Walter Elias Disney, born in Chicago in 1901, to Elias Disney and Flora Call Disney. Disney had many new things happening in this early time period. Many Disney production happened in the 1920’s. Also, they had many characters produced during this time. Disney also had a lot of history occur in this time period. The Disney name, known worldwide, all began in the 1920’s. In the 1920’s Disney had many new productions happening, including feature films and the many new cartoons happening during this time. But, what exactly started Disney? In 1921, one of the most important events happened, the rise of the Rudolph Valentino finally got his dream as a star. Following his appearance in “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” the public could not …show more content…
As simple as history with the company, life, and just even the philosophy. The technology would lead to taking pictures with many different forms. Initially, it just synchronized musical scores, but it would soon lead to “talkies.” During 1928, the motion picture producers finally realized that the public wanted “talkies.” This helped pull the industry out of the slump. With this, movie theatres upgraded with sound systems to handle the “Talkies.” Many of these films had just parted “talkie” and part musical score during this transition phase. (1920’s Movie History,” 2006). Walt began producing advertising films in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1919. Disney then introduced a new method for synchronizing sound with animation and then known as the first to use the three-color process. (Disney, 2003). In 1923, Disney moved to Los Angeles to turn into a film producer or director. Walt then set up his first studio in the back half of a real estate office. (2003, Disney, Walt) In the spring of 1929, fate introduced the country to a new Walt Disney phenomenon. At Roxy Theatre in New York, audiences delighted to four dancing skeletons who had risen from the grave to cavort among the tombstones. (Blitz, 1979) In the late 1922 Walt’s financial bacon somehow got saved by a $500 commission from dentist Thomas McCrum for a live-action dental-health film called Tommy Tucker’s Tooth. In 1923 Walt wrote to Margaret J. Winkler, distributor of the successful Out of the Inkwell series produced by Max Fleischer, telling her of his plans. During Walt's time in Kansas City, he spent most of his time producing the “Newman Laugh-O-grams” for a local cinema. (Grant, 1987). History has provided unlimited information about