Rudolf Rudy Ising was an American illustrator, most known for making cartoon shows for Warner Bros. and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. He is additionally most popular for his Oscar for the MGM animation in 1940 and his works with a partner, Hugh Harman Hugh Harman was an American artist, most known for >> Read More... .
Rudolf Ising initially worked in the mid-1920s at Walt Disney's studio in Kansas City. When Disney moved to California, Hugh Harman, Ising, and individual artist Carman Maxwell remained behind to attempt to begin their studio. Their arrangements went no place, and the men before long rejoined Disney to work at the Alice Comedies and Oswald the Lucky Rabbit films. It was during this time, that Harman and Ising fostered a style of animation drawing that would later be firmly connected with, and credited to, Disney. When producer Charles Mintz ended his relationship with Disney, Harman and Ising went to work at Winkler Pictures' new liveliness studio.
Eventually, during the creation of Winkler's Oswald kid's shows, Harman and Ising went to Universal to attempt to persuade the studio to place them in control rather than Mintz. Carl Laemmle, the head of Universal Pictures, became weary of the inward governmental issues and ended Winkler Pictures' agreement. This brought about Harman, Ising, and other previous Winkler staff setting up Harman-Ising Productions.
Harman and Ising started pitching an enlivened/surprisingly realistic short film named "Bosko, the Talk-Ink Kid" to different individuals. At the point when maker Leon Schlesinger Leon Schlesinger, an American producer, was born o >> Read More... saw the film, he gave the two the green light for the Looney Tunes During the golden age of American animation, one o >> Read More... series. A sister series, Merrie Melodies Merrie Melodies is also known as the Looney Tunes >> Read More... was made a year after the fact (the two titles being a satire of Walt Disney's Silly Symphonies).
Ising discovered some work as an activity consultant, coordinating, for instance, cartoon shows in the Silly Symphonies series for Disney in 1938. When Disney later reneged on an arrangement he had made for two other Harman-Ising pictures, the artists offered the cartoon shows to Fred Quimby at MGM. Quimby rehired Harman and Ising, yet they at this point not cooperated. The next year, Ising's "The Milky Way" turned into the primary non-Disney film to win the prize. Ising passed on MGM to join the military in 1943. Rudolf Ising died of cancer on July 18, 1992, in Newport Beach, California.
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