Newport film festâs âBambiâ provides inspiration for âTyrusâ documentary
If Pamela Tom hadnât watched past the end of âBambi,â she might never have found the inspiration for her documentary, which will screen this week at the Newport Beach Film Festival.
The filmmaker, who lives in Los Angeles, was enjoying a family viewing of a Disney classic a decade and a half ago when a bonus feature at the end of the videotape piqued her curiosity.
âWhen my daughter was young, around preschool, I was watching âBambiâ on VHS,â Tom recalled. âAnd at the end of the film, they have these little making-of documentaries, and the animators kept referring to this Chinese American artist named Tyrus Wong. I thought, âA Chinese American artist in the 1930s? I need to find out more about this person.ââ
Tom, who is Chinese American herself, put feelers out in the community and found Wongâs contact information. She then invited the artist to her familyâs restaurant for lunch, and the two stayed in touch, for more than 15 years, in fact, as Tom raised money for her documentary and shot it in increments.
âTyrus,â which tracks its subjectâs life from his boyhood in China to his latter-day recognition as a Disney pioneer, will be shown Tuesday at the Edwards Big Newport 6. The festival has long created a special berth for Disney on its schedule, and Tomâs documentary will join other related attractions on this weekâs program.
The documentary âThe Whimsical Imagineer,â about Disney artist Roland Fargo Crump, will also show Tuesday at Big Newport. (That film and âTyrusâ will also screen Wednesday at the Island Cinema at Fashion Island.) In addition, producers Don Hahn and Dave Bossert will host the seventh âDisney Rarities,â a compilation of little-seen artifacts from the studioâs vaults, Tuesday at the Regency South Coast Village in Santa Ana.
Like former resident John Wayne, who routinely features in Newport festival screenings, Disney has a prominent history in Orange County. According to Lohanne Cook, the festivalâs director of special projects, the annual Disney offerings lure a large crowd every year â and not just from the outside.
âFor Disney, we always have a solid audience,â she said. âThereâs always someone who comes out, even our own employees. When they have a break â we all get one or two days off at the festival, our own time to spend for leisure â a lot of us end up going to the Disney programs, because we know itâs going to be a great time.â
Whatever Hahn and Bossert bring out of the archives, Wongâs story may be the greatest Disney rarity of all at the festival this year. The artist, who recently turned 105, endured at Disney â for a time, at least â during an era when Asian Americans were marginalized.
Wong, who emigrated at age 9 to California with his father, attended the Otis College of Art and Design on a scholarship after a teacher spotted his talent. He later had modest success as a gallery artist and, in 1938, scored a job in Disneyâs art department.
At first, Wong didnât have much opportunity to showcase his own style; his first duties were to take other artistsâ images and create âin-betweenâ drawings that would lead a character, such as Mickey Mouse, from one pose to another.
When Wong heard that the studio was beginning work on âBambi,â however, he managed to win over Walt Disney with his nature paintings.
Those paintings, as âTyrusâ illustrates, contributed to the filmâs visual look by contrasting the sharp character designs with spare, soft-focus backgrounds. In some cases, the artistâs brush strokes are even visible on the screen â a traditional Chinese style that, as Tom learned by talking to industry professionals, continues to influence animators.
Still, the documentary makes clear that Wong was far from a golden boy at the studio. Despite Walt Disneyâs admiration for his work, the two never had an actual conversation, and Wong was sometimes slighted by colleagues. When many Disney artists went on strike in 1941, Wong opted to continue working, and the resulting rancor apparently led to his firing before âBambiâ was completed.
In later years, Wong drew storyboards for Warner Bros. and Republic Pictures (the documentary lists âRebel Without a Cause,â âThe Wild Bunchâ and âSands of Iwo Jimaâ among his credits) before he retired from Hollywood. In later years, he kept busy as an artist, designing kites and even dinnerware.
Eventually, the studio that declined to hold onto him years ago came around to celebrate him. At one point in âTyrus,â Roy Disney is shown at a Disney Legends award ceremony declaring, âHe only worked at the studio for three years and, during that time, devoted himself to just one movie, âBambi.â But what a film it was.â
Tom, who grew to appreciate Wongâs influence while making her documentary, hopes that âTyrusâ will help to introduce its subjectâs name to those outside the Chinese American community.
âHeâs our resident artist, so to speak,â she said. âAnd then, within the Disney community, they embrace him. Artists today still look to him for influence. But outside of those two core audiences, most people donât know who he was.â
*
IF YOU GO
What: âTyrusâ
Where: Edwards Big Newport 6, 300 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach
When: 4:45 p.m. Tuesday
Cost: $15
Information: (949) 253-2880; newportbeachfilmfest.com
It will also screen at 5:15 p.m. Wednesday at the Island Cinema, 999 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach; tickets are $15.
--
ALSO
Newport festival short film âChasing the Distanceâ melds running and Grand Canyon conservation
Film festivalâs âHuntwatchâ aims to halt gruesome baby seal hunting practice
Newport film fest continues tributes to John Wayne with screening of âEl Doradoâ
â40s-style thriller premiering at Newport film festival explores love and obsession