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Cal Howard
Cal Howard
from Wikipedia

Calvin Henry Howard (March 24, 1911 – September 10, 1993) was an American cartoon story artist, animator and director mostly remembered for his work at Walter Lantz Productions and Warner Bros. Cartoons.[1] He was also the voice actor of Gabby Goat in Get Rich Quick Porky and Meathead Dog in Screwball Squirrel.[2]

Career

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In the late 1920s, Howard became a story man and animator for Walter Lantz Productions, then Walt Disney Animation in 1929. During his career, he worked for several pioneer animators besides Lantz and Disney, including Max Fleischer and Ub Iwerks. From 1930 to 1933, Howard served as a story man for Iwerks and then Lantz.

In 1938, Howard left Warner Bros. Cartoons with his friend Tedd Pierce to work for Fleischer Studios in Miami, and served as the live-action model for Prince David in Fleischer's Gulliver's Travels. In the 1940s, Howard moved to a different studio. He left Fleischer for the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio in 1942, where he served as an uncredited writer for Tom and Jerry. He was fired by Fred Quimby, after discovering that he brought alcohol to the ink and paint department during the Christmas holiday.[3] Howard would move to Screen Gems, and later returned to Warner Bros 1949.

In 1974, Howard returned to Disney as a story artist. In 1949, Cal Howard moved from California to New York City, to work on NBC's Broadway Open House and Your Show of Shows. When Broadway Open House ended he was hired by Pat Weaver to be an associate producer and writer for the development of NBC's Today Show. He left NBC early in 1952 to return to California and work with Ralph Edwards. In the 1960s, he returned to cartoon work, until his retirement. Cal Howard worked at over seven animation studios in his lifetime and finally received the Annie Award in 1980 for lifetime achievement. He also served on the advisory board of the National Student Film Institute.[4][5]

References

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from Grokipedia
Cal Howard is an American cartoon writer and songwriter known for his significant contributions to animated short films during the Golden Age of American animation, particularly through his work on the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series at Warner Bros. Born on April 24, 1906, in Los Angeles, California, Howard entered the animation industry in the 1930s and quickly established himself as a prolific scriptwriter at Leon Schlesinger Productions (Warner Bros. Cartoons), where he penned stories for many classic shorts featuring characters such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Porky Pig from 1937 to 1943. After departing Warner Bros., he freelanced and worked for various studios including Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Walter Lantz Productions, and Walt Disney Productions, continuing to write scripts and contribute lyrics for animated projects into later decades. His career spanned several major animation houses and helped shape the humor and narrative style of numerous theatrical cartoons. Howard passed away on September 2, 1993, leaving behind a legacy of creative work in the animation industry.

Early life

Childhood and entry into animation

Cal Howard was born Calvin Henry Howard on March 24, 1911, in Los Angeles, California. Calvin Henry Howard began his artistic career as a young teenager by submitting drawings and comics to The Junior Times, a supplement of the Los Angeles Times, with his contributions appearing from late 1923 through 1927. In 1930, Howard entered the animation industry as an in-betweener at Walt Disney's studio. Due to budget cuts, he was released from his contract on December 7, 1931, along with junior animator Ed Benedict, as reported by Variety. He subsequently moved to Walter Lantz's studio.

Theatrical animation career in the 1930s

Early studios and Warner Bros. contributions

Howard's early animation career in the 1930s featured several studio transitions after his release from Walt Disney's studio on December 7, 1931, due to budget cuts. He then joined Walter Lantz Productions along with animator Ed Benedict, where he met and befriended Tex Avery. Around 1933, Howard briefly worked at Ub Iwerks' studio before returning to Lantz. In April 1935, after Avery left Lantz to direct at Warner Bros., Howard assisted him on the storyboard for Avery's debut Warner cartoon, Gold Diggers of '49 (released November 1935), at Avery's home while still employed at Lantz. Howard soon followed Avery to Warner Bros., joining the story department as part of a general pool of gag writers and story men who contributed ideas across directors' units under a rotating credit system. This system assigned on-screen story credits rotationally rather than based on individual contributions to specific films. Howard received screen story credit on Tex Avery's Little Red Walking Hood (1937) and The Sneezing Weasel (1938). He also performed incidental voice work, including the role of Gabby Goat in Bob Clampett's Get Rich Quick Porky (1937). During their time together at Lantz, Howard and Avery were known as a prankster duo who frequently engaged in workplace hijinks. At Warner Bros., Howard continued his reputation for practical jokes; Chuck Jones later recalled Howard operating a makeshift commissary from his desk with zinc-lined drawers and lowering refreshments in baskets to colleagues on lower floors, once retaliating against a pilfered basket by inserting a lit firecracker.

Co-directing and departure from Warner Bros.

In the fall of 1937, following Friz Freleng's departure from Warner Bros. to MGM around September, Cal Howard was assigned to co-direct a newly formed animation unit alongside animator Cal Dalton. The Howard-Dalton team received directing credits on three theatrical cartoons released in 1938, including the Merrie Melodies short A-Lad-In Bagdad. Howard's directorial stint was brief, and he departed Warner Bros. by September 1938. To mark his exit, he paid an ice cream vendor to don his outfit, ring the bell, and distribute free ice cream to his fellow Warner artists, as recalled by animator Bob Kurtz: "When Cal quit Warners, he went to see one guy who was selling ice cream and he paid the guy to put on his outfit and rang the bell, giving away free ice cream to all the Warner artists."

1940s studio work

Fleischer Studios and Gulliver's Travels

Cal Howard relocated to Fleischer Studios' new facility in Miami in 1938, joining forces with writer Tedd Pierce following his time at Warner Bros. During his tenure at the studio, he contributed storyboards to Gulliver's Travels (1939), the studio's first animated feature film. He also served as the live-action model for the character Prince David and provided the character's single line of dialogue as his voice actor. Howard shared screenplay credit on Gulliver's Travels with Dan Gordon, Tedd Pierce, Isadore Sparber, and Edmond Seward. Howard received screen adaptation credit on Fleischer Studios' second animated feature, Mr. Bug Goes to Town (1941). While at the Miami studio, he also contributed story material to several of the studio's theatrical short subjects.

MGM and Screen Gems

After his work on Gulliver's Travels at Fleischer Studios, Cal Howard returned to the West Coast and joined MGM as a story man in the summer of 1941. He contributed to stories for the Tom and Jerry series, alternating between the units led by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera and the one headed by Rudy Ising, though story men received little or no on-screen credit during this period. In later years, Howard claimed to have contributed to an Oscar-winning Tom and Jerry cartoon but could not recall the specific title; possible candidates include The Yankee Doodle Mouse (1943) or Mouse Trouble (1944). During the Christmas holidays, Howard brought alcohol into the ink and paint department; animator Ed Love initially took the blame and was fired, but producer Fred Quimby ultimately terminated Howard after learning the truth. Howard retained a strong animosity toward Quimby, once teaching his son's Cub Scout troop to shout "Quimby is a red-faced jerk!" while driving past the MGM building. By May 1945, Howard had moved to Screen Gems as a story man, earning screen credits on several entries in the Phantasies and Color Rhapsodies series. He also supplied incidental character voices, including that of a homeless homing pigeon in Cockatoos for Two (1947). After Screen Gems closed in 1947, he pioneered early television animation by creating Brother Goose, a three-minute serialized program that employed still drawings presented sequentially over a music and dialogue track. In early 1949, Howard briefly returned to Warner Bros. in Friz Freleng's unit, receiving story co-credit with Warren Foster on Canned Feud (1951).

Television and multimedia work

Pioneering TV projects and move to New York

Following the closure of Screen Gems in the late 1940s, Cal Howard experimented with early television animation formats while freelancing. He created Brother Goose, a three-minute serialized program using sequential still drawings over music and dialogue tracks as part of the syndicated Telecomics package in 1949. The Telecomics concept was later picked up by NBC and repackaged as NBC Comics, though without his further involvement. In 1949, Howard moved to New York City to focus on live television writing amid the medium's rapid growth. Morey Amsterdam and Jerry Lester hired him to write sketch outlines for NBC's Broadway Open House, the pioneering late-night comedy-variety series starring Jerry Lester (with Morey Amsterdam as a regular), which premiered on May 29, 1950. A notable anecdote from this period reflects the intense pressure of live comedy production: radio personality Dick Whittinghill recalled that Howard would vomit before every strong show, and crew members would anxiously check if he had done so—if yes, they celebrated as a sign of quality. If no, it indicated a weaker episode. These early New York experiences marked Howard's entry into television as a gag and sketch writer during the industry's formative live era.

NBC roles and gag writing

Cal Howard transitioned to staff positions at NBC in the early 1950s, serving as an associate producer and writer during the development of the Today show following his contributions to Broadway Open House. He departed NBC in early 1952 and relocated to California to collaborate with producer Ralph Edwards. In 1952, Howard worked as producer and director on Edwards's short-lived daytime series The Ralph Edwards Show, which premiered in January and featured low-budget stunt-based games and gags; after host Ralph Edwards was replaced by Johnny Dugan four months later, Howard remained in the producer-director role for the renamed program. He continued his association with Edwards by writing for the children's spin-off Funny Boners, which aired on NBC from 1954 to 1955 and adapted the Truth or Consequences format for younger audiences with childish tricks and stunts. From late 1956 onward, following Bob Barker's assumption of hosting duties on a revived Truth or Consequences, Howard served as one of the program's main gag writers, contributing to the humorous and often humiliating "consequences" segments that characterized the series. In 1957, he made a personal on-camera appearance on The Steve Allen Show, participating in a stunt where he was struck with breakaway bottles as part of a dare tied to the style of consequences featured on Truth or Consequences. In 1958, Howard wrote the teleplay for the unsold pilot The Adventures of Superpup, a proposed children's series that reimagined Adventures of Superman characters as dogs using little people in costumes; the project was filmed but not picked up by a network.

Later career in animation and comics

Returns to animation studios

After his work in television during the 1950s, Cal Howard returned to animation as a freelancer by the late 1950s, resuming cartoon story work for Walter Lantz Productions and Warner Bros. In the early 1960s, he worked as a story man for CBS-Terrytoons, contributed to Format Films' The Alvin Show, and wrote for Ed Graham Productions' Linus the Lion-Hearted. Throughout the decade, he wrote stories for Walter Lantz Productions. He also served as the main writer at Warner Bros./Seven Arts during the final period of their theatrical cartoon production under Herbert Klynn and Bill Hendricks, providing stories for series including Merlin the Magic Mouse, Bunny and Claude, and various one-shot cartoons. Following the closure of the Warner Bros. animation department in 1970, Howard returned to Walter Lantz Productions, where he received story credits on the studio's final theatrical output before it folded in 1972. He provided stories for numerous Woody Woodpecker shorts released that year, including A Fish Story, Bye, Bye, Blackboard, Unlucky Potluck, The Genie with the Light Touch, For the Love of Pizza, Show Biz Beagle, Chili Con Corny, Rain Rain, Go Away, Pecking Holes in Poles, and Let Charlie Do It. Howard also contributed stories to The Bugs Bunny Show from 1961 to 1972, a television series that primarily packaged classic Warner Bros. theatrical cartoons with new framing material, and later wrote for The Bugs Bunny / Road Runner Show in 1978.

Disney publications and retirement

Cal Howard returned to Disney in the mid-1970s, this time in the publications division, after his early layoff from the animation department in 1931. In 1974, he was appointed story editor for Walt Disney Publications, where he oversaw story development and contributed scripts primarily for foreign-market comic books. His work emphasized gag-driven narratives and character-focused tales, including the "Mickey and the Sleuth" series, which cast Mickey Mouse as a detective in humorous mystery adventures, and "Goofy Classics," a line of stories adapting classic literature and folklore with Goofy in the lead role. Howard also contributed to the revival of Mortimer Mouse in Disney comics during this period, bringing back the character—originally introduced as Mickey's rival in the 1930s—in new stories for international audiences. He continued in this capacity until his official retirement from the Disney comics department in 1986.

Legacy and death

Annie Award and industry impact

Cal Howard received the Annie Award for Lifetime Achievement in Animation in 1980 from ASIFA-Hollywood, recognizing his enduring contributions to the field. This honor highlighted a career spanning more than five decades, during which he worked as a story artist and gag writer across more than seven animation studios—including Disney, Warner Bros., MGM, Fleischer, and Walter Lantz—as well as in early television animation, live-action comedy writing, and Disney comic books. His versatility and prolific output as a gag man made him a key behind-the-scenes influence on animated humor, from theatrical shorts to foreign-market comics. Howard's sharp wit and love of practical jokes left a lasting impression on colleagues. Chuck Jones described Howard's antics at Warner Bros., where he operated a makeshift commissary from his desk and once retaliated against basket thieves from a neighboring office by replacing the contents with a lit firecracker. Bob Kurtz, who regarded Howard as a mentor and close friend, recounted how Howard arranged for an ice-cream vendor to distribute free treats to Warner artists upon quitting the studio, and how, even in later years, he would shout "Fuck Quimby!" out the car window when passing Quimby Street as a longstanding jab at MGM producer Fred Quimby. Kurtz further called Howard "the funnest man I have ever known." These stories were shared by Jones and Kurtz at Howard's eulogy, underscoring his reputation for humor both on and off the page.

Final years and passing

After retiring in 1986 from his role as story editor for Walt Disney Publications, Cal Howard resided in the Los Angeles area. He maintained social connections with friends and colleagues in retirement, including regular breakfast meetings every two or three weeks with animator Bob Kurtz. Howard died on September 10, 1993, at the Motion Picture Country Hospital in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, at the age of 82 after a long period of declining health. His son Jack Howard, who produces television commercials, confirmed that his father's passing followed this extended decline. At his eulogy, Howard's family insisted that colleagues share humorous stories from his life, with tributes delivered by figures including Bob Kurtz and Chuck Jones. Kurtz recounted one example of Howard's enduring personality in later years: during their outings, whenever they passed Quimby Street, Howard would stick his head out of the car and shout "Fuck Quimby!" in reference to his longstanding grudge against MGM producer Fred Quimby.
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