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David Hilberman
David Hilberman
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David Hilberman (18 December 1911 – 5 July 2007) was an American animator and one of the founders of classic 1940s animation. An innovator in the animation industry, he co-founded United Productions of America (UPA).[2][3] The studio gave its artists great freedom and pioneered the modern style of animation. As Animator and Professor Tom Sito noted: "Arguably, no studio since Walt Disney exerted such a great influence on world animation."[4] He and Zack Schwartz went on to start Tempo Productions which became an early leader in television animated commercial production. In short, he played an important role in the new directions the art form took in the 1940s and '50s.[5][6]

Key Information

Hilberman studied art in schools in both Detroit and Cleveland. The Great Depression began when he was 18, and with its huge economic dislocation promoted political activism and consequential legislation: the Social Security Act and the National Labor Relations Act. In 1932 he traveled with friends to Russia, where all of their parents had been born. He stayed for six months in Leningrad, worked in a theater and studied stagecraft and art. Unable to speak Russian and finding Russians too dogmatic, he returned to Cleveland. There he resumed his education at Case Western Reserve University, earning a B.S. in Art Education in 1934 and continuing his involvement with theater at the Cleveland Play House eventually securing a job teaching art in high school. He married, became aware of a talent search for artists being held by Walt Disney Productions and submitted a portfolio. He became one of 29 artists hired out of several thousand applicants. Hilberman began in animation as an assistant animator and shortly was asked by Bill Tytla to join his unit working on the dwarf sequences in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Disney's first animated feature film. The film, which had been a major gamble for the Walt Disney studio became a huge artistic and financial success and lead to a series of pioneering animation features. He went on to do layout on six short films and was then put in charge of pre-production layout for Bambi. In preparation, he learned how to use the studio's huge new multiplane camera used for the panoramas through the woods. He was proud of the work done at the studio.[7] The rise of Hitler in Germany during the 1930’s was of growing concern for many. David, (pen name Mark David) with Jerome Lawrence Schwartz worked together in late 1939 to produce Oscar the Ostrich. It featured a screaming Hitler Ostrich who gathered up followers and loose sand dunes. Oscar was the good ostrich who stuck his head in the sand and ignored the screaming, dangerous one. Then the Hitler Ostrich seized the sand dune to the East. This clearly referred to the September 1, 1939 German seizure of Poland which marked the start of World War II, even as Stalin still supported Germany. Oscar and his buddies decide it is time to get angry and fight back.

Many artists had worked long unpaid hours on Snow White. Instead of overtime pay, virtually all employees were promised bonuses for their efforts, some large, some small. Many were never paid as much of the revenues from the feature went into building the new Disney Studio in Burbank. Importantly, the Studio's revenues had been cut in nearly half by the WWII in Europe. By early 1941 artists were being let go without explanation, even when senior and very skilled. These layoffs lead directly to the Disney animators' strike in the spring of 1941. In an FBI interview three weeks after the strike began, Disney blamed these staff cuts for the strike.[8] Nevertheless, two weeks later Disney placed an ad in Hollywood trade papers stated the strike was caused by Communist agitation![9] Many of these issues are discussed in Karl F. Cohen's 1997 book: Forbidden Animation.

The after effects of the Studio's economic downturn and the strike included a major exodus of talent from Disney. In 1943 David Hilberman, Zack Schwartz and Steve Bosustow, set up a new studio, which became UPA. Notable early films to which he contributed included his most political films: Point Rationing of Foods which was shown nationwide as part of the war effort, then for FDR's 1944 re-election campaign: Hell-Bent for Election and subsequently: Brotherhood of Man. The pamphlet, Races of Mankind on which Brotherhood was based, was written by two eminent anthropologists, Ruth Benedict and Gene Weltfish and based on U.S. Army studies of recruits in WWI. It was nevertheless banned by the War Department as subversive due to its assertion that racial differences were superficial.

Hilberman was drafted into the army toward the end of World War II and a year after his return to civilian life he sold his interest in UPA. The end of the war and the 1946 elections brought a sharp right turn in American politics. Exploiting fears of the Soviet Union (unrealistic given the decimation of the Soviet Union by the war and Stalin's policies) the Second Red Scare began. In 1947 the House Un-American Activities Committee met in Hollywood. Walt Disney blamed the strike on communist agitators rather than acknowledging unexplained layoffs of artists previously attributed to the studio's financial stress. Disney named several artists, including Hilberman as Communists. Similarly, other movie studio executives named many union activists as Communists and the attack on the unions turned into a nasty witch-hunt. Best known for the 10 Screen Writers denounced as Communists, the Hollywood Blacklist began. The social justice issues which motivated the Hilbermans to attend some Communist Party meetings in the late 1930s and early 1940s—worker's rights, unions, women's rights, an end to racism – were regarded as subversive. One of the FBI special agents who was involved chasing commies found himself thinking "Gee this isn't all that bad. They want equal rights in the union for minorities and blacks and equal pay for women. What the hell is wrong with this?"[10]

In 1947 David Hilberman and Zack Schwartz founded another studio in New York City: Tempo Productions which went on to become a very successful producer of television animated commercials of high artistic merit. In December 1953 at the height of the red scare the newsletter Counterattack, listed the companies that had used Tempo and urged a boycott of the firm. Abruptly, orders for commercials were withdrawn and all employees had to be laid off. The business was sold and the family traveled to Europe the next spring as David looked for work in Western Europe. Their boat trip to Europe overlapped with the Army-McCarthy hearings, which were to mark the beginning of end of the witch-hunt, if not its substantial political and personal after-effects. After talking to film producers and directors in France and Italy, Hilberman chose work in London for over a year where he set up a TV animated commercial department for Pearl and Dean and directed Calling All Salesmen. The family returned home in late 1955.[11]

Back in New York, working as Transfilm, he produced and directed Man of Action in 1955. In 1962 he directed Little Blue and Little Yellow, based on the book of the same name by Leo Lionni which had an anti discrimination theme. He also directed a fanciful PR film for ESSO, designed by Ronald Searle: Energetically Yours with old Disney & UPA associates Bill Melendez and Art Babbitt doing the animation at their respective companies. Melendez took the simplified modern animation style and use of artist's individual characters pioneered at UPA to the Peanuts TV series. Back in Los Angeles, at Churchill Films he designed and directed educational films: Quest for Freedom, Ancient New World, Transportation, Land of Immigrants, Hooked and Girl to Woman. He also worked at Hanna-Barbera doing layout for a variety of projects, a connection which began at Disney's and lasted many years. In 1963 David returned to school part-time earning an MA in Theater Arts from UCLA in 1965. He was invited to teach at San Francisco State University in 1967, where he taught animation and helped start the Film department. A number these films are available on YouTube and other internet sites.

After leaving SF State[clarification needed] in 1973 he and his wife lived in the SF Bay Area[where?] for many years. He made several films on Synanon including The People's Ranch, What is Synanon? and The Synanon Wedding, worked with Jeff Hale at Imagination, Inc. and designed sets for the Palo Alto Children's Theater. He resumed doing layout work for Hanna-Barbera, which included a six-month stint in Japan coordinating production in East Asia for The Smurfs. His wife Libbie's warmth and caring held the family together through many difficult moves. She died on 11 July 2006, David a year later on 5 July 2007. They are survived by 3 children, 9 grandchildren and 8 great-grandchildren.

He was Jewish.[12] He expressed his religion primarily by a commitment to social justice, racial and gender equality and direct support for workers through health insurance, unions and similar programs and policies.

Awards

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
David Hilberman is an American animator known for his early contributions to Walt Disney feature films, his leadership in the 1941 Disney animators' strike, and his co-founding of United Productions of America (UPA), which pioneered a modernist limited animation style that significantly influenced the industry. Born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1911, he moved to Los Angeles in 1936 after being recruited by Disney and advanced to layout artist, working on shorts such as Farmyard Symphony and The Ugly Duckling, as well as features including Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and Bambi. Hilberman became a key figure in union organizing at Disney amid growing labor tensions, helping lead the Screen Cartoonists' Guild and playing a prominent role in the bitter 1941 strike. After leaving Disney, he co-founded Industrial Film and Poster Service with Zachary Schwartz and Stephen Bosustow to produce training films and graphics, which reorganized into UPA in 1945 and became renowned for innovative approaches that emphasized stylized design over Disney's detailed realism. He sold his UPA interest shortly after to pursue other opportunities, including attempts to establish animation in the Soviet Union that did not materialize. In the late 1940s, Hilberman co-founded Tempo Productions in New York, a leading commercial animation studio, but accusations of communist affiliations—publicly stated by Walt Disney before the House Un-American Activities Committee and echoed in media—led to its closure during the blacklist era. He acknowledged brief Communist Party membership before World War II but emphasized that the Disney strike was not communist-led. Following these challenges, he freelanced in Europe and later returned to the United States, earning a master's degree in theater arts from UCLA in 1965 and teaching animation and film at San Francisco State University from 1967 to 1973. Hilberman continued working in animation through the 1980s and 1990s on various television series and films before retiring, remaining active in the arts and education until his death on July 5, 2007, at age 95. His career bridged traditional Hollywood animation with modernist experimentation and labor activism, leaving a lasting impact on the field's artistic and organizational development.

Early life and education

Birth and family background

David Hilberman was born on December 18, 1911, in Cleveland, Ohio. He grew up in Cleveland, where he had a brother named Max Hilberman.

Education and early travels

David Hilberman traveled to Russia at the age of 21 around 1932, where he spent considerable time immersing himself in the local arts scene. During this period, he worked backstage at the Leningrad State People’s Theatre and attended classes at the Leningrad Academy of Fine Art. Hilberman was a member of the Communist Party for about three years up to the United States' entry into World War II. In a 1980 interview with animation historian John Canemaker, he stated: “up to the war, for about three years, I was a Communist.” This brief political involvement occurred during the 1930s and early 1940s.

Career at Walt Disney Productions

Joining Disney and role progression

David Hilberman joined Walt Disney Productions in July 1936 as a trainee, arriving in Los Angeles as one of 40 young artists recruited through a nationwide talent search. Within 18 months (or a little over a year by some accounts), he advanced to layout artist, contributing to scene planning and staging for animated productions. His tenure at Disney ended in 1941 amid growing labor tensions at the studio.

Layout contributions to Disney projects

Hilberman contributed to the visual staging and composition of several animated short subjects, including Farmyard Symphony (1938), The Ugly Duckling (1939), and Beach Picnic (1939). In 1939, he became the first production layout artist assigned to the feature film Bambi, overseeing early pre-production layout work before leaving the project early. He contributed layout work to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) and Bambi (1942). These layout roles involved planning scene compositions, backgrounds, and character placements to support animation and storytelling in Disney's signature style.

The 1941 Disney animators' strike

Leadership role in the strike

David Hilberman was one of the primary leaders of the 1941 Disney animators' strike, serving alongside Art Babbitt as a key organizer and artist representative. As secretary of the Disney unit of the Screen Cartoonists Guild, he played an active role in early union efforts beginning in 1940, including distributing membership cards, gathering support among animators, and rallying strikers with speeches over loudspeakers when the walkout began on May 29, 1941. The strikers demanded better wages, improved working conditions, and recognition of the Screen Cartoonists Guild as their bargaining representative. In his October 24, 1947, testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee, Walt Disney named Hilberman as the main organizer of the strike, describing him as "the real brains of this" and stating "I believe he is a Communist. His name is David Hilberman." Disney added that Hilberman had "considerable time at the Moscow Art Theater studying art direction, or something" and "had no religion," according to his investigation of Hilberman's background. Hilberman later denied Communist leadership of the strike in a 1980 interview with animation historian John Canemaker, asserting “The strike itself was not Communist-led. I was floored when some obviously communist-inspired material was put up on the bulletin board.” He acknowledged brief Communist Party membership, noting “up to the war, for about three years, I was a Communist. Once the war came along everybody plunged into the war effort, everybody’s on the same side, and I of course went into the Service.” Following the strike's resolution, Hilberman served in the U.S. Army during World War II.

Immediate aftermath and political accusations

Following the settlement of the 1941 Disney animators' strike, David Hilberman departed from Walt Disney Productions. He subsequently served a brief stint in the United States Army during World War II, a period when he noted that "everybody plunged into the war effort" and that he "of course went into the Service." In his 1947 testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee, Walt Disney accused Hilberman of communist affiliations and identified him as the hidden leader of the strike, stating, "I feel that there is one artist in my plant... he was the real brains of this, and I believe he is a Communist. His name is David Hilberman." Disney elaborated that Hilberman "had no religion" and "had spent considerable time at the Moscow Art Theatre studying art direction, or something," presenting these details as evidence supporting his belief in Hilberman's communist ties. These accusations formed part of Disney's broader claim that the 1941 strike represented a communist effort to influence his studio. Hilberman later clarified in interviews that his involvement with the Communist Party lasted about three years and ended prior to the war, after which he emphasized that "the strike itself was not communist-led" and expressed surprise at some communist-inspired materials appearing during the events. He frequently denied being a communist.

Founding and early work at UPA

Establishment of UPA with partners

Following the 1941 Disney animators' strike, David Hilberman partnered with fellow former Disney animator Zack Schwartz to establish an independent operation focused on freelance animation and graphic work. They rented shared studio space in the Otto K. Olesen Building in Hollywood, providing a place to paint, study, and work outside traditional animation studios. During the war years, Stephen Bosustow, then employed at Hughes Aircraft, approached Hilberman with a commission for a safety filmstrip from the company's safety director, a project that Hughes sought to distribute more broadly due to demand. When Bosustow's employer declined to take on the speculative work, Hilberman invited him to collaborate in the rented Olesen Building space alongside Schwartz, where the three completed the filmstrip together. This initial joint effort launched their formal partnership and laid the groundwork for the studio's early operations. The collaboration soon formalized as Industrial Film and Poster Service, a small studio producing films, filmstrips, and graphic materials primarily for defense contractors, the Army, and the Navy during World War II. In late 1945, as the studio expanded, it was reorganized and renamed United Productions of America (UPA). This founding marked the beginning of a venture that would pioneer a more stylized approach to animation in subsequent years.

Key early productions and stylistic innovations

David Hilberman, as a co-founder of United Productions of America (UPA), contributed significantly to the studio's early independent productions and its pioneering shift toward a distinctive animation aesthetic. The studio—initially operating as Industrial Film and Poster Service before reorganizing as UPA in late 1945—received its first major commission in 1944 when the United Auto Workers union hired it to produce Hell-Bent for Election, a campaign short directed by Chuck Jones that supported Franklin D. Roosevelt's bid for a fourth term. This film marked an important early success for the group and demonstrated their ability to create politically engaged animation outside the Disney system. In 1946, UPA produced Brotherhood of Man, another United Auto Workers-sponsored short directed by Bobe Cannon that promoted racial tolerance. This film helped launch the studio's signature flat, stylized design, which emphasized simplified character forms, graphic backgrounds, and expressive movement over detailed rendering. UPA's broader stylistic innovations centered on limited animation techniques, including reduced drawings per foot of film, flatter compositions, and a modernist graphic approach that deliberately contrasted with Disney's naturalistic full animation and multi-plane realism. These choices were a collaborative effort among Hilberman, Zachary Schwartz, and Stephen Bosustow, with Hilberman noted for building the studio on a solid foundation through careful planning and discussion. Industry historian John Canemaker later described Hilberman as a pivotal figure whose artistic vision in co-founding UPA helped change how Hollywood cartoons were made and what they looked like.

Departure from UPA and Tempo Productions

Sale of UPA interest

In 1946, David Hilberman and Zachary Schwartz sold their shares in United Productions of America to their co-founder Stephen Bosustow. This transaction transferred full ownership and operational control of the studio to Bosustow. The sale marked Hilberman's complete departure from UPA, ending his direct involvement in the company he had helped establish just a few years earlier. Following the change in ownership, UPA continued to develop its distinctive style and achieved growing acclaim in the animation industry under Bosustow's leadership.

Founding Tempo and pioneering TV commercials

After leaving United Productions of America, David Hilberman relocated to New York City and co-founded Tempo Productions with Zack Schwartz in 1946, establishing the studio to produce animated television commercials as television broadcasting began its rapid expansion. Bill Pomerance later joined the partnership, strengthening the operation. Tempo Productions grew quickly and became one of the largest animation studios specializing in TV commercials in the United States by the early 1950s. The studio earned recognition as a leading producer of award-winning animated television advertisements, noted for their high artistic merit and innovative approach during the medium's formative years. As one of the earliest and most successful creators of television animated commercials, Tempo pioneered the application of limited animation techniques to advertising, enabling efficient yet creative production that helped legitimize animation as a powerful tool for the emerging television market. This work built on stylistic innovations from Hilberman's prior experience, setting standards for artistic quality in commercial animation.

Blacklisting, international period, and return

Impact of the Red Scare on career

The Red Scare and the ensuing Hollywood blacklist profoundly disrupted David Hilberman's career in the early 1950s. His union leadership during the 1941 Disney strike, along with his acknowledged brief membership in the Communist Party for about three years before World War II, made him a target of anti-communist scrutiny. Accusations stemming from Walt Disney's 1947 testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee, where he named Hilberman as a communist instrumental in the strike, combined with public statements from gossip columnist Walter Winchell labeling him a communist, contributed to his blacklisting. These pressures forced the closure of Tempo Productions around 1952, ending the studio's success as one of the leading producers of television commercials in New York. The shutdown of Tempo effectively terminated Hilberman's role in a major commercial animation enterprise and marked a significant setback in his domestic career during the McCarthy era.

Work in England and industrial films

Following the impact of blacklisting in the early 1950s, David Hilberman relocated to England, where he continued his animation career by directing industrial and educational films. During this international exile period, he focused on commissioned shorts that served corporate and educational purposes rather than theatrical entertainment. One of his most prominent works from this era was Energetically Yours (1957), an industrial film produced for the Standard Oil Company (Esso) that traced the history of human energy use from primitive times to the modern era of petroleum. The film featured distinctive designs by British illustrator Ronald Searle and was directed by Hilberman. It included narration by British actor Maurice Denham. After returning to the United States, Hilberman directed the educational short Girl to Woman in 1965, which addressed adolescent development and puberty for young female audiences. This film was produced in collaboration with Robert B. Churchill and aimed at school and instructional settings. These projects exemplified Hilberman's contributions to non-theatrical animation. He eventually returned to the United States and shifted toward teaching animation.

Teaching and late animation career

Establishing animation education at San Francisco State

In the late 1960s, David Hilberman became the first animation professor at San Francisco State University, where he played a pivotal role in establishing formal animation education. He began teaching animation and film classes at the university in 1967 and continued until 1973, during which time he developed an animation studies program. This effort helped start the animation program at San Francisco State College (later University) in the 1960s, marking a significant step in institutionalizing animation training in higher education. Hilberman's work at San Francisco State represented a pioneering contribution to animation education, building on his extensive industry experience to create structured academic opportunities for students. His wife, Libby Hilberman, herself a noted pioneer in animation who had worked at UPA, Tempo, and Disney, also taught at SF State later in her career.

Layout and directing work in 1980s–1990s television

In the 1980s and 1990s, David Hilberman returned to active work in television animation, primarily as a layout artist at Hanna-Barbera Productions, contributing to a substantial volume of episodic content during this later phase of his career. He provided layout for Hanna-Barbera series including The Smurfs (1981–1982, 62 episodes) and The Kwicky Koala Show (1981), as well as the feature film Once Upon a Forest (1993). Hilberman also handled layout duties on He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (1984–1985, 65 episodes) and She-Ra: Princess of Power (1985, 65 episodes). He took on a supervising director role for Galaxy High School (1986, 13 episodes) and worked as a storyboard or story director on My Little Pony (1986–1987, 61 episodes). This body of work reflected Hilberman's continued involvement in high-output television animation production, overlapping with his residence in the San Francisco Bay Area following his earlier teaching tenure.

Personal life, death, and legacy

Family and personal relationships

David Hilberman was born on December 18, 1911. He was married to Libby Hilberman (also known as Libbie in some sources), who was also an animator and worked at Walt Disney Productions, United Productions of America (UPA), and Tempo Productions. She later taught animation at San Francisco State University. Libby Hilberman was recognized as one of the women pioneers in the animation industry. She died on July 11, 2006. Hilberman and his wife had three children: sons Mark and Dan, and daughter Kathe. Their son Mark Hilberman has been quoted in obituaries regarding his father's life and career.

Death and lasting influence on animation

David Hilberman died on July 5, 2007, at Stanford Hospital in Stanford, California, at the age of 95. His son Mark reported that the cause was complications from an infection. Hilberman is remembered as a pivotal innovator in animation history, most notably as a co-founder of United Productions of America (UPA), whose stylized, limited animation approach marked a significant departure from the detailed, realistic style associated with Disney and influenced the broader industry's evolution toward more modernist and economical techniques suitable for television. Animation historian John Canemaker described him as "inadvertently, almost accidentally, a pivotal figure in animation history," crediting his co-founding of UPA and related efforts with changing "forever how the Hollywood cartoon was made and what it looked like." Animator Gene Deitch similarly emphasized that "all who continue to push the animation envelope today owe very much to Dave Hilberman’s vision and fortitude." Hilberman's influence extended to pioneering television commercials as a co-founder of Tempo Productions, one of the leading animation studios for TV advertising in its era, and to education, where he helped establish the animation program at San Francisco State University and taught there from 1967 to 1973, contributing to the professional training of future animators. His legacy endures in animation histories as a bridge between the classic Disney era and the modern limited-animation landscape that enabled animation's expansion into television and advertising.

References

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