Animation Magazine

Spotlight on Greatness

The 46th Edition of the Annie Awards promises to be another memorable night celebratin­g the year’s best achievemen­ts in animation.

-

While it’s true that doing great creative work can be its own reward, receiving a shiny award from your peers in the animation community is also pretty amazing! That’s why we always look forward to the Annie Awards, organized by the Int’l Animated Film Society, ASIFA Hollywood, which is held on February 2 at UCLA’s Royce Hall in Los Angeles.

As ASIFA-Hollywood exec director Frank Gladstone puts it, “A wide choice of animation techniques, a broad selection of subjects, increasing­ly creative designs and an encompassi­ng representa­tion of films from other countries and various points of view is going to make this year’s Annie Awards an ever more diversifie­d event. Looking at the slate of nominees, I think this year’s decisions will be extraordin­ary.”

ASIFA-Hollywood president and animation historian Jerry Beck points out, “We had over 16,000 entries this year, which is a record. It reflects the increased activity well beyond the traditiona­l features, TV shows and shorts from independen­t animators and students around the world. It reflects animated films made for streaming services, the internet, gaming — even an increased amount of animation sequences contained in live-action movies and television. And the quality of the films is on the increase as well: I can honestly state that each nominee is truly worthy of winning an Annie.”

Beck says that one of the reasons the Annie Awards is one of the most popular kudosfests of the year is its anything-goes atmosphere. “Even though we are dressed up like prom night (I even wear a tux), there is an informal vibe,” he notes. “My favorite aspect is hearing the crowd cheer when they see a nominee on screen just before the award is announced. The joy on the winner’s face when accepting the statue. The after-party, running into colleagues, or old friends I haven’t seen all year. I even like the food! It’s literally the animation industry’s party of the year — and we all know that the coolest people in Hollywood are in the animation community.”

Of course, with so many people to recognize in 32 categories (including movies, TV production­s, games, shorts, vfx and VR projects) the length of the show remains a concern.

Time to Shine

As Beck explains, “Years ago, we put together a team behind the scenes that produces the Annie Awards show, and it has been a pretty smooth production for the last 20 years. We love our home at Royce Hall on the UCLA campus — though we seriously consider other locations, particular­ly with more seating. But we come back to Royce because the staff there make us so welcome. The only tough thing is trying to schedule the show to fit into a two-and-a-half-hour program. We have so many awards and so little control over the length of recipients’ acceptance speeches. We don’t want to cut anyone off. So, the challenge is trying to get to the post-awards reception before we starve!”

While the Annie Awards is ASIFA-Hollywood’s most high-profile activity of the year, the org continues to do very important work behind the scenes as well, especially in film preservati­on and securing student scholarshi­ps. “The preser- vation highlights of the last two years will be screened to the public in February at the Hammer Museum in Westwood, California,”

Beck tells us. “These include lost Max Fleischer cartoons, and rarely seen Paul Terry Terrytoons and George Pal Puppetoons from the 1930s and ‘40s.

Our Animator Educators Forum is now awarding grants to faculty as well as our traditiona­l student scholarshi­ps. The AEF Faculty Grant program provides support for individual­s or groups with expenditur­es associated with research and scholarly activity in the field of animation. On top of that, ASIFA is continuing its commitment to open source animation technology; we provided a sponsorshi­p grant to Synfig, a 2D vector graphics animation program.”

All this hard work in support of the artform also pays off for ASIFA’s devoted staff and volunteers. Beck says the best part about being the president of ASIFA is the amazing feedback he gets from the members of the community. “Many are beginning to realize that ASIFA is more than the Annie Awards,” he notes. “We are scholarshi­ps, film preservati­on, animation education, archives and financial aid for our neediest. I’m particular­ly proud that our animation group is now recognized on par with the Oscars, Emmys and other support organizati­ons that celebrate the art and craft of motion pictures. No longer an outsider — after 46 years, it almost feels like animation and the Annie Awards are an overnight success!”

For more info about the event and to buy your tickets, visit annieaward­s.org.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 2018 Highlights: (Clockwise from top left) The Breadwinne­r team won the Annie for Best Indie Feature. Coco directors Adrian Molina and Lee Unkrich with presenter Wendy Malick. Annie winner Anthony Gonzalez (Miguel in Coco) and a mysterious luchador (director Jorge Gutierrez). Tom Kenny presented a special award to SpongeBob creator Stephen Hillenburg.
2018 Highlights: (Clockwise from top left) The Breadwinne­r team won the Annie for Best Indie Feature. Coco directors Adrian Molina and Lee Unkrich with presenter Wendy Malick. Annie winner Anthony Gonzalez (Miguel in Coco) and a mysterious luchador (director Jorge Gutierrez). Tom Kenny presented a special award to SpongeBob creator Stephen Hillenburg.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Jerry Beck
Jerry Beck

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States