Christian resides in the Bay Area and her daughter Timothia resides in Los Angeles. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Fred Moore (animator)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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