Donnie dunagan i was bambi егэ ответы

Donnie Dunagan: I was Bambi

It was more than 75 years ago, but I remember that call. It came through on the kitchen phone at our home in Westwood, California, and my mother answered. It was Walt Disney on the other end. He wanted me to talk about a role in a new feature he was working on; a cartoon about a group of animals in a forest. My mother thought it sounded terrific.

My agent hated it. I was only five years old, but I’d been in six movies and he said he had a bigger part lined up for me in a western. He came over and started shouting. He said the Disney movie would ruin my career and started speaking down to my mother. That made me so mad I fired him. The following week, Variety ran a story: Five-Year-Old Actor Fires His Manager.

Soon afterwards, my mother and I were driven to the Disney studio. Disney was there to meet us, all smiles. He was this wonderful, gracious man. That was my first and lasting impression of him. In his office, he had several shots of me from my previous films. We talked for a while, then he turned to my mother and said: ‘He’ll be wonderful for this part.’

They had to capture my facial expressions for the animation, so I spent hours sitting on a stool with a semi-circle of artists around me. I remember thinking, they must have a million coloured pencils between them. They’d give me these instructions such as, ‘Look left, look right, hold it!’ There’s a scene where the girl deer, Faline, kisses Bambi on the cheek. To get me to pose for that, one of the men said, ‘Donnie, give me your worst face, like something awful has happened to you. Have you had a spanking recently, or some bad medicine?’ I said, ‘Sir, my mother gave me some castor oil. It was disgusting.’ And the man said, ‘Imagine you just had a double dose of that castor oil.’ I creased up my face and they shouted, ‘Hold it!’

The voice work took about three months. I was on my own in a little sound booth, reading lines, with the artwork in front of me, so I could see what the deer was doing.

The premiere in 1942 was packed, with people standing in the aisles. I remember the reaction when Bambi’s mother was shot. There were gasps and parents covered their children’s eyes. People still talk to me about the movie, and inevitably everyone mentions that scene. The original artwork had Bambi’s mother shot on camera, with a bullet hole and lots of blood. But because of the second world war, Disney said that was too sensitive. He had them tone it down and instead you hear a bang and she falls off screen.

By the time the second world war was over, I was done with movies. I kept quiet about my acting career through school, and then I joined the marines when I was 18. I worked my way up to major and I kind of forgot about that little deer.

But there was one incident in Vietnam that brought it all back. There’s a scene in the movie where Bambi is shot and you see his father appear. He says, ‘Bambi, get up, get up, you have to get up.’ During a mission in Vietnam, a grenade went off near me, and I took a bullet to the leg. I was down and dizzy, and then this young sergeant was standing over me, lifting my head. He said, ‘Sir, get up, you have to get up.’ And there I was Bambi again.

A lot of people don’t know it was shot almost 6,000 ft long. By late 1941, Disney was in enormous debt and America was entering the war. He needed to get Bambi out, so he cut it by over 2,000 ft. It’s a shame, because the film should be 38 minutes longer, and some beautiful scenes are missing. But I hear they recently unearthed that footage and are restoring it. That’s something I would love to see.

ВОПРОС 1: Donnie’s mother found Disney’s proposal …
1) awesome.
2) demanding.
3) excessive.
4) frightening.

ВОПРОС 2: Donnagan fired his manager because …
1) the boy wanted to be independent in his choice.
2) the boy was eager to try something else besides films.
3) the man hated Disney.
4) the man was rude.

ВОПРОС 3: Variety mentioned in the report is …
1) a magazine.
2) a reporter.
3) a theatre.
4) an animation studio.

ВОПРОС 4: Artists worked with Donnie for long hours …
1) to And a proper make-up for him.
2) to make the face of Bambi.
3) to train to him express the eeded emotions.
4) to understand whether the boy suited the project.

ВОПРОС 5: Donnie Dunagan first saw the deer on screen …
1) when the film was restored.
2) when the first night was on.
3) when the soundtrack was being made.
4) when he joined the army.

ВОПРОС 6: The memories of the film came back to the actor after a while when …
1) he experienced his first kiss with a girl at school.
2) he was wounded on the battlefield.
3) his father came to visit him in hospital.
4) his mother was killed.

ВОПРОС 7: Some episodes were withdrawn from the film because
1) they were too painful to see.
2) the film was too long to be watched by children.
3) the company was lacking money.
4) the company was failing to meet the deadline.

ВОПРОС 1: – 1
ВОПРОС 2: – 4
ВОПРОС 3: – 1
ВОПРОС 4: – 2
ВОПРОС 5: – 3
ВОПРОС 6: – 2
ВОПРОС 7: – 3

It was more than 75 years ago, but I remember that call. It came through on the kitchen phone at our home in Westwood, California, and my mother answered. It was Walt Disney on the other end. He wanted me to talk about a role in a new feature he was working on; a cartoon about a group of animals in a forest. My mother thought it sounded terrific.

My agent hated it. I was only five years old, but I’d been in six movies and he said he had a bigger part lined up for me in a western. He came over and started shouting. He said the Disney movie would ruin my career and started speaking down to my mother. That made me so mad I fired him. The following week, Variety ran a story: Five-Year-Old Actor Fires His Manager.

Soon afterwards, my mother and I were driven to the Disney studio in Burbank. Disney was there to meet us, all smiles. He was this wonderful, gracious man. That was my first and lasting impression of him.

In his office, he had several stills of me from my previous films. We talked for a while, then he turned to my mother and said: “He’ll be wonderful for this part.”

They had to capture my facial expressions for the animation, so I spent hours sitting on a stool with a semi-circle of artists around me. I remember thinking, they must have a million coloured pencils between them. They’d give me these instructions such as, “Look left, look right, hold it!”

There’s a scene where the girl deer, Faline, kisses Bambi on the cheek. To get me to pose for that, one of the men said, “Donnie, gimme your worst face, like something awful has happened to you. Have you had a spanking recently, or some bad medicine?” I said, “Sir, my mother gave me some castor oil. It was disgusting.” And the man said, “Imagine you just had a double dose of that castor oil.” I creased up my face and they shouted, “Hold it!

The voice work took about three months. I was on my own in a little sound booth, reading lines, with the artwork in front of me, so I could see what the deer was doing. People find it strange but I didn’t work with Peter Behn, the boy who played Thumper. We didn’t even meet each other until a couple of years ago, when we were both in our 80s and guests on the same TV show. That was a great experience.

The premiere in 1942 was packed, with people standing in the aisles. I remember the reaction when Bambi’s mother was shot. There were gasps and parents covered their children’s eyes.

People still talk to me about the movie, and inevitably everyone mentions that scene. The original artwork had Bambi’s mother shot on camera, with a bullet hole and lots of blood. But because of the second world war, Disney said that was too sensitive. He had them tone it down and instead you hear a bang and she falls off screen.

By the time the second world war was over, I was done with movies. I kept quiet about my acting career through school, and then I joined the marines when I was 18. I worked my way up to major and I kind of forgot about that little deer.

But there was one incident in Vietnam that brought it all back. There’s a scene in the movie where Bambi is shot and you see his father appear. He says, “Bambi, get up, get up, you have to get up.” During a mission in Vietnam, a grenade went off, concussing me, and I took a bullet to the leg. I was down and dizzy, and then this young sergeant was standing over me, lifting my head. He said, “Sir, get up, you have to get up.” And there on the battlefield I was Bambi again.

A lot of people don’t know it was shot on reel-to-reel film and almost 6,000ft long. By late 1941, Disney was in enormous debt and America was entering the war. He needed to get Bambi out, so he cut it by over 2,000ft. It’s a shame, because the film should be 38 minutes longer, and some beautiful scenes are missing. But I hear they recently unearthed that footage and are restoring it. That’s something I would love to see.

As told to Jonathan Thompson

Do you have an experience to share? Email experience@theguardian.com

Bambi is a a Disney Classic, so to get the chance to sit down and chat with Donnie Dunagan, the voice of Bambi, and Peter Behn, the voice of Thumper was an amazing treat.

Donnie Dunagan, Peter Behn and Leanette Fernandez

  • Peter Behn originally auditioned for the role of Bambi but he had the “wrong voice for that part. However,…Ollie decided that my voice was right for the rabbit…Inever actually ever auditioned for Thumper” – Peter Behn
  • The voice recordings took place intermittently over a two-year period.
  • Donnie Dunagan and Peter Behn never met while recording. They actually met about ten years ago.
  • While making the film, they had a little Disney zoo set up so that the animators could see the anatomy of the animals and help them with their drawings of the animals. Peter remembers Walt Disney being there with him while he visited the zoo.
  • Walt Disney was so…far ahead of his time in the environmental concerns. I think the movie is truly a very strong statement in favor of protecting the environment and the concern that man was ruining it or even making it worse…it’s a forward awareness and thinking that Walt obviously brought to the movie. He had to know what he was doing. I think it was very strong…”

Bambi is now available on Digital HD (and will be available on Blu-ray June 6th). Plus, there is a really pretty tank top featuring the Paul Felix art inspired by BAMBI, that is available via Disney Movie Rewards with every digital purchase/redemption of BAMBI. Click here for more details on the promotion.

Bambi header

* I was invited by Disney to the #PiratesLifeEvent to share my experience with my followers. However, All opinions are my own.

I attended the PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES Premiere courtesy of Walt Disney Studios.  All thoughts/experiences/opinions are my own!

Interview with Donnie Dunagan (Voice of Bambi), Peter Behn (Voice of Thumper) & Artist Paul Felix

Disney is releasing BAMBI as part of the Walt Disney Signature Collection (digital release is TODAY May 23rd and the BluRay release is June 6th) in celebration of its 75th anniversary!  When in Los Angeles last week for the Pirates of the Caribbean movie premiere event, I had the honor to meet and interview Donnie Dunagan (voice of Bambi) and Peter Behn (voice of Thumper)!

Interview with Donnie Dunagan (Voice of Bambi), Peter Behn (Voice of Thumper) & Artist Paul Felix

One thing is for sure, one would never ever know Donnie nor Peter were such legends in Disney films just by meeting them.  In fact, even Donnie’s wife was unaware of his very interesting past until she ran across some Bambi memorabilia he had left on the curb and wanted some explanations!   Donnie’s explanation for this secrecy?  “I didn’t want to be a braggart.”  And that is just the sort of men Donnie and Peter were when we met them for a round table discussion about voicing Bambi and Thumper.

Donnie On Meeting Walt Disney

When I first saw him, he had his sleeves rolled up and he was working and they introduced us to him. We had a great time. Most of the time I saw him, he was participating in things. He was, “Here comes Walt, here comes Mr. Disney, he’ll help.” Ask him about this. Ask him about that. That’s called leadership. Very different. And that’s why Disney was successful.

Interview with Donnie Dunagan (Voice of Bambi), Peter Behn (Voice of Thumper) & Artist Paul Felix

Donnie On The Recording Process

Remember when the mother is shot, right? When that recording was required I did not do it as well as I should have. My coach was a lady in the sound booth. And she said, your mother’s in trouble. Now, she didn’t tell me this is fun, right. She said your mother’s in trouble. Donnie, maybe your mother’s in trouble. You need to plead your mother. Call your mother, call your mother. That caught my attention pretty quick. You know I’m just a kid, right. Now, that took some doing with me. Peter was faster at this than I was. I took some coaching.

Interview with Donnie Dunagan (Voice of Bambi), Peter Behn (Voice of Thumper) & Artist Paul Felix

While Donnie was the “vocal” one of the duo, Peter Behn was the soft spoken but extremely insightful one.  It struck me as a bit funny, since their roles in the film were the opposite.  Peter is also very into environmental conservation and spoke of it often.

Peter On Disney Being Ahead of His Time

One of my strongest feelings about the movie is the amazing fact that back in the 30s, Walt Disney was so aware, far ahead of his time in the environmental concerns. I think the movie is truly a very strong statement in favor of protecting the environment and the concern that man was ruining it or even make it worse which unfortunately I personally believe. It’s one of my strong beliefs that we have to do everything we can to keep it from getting worse. It’s a forward awareness and thinking that Walt obviously brought to the movie. He had to know what he was doing. I think it was very strong. And I think as time goes on perhaps that aspect of the movie will resonate and become even more important.

Interview with Donnie Dunagan (Voice of Bambi), Peter Behn (Voice of Thumper) & Artist Paul Felix

Donnie On The Environment

If I live to be 1000 years old I couldn’t say it better than Peter did. The environmental profile, the forests, the reckless fire is spoken to by children in schools now. And I listen to them. And they pick up on that right away. (Holding up drawings of Bambi) Here’s an extension of Mr. Walt Disney’s Bambi. I get one of these by children a month from all over the world. If this doesn’t tell people that Bambi is forever, I’ll do push-ups in that parking lot for you.

I can tell you folks, there wasn’t a dry eye in the room after speaking with these two great men.  They really shed light on a very important subject, one that Disney so easily got across to children far and wide.

Bambi is released on Digital HD TODAY May 23rd and Blu-ray & DVD June 6th. If you purchase Bambi, you have the option to buy a special tank featuring the Paul Felix art inspired by Bambi, ends July 31st!

Donnie Dunagan

Donald «Donnie» Roan Dunagan (born August 16, 1934) is a semi-retired American former child actor and United States Marine Corps drill instructor. He was a voice actor in the Bambi film, providing the voice of Young Bambi. A 28-page interview, his first after decades as a «lost Hollywood player,» can be found in the book «Earth vs. the Sci-Fi Filmmakers» (Jefferson NC: McFarland & Co., 2006) by Tom Weaver.

Biography

Dunagan was born in San Antonio, Texas, but his family soon moved to Memphis, Tennessee where they struggled with poverty.[1] There at the age of three-and-a-half he won a talent contest prize of $100. Spotted by a studio talent scout, the family moved to Hollywood where Dunagan appeared in a series of films,[2] and soon became his family’s main breadwinner. His career ended after he provided the voice for the young fawn in Walt Disney’s Bambi. By the age of 13 Dunagan was living in a boarding house and working as a lathe operator. In 1952, at the age of 18 he enlisted in the Marine Corps.[3] He became the Marines youngest-ever drill instructor[citation needed]) , and served three tours in Vietnam, where he was wounded several times, before finally retiring in 1977 with the rank of Major.[4]

Filmography

  • Bambi (1942) – as Bambi (young)
  • Meet the Chump (1941) – as Little Boy
  • Vigil in the Night (1940) – as Tommy
  • Tower of London (1939) – as Baby Prince Richard
  • The Forgotten Woman (1939) – as Terry Kennedy Jr.
  • Son of Frankenstein (1939) – as Peter von Frankenstein
  • Mother Carey’s Chickens (1938) – as Peter Carey

See also

References

External links

  • Donnie Dunagan at the Internet Movie Database

Categories:

  • 1934 births
  • Living people
  • American child actors
  • American voice actors
  • People from San Antonio, Texas
  • United States Marines
  • American voice actor stubs

Wikimedia Foundation.
2010.

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Donnie Dunagan: I was Bambi

It was more than 75 years ago, but I remember that call. It came through on the kitchen phone at our home in Westwood, California, and my mother answered. It was Walt Disney on the other end. He wanted me to talk about a role in a new feature he was working on; a cartoon about a group of animals in a forest. My mother thought it sounded terrific.

My agent hated it. I was only five years old, but I’d been in six movies and he said he had a bigger part lined up for me in a western. He came over and started shouting. He said the Disney movie would ruin my career and started speaking down to my mother. That made me so mad I fired him. The following week, Variety ran a story: Five-Year-Old Actor Fires His Manager.

Soon afterwards, my mother and I were driven to the Disney studio. Disney was there to meet us, all smiles. He was this wonderful, gracious man. That was my first and lasting impression of him. In his office, he had several shots of me from my previous films. We talked for a while, then he turned to my mother and said: ‘He’ll be wonderful for this part.’

They had to capture my facial expressions for the animation, so I spent hours sitting on a stool with a semi-circle of artists around me. I remember thinking, they must have a million coloured pencils between them. They’d give me these instructions such as, ‘Look left, look right, hold it!’ There’s a scene where the girl deer, Faline, kisses Bambi on the cheek. To get me to pose for that, one of the men said, ‘Donnie, give me your worst face, like something awful has happened to you. Have you had a spanking recently, or some bad medicine?’ I said, ‘Sir, my mother gave me some castor oil. It was disgusting.’ And the man said, ‘Imagine you just had a double dose of that castor oil.’ I creased up my face and they shouted, ‘Hold it!’

The voice work took about three months. I was on my own in a little sound booth, reading lines, with the artwork in front of me, so I could see what the deer was doing.

The premiere in 1942 was packed, with people standing in the aisles. I remember the reaction when Bambi’s mother was shot. There were gasps and parents covered their children’s eyes. People still talk to me about the movie, and inevitably everyone mentions that scene. The original artwork had Bambi’s mother shot on camera, with a bullet hole and lots of blood. But because of the second world war, Disney said that was too sensitive. He had them tone it down and instead you hear a bang and she falls off screen.

By the time the second world war was over, I was done with movies. I kept quiet about my acting career through school, and then I joined the marines when I was 18. I worked my way up to major and I kind of forgot about that little deer.

But there was one incident in Vietnam that brought it all back. There’s a scene in the movie where Bambi is shot and you see his father appear. He says, ‘Bambi, get up, get up, you have to get up.’ During a mission in Vietnam, a grenade went off near me, and I took a bullet to the leg. I was down and dizzy, and then this young sergeant was standing over me, lifting my head. He said, ‘Sir, get up, you have to get up.’ And there I was Bambi again.

A lot of people don’t know it was shot almost 6,000 ft long. By late 1941, Disney was in enormous debt and America was entering the war. He needed to get Bambi out, so he cut it by over 2,000 ft. It’s a shame, because the film should be 38 minutes longer, and some beautiful scenes are missing. But I hear they recently unearthed that footage and are restoring it. That’s something I would love to see.

ВОПРОС 1: Donnie’s mother found Disney’s proposal …
1) awesome.
2) demanding.
3) excessive.
4) frightening.

ВОПРОС 2: Donnagan fired his manager because …
1) the boy wanted to be independent in his choice.
2) the boy was eager to try something else besides films.
3) the man hated Disney.
4) the man was rude.

ВОПРОС 3: Variety mentioned in the report is …
1) a magazine.
2) a reporter.
3) a theatre.
4) an animation studio.

ВОПРОС 4: Artists worked with Donnie for long hours …
1) to And a proper make-up for him.
2) to make the face of Bambi.
3) to train to him express the eeded emotions.
4) to understand whether the boy suited the project.

ВОПРОС 5: Donnie Dunagan first saw the deer on screen …
1) when the film was restored.
2) when the first night was on.
3) when the soundtrack was being made.
4) when he joined the army.

ВОПРОС 6: The memories of the film came back to the actor after a while when …
1) he experienced his first kiss with a girl at school.
2) he was wounded on the battlefield.
3) his father came to visit him in hospital.
4) his mother was killed.

ВОПРОС 7: Some episodes were withdrawn from the film because
1) they were too painful to see.
2) the film was too long to be watched by children.
3) the company was lacking money.
4) the company was failing to meet the deadline.

ВОПРОС 1: – 1
ВОПРОС 2: – 4
ВОПРОС 3: – 1
ВОПРОС 4: – 2
ВОПРОС 5: – 3
ВОПРОС 6: – 2
ВОПРОС 7: – 3

Dom Robinson interviewsDonnie Dunagan, the voice of BambiCoverBambi Special Edition:Donnie Dunagan turned 71 years old last Augustand in his adult life became a Marine and served in Vietnam, but he startedoff as a child actor, performing a string of roles including the voice ofthe young Bambi in the classic Disney animation for all the family, which wasre-released on a remastered double-disc DVD on February 14th 2005(see the Sendit.com link above for more details).

  • 1. What is it that attracted you to acting initially?
      When I was a young boy my folks and I were dirt-poor and in early 1937we left San Antonio, Texas for Memphis, Tennessee when the Depression got toobad.

      One of my very first memories was of a man who lived across the street from us -a man who was then famous and later became even more famous: a dancer called”Peg Leg” Bates. This nice man across the street taught me, with my mother’sawareness and permission, to dance.

      When I was three and a half there was a talent show at the Orpheum Theatre onSouth Main in Memphis with a prize of $100. A hundred dollars then, to folksliving like most folks were doing, was a lot of money!

      So I entered the compeitions – the neighborhood folks helped my mom fashion,from scraps, a little outfit for me with a painted paper bag as a top hat.I was just a little kid and they threw me up on the stage and I did a danceto a song called ‘A-Tisket, A-Tasket’ and well, I won the thing! Inthe audience was a young fellow from RKO Studios who spotted me and withinfour or five days, we had packed in two suitcases everything we owned andwe were on the train. That was the start of my career which lasted eightfilms before the age of six!


  • 2. How did you come to be involved in Bambi?
      Well I was initially hired as the eye and facial expression model byMr Disney. I can remember posing for the artist at Disney, who wassketching furiously, very fast sketching. They were telling me to turn myhead this way, turn my had that way.

      The voice part evolved from that, I was then auditioned to be the voice ofBambi for part of his youth – Mr Disney wanted real children to do thespeaking parts for the young animals in the film… I signed the contract in1940.

  • 3. What was the most challenging aspect of making the film?
      You were having too much fun for it to be challenging! The whole experiencewas marvellous. I had so much fun with all those wonderful people – when Ihad to perform with my voice they would have to remind me that this was workand not play!
  • 4. What is your favourite recollection of working on Bambi and working with Walt Disney?
      I talked to Mr Disney on several occasions, I had the impression that hewas very well respected by the people around him. He was a real gentle person.

      Working at Disney Studios was a very happy place and I remember that the icecream was swell! I also remember the trip to the Studios was so long and Igot bored but when I got to the studios I thought – I’m at the place wheremagic is made.

      Even though I’m aged 71 now, I have a good memory of the happy times I had asthe voice of Bambi. I remember vividly sitting on a stool – I had never saton a stool before – they had boards and paper and lots of pencils. I calledthem the drawing men because all these men were doing was drawing, drawing,drawing. I’d sit on my stool and they would ask me to look afraid.

  • 5. Who have you enjoyed working with the most, and if you plan to do more films in the future who would you most like to work with?
      My memories of Bambi are of a very happy time, I’m very proud to have workedon such a great story – that children of every age enjoy. I often say thatBambi is a ‘heart massage’, the world nowadays could do with a little heartmassage and 65 years on with this great DVD – we’re still talking about it,it’s wonderful.

      To answer your second questions, I’d love to have the chance to play acharacter again, I’m so honoured to have worked on the films in my childhood.You never know, there might be things in the pipeline.

  • 6. What is your favourite movie of all time?
      Well that would have to be Brigadoon. It’s a good ole corny musical, Ithink the best musical story of all time. It’s the most marvellous thing – Iown 11 copies of the film on video and when I’m visiting children in hospitalsor orphanages, I always make sure I take a copy to show them!
  • Interview copyright © Dom Robinson, 2005.

    [Up to the top of this page]

    Reviewer of movies, videogames and music since 1994. Aortic valve operation survivor from the same year. Running DVDfever.co.uk since 2000. Nobel Peace Prize winner 2021.


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