Lögberg-Heimskringla - 06.12.1985, Blaðsíða 6

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 06.12.1985, Blaðsíða 6
6-WINNIPEG, FOSTUDAGUR 6. DESEMBER 1985 Animation Central Continued from page 3. all of the young animators in the city their start. Kenn Perkins is primarily a commercial house, famous for its K-Tel animation but equally adept and inventive with other products, with NFB vignettes, and with children's animation. CBCs involvement in animation comes from the children's program Sesame Street. For the past thirteen years the CBC has not just rebroad- cast the American show but created a Canadian version of it. The heav- ily urban, New York City-oriented, and Spanish language segments of the program have been excised in favour of twenty minutes per day of Canadian content: French 'lessons' instead of Spanish, 'zeds' instead of 'zees’ in the alphabet, Winnipeg, Toronto, Montreal, or Vancouver locations instead of New York, Cana- dian folklore and ethnics instead of American. Winnipeg has provided upwards of forty animation spots per year to Sesame Street, varying in length from about twenty seconds to as much as two minutes and rebroad- cast twice per year. Pat Kent is in charge of the Sesame Street work done in Winnipeg and has been for the past six years. She has been ably supported by Dave Strang, animator and graphic designer, and Dave Jandrisch, free- lance musical director. Strang, whose brightly coloured and fanciful characters and frisky geometric shapes have become distinctive, has eleven segments to complete this year. Given the simplicity and sharp- ness of design and story in his pre- vious work, his segment on Interna- tional Symbols (road signs, etc.) is sure to be a stand-out. Seventeen other segments have been assigned to five freelance ani- mators from the area. The most Gwen Continued from page 5. marked his face or his steel-grey hair. Besides he seemed to be well off. At least he owned a house. Perhaps, she thought, that she should not resist him too much, but then she was not prepared to make it easy for the old codger. They had three children, two girls and a boy. Those were busy days for Guðný, preparing meals for Gus and looking after his four children, and their younger family of three. She had less time for Gus and he began to feel neglected. More and more he began to meet with the boys at the saloon, even coming home drunk. He was fast becoming alcoholic. He was devel- oping abusive attitudes towards Guðneý, berating her for his bad luck. More and more she had to scream at him for the household money. It was becoming intolerable, the moment of decision had come. She found a part-time job, house cleaning for a well-established fam- ily in Kenora. Once a week she would secretly go and earn fifty cents. Carefully, she saved her quar- ters, and after six months she was able to buy train fare for herself and her children. Secretly, she boarded the train. When Gus arrived home late that night, he fell asleep in the dining room chair. Next morning in a sober haze he seemed to sense that she was gone. The train slowly came to a halt as the squealing steel brake shoes brought the wheels to rest. After the train pulled away, Guðneý began to look around, assess- ing her circumstances. Her eyes fastened onto a well-dressed, kindly-looking man, reaching middle age. His wing collar, derby hat and walrus moustache, lent dignity to his above-average stature. She approached him with her three children and asked, "Do you know where I can contact an Icelander?" His reply was, "I am an Icelander, what can I do for you?" Patiently, he listened to her and took her to his home. Her prayers had been ans- wered, for fate had led her to a kind and generous man, Arinbjörn Bárdal. He and his wife set her up in their old house beside the new one they had just built. Life became pleasant again. She had found a haven that was to be a life-long anchor in her frugal path through life. She found jobs as a char- woman, to be rewarded by her children as they reached adulthood. Old Gus began to feel sorry for himself. He felt deserted. In his mind he decided he would bring her back from wherever she might be. Reason- ing told him that she must have gone to Winnipeg and sought refuge with Icelanders. It did not take long to track her down. Arriving at her doorstep, he in- sisted that she return, but Arinbjörn convinced Gus to leave her alone and hightail back to Rat Portage. During the last days of his life he sought and found refuge with Guðneý and her grown-up children. There he died a peaceful death. There is no picture of Guðný. It is only by chance that the bare facts of her life are known. She did not wield a high status in life. It was rather the other way around. Even her name is unknown let alone a pic- ture. Yet she had a greatness. She was a good mother. Each time we pick up Logberg- Heimskringla and look at the adver- tisement of Neil Bardal, we see the face of A.S. Bardal at the back of the threesome generations. A reminder of this generous humanitarian and his kindness toward those in need. experienced of them, and the one who seems to be the most versatile at cel animation, is Neil Mclnnes. His work this year includes illustrating the letters A (from automobile to air- port to astronaut to the planet "A") and M, counting in French with eleven pies, telling the time of day with different kinds of clocks, and identifying various animals' tails. An- drew Schultz is best at fast action and sports motifs, but he is getting more inventive in his characters and idear. His six assignments this year range from trying to find things that bounce (to illustrate the letter "B") to using French and English activities and events to distinguish the months of the year. He also has three identifica- tion segments: identifying food by having ants cart it away from a pic- nic, identifying stores by having a hot dog go into several of them looking for condiments, and identifying dif- ferent uniforms. Barbara Hicks works with creatures and designs made from cutouts from pieces of felt material. She has two sequences this year: identifying animals in a jungle and on a farm by the noises they make. Connie Steiner uses images that are softer and more painterly; her animation relies more on panning over and dissolving between im- ages rather than frame-by-frame articulation. She has one story to do this year — about haircuts and ears. The rookie of the crew, Patrick Lowe, also has just one assignment: using a car and its wheels to differ- entiate between circles and rectan- gles. He got it on the strength of an amusing animated short, done in super-8, on the creationist-evolution conflict, called Going Ape. Sesame Street's value to the ani- mation community lies in the fact that it offers beginners like Patrick Lowe a chance to test themselves and develop their craft while also allow- ing more experienced animators the opportunity to experiment within a limited framework and keep busv be- tween other commitments. While the best Sesame Street segments are often thought-provoking and artful even to adults, like commercials they can rarely stand alone; they need the context of the rest of the program to sustain them. This is not to belittle them as either trivial or childish. Many of them quite obviously are not, in either design or execution. It is only to point out that the distance between a thirty to sixty second seg- ment and a cartoon of even six to ten minutes duration is a distance not easily traversed. Sesame Street animation is simple concept animation. It places a premium on two dimensions and screen centre, in brevity, spareness, clarity, and ease of identification. There is a progress to them but no amplification, no complication; they are anecdotal rather than incremen- tal; they rely on caricature rather than characterization. But there are few people who have mastered the form with the ease that Dave Strang Continued on page 7. MESSUBOÐ Fyrsta Lúterska Kirkja JOHN V. ARVIDSON PASTOR 10:30 a.m. The Service followcd by Sunday School & coffee hour. BARDAL FCJNERAL HOME AND CREMATORIOM \A/innipeg's original Bardal Funeral Home has V Vbeen serving the citg's needs since 1894. Bardal Funeral Homes offers a wide uarietu of traditional and modern seruices forall faiths. For consultation contact Dauid Pritchard or Jack C. Farrell. CALL 774-7474 24 Hours a Day 843 Sherbrook Street EINAR ARNASON

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