DreamWorks announced this afternoon that veteran producers Bonnie Arnold and Mireille Soria, the respective lead producers of the studio's "How to Train Your Dragon" and "Madagascar" franchises, will oversee creative development and production for DreamWorks Animation’s theatrical releases.
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Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Bill Damaschke, Bonnie Arnold, Mireille Soria, Business, Add a tag

Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Events, dreamworks, DreamWorks Animation, Bill Damaschke, Conrad Vernon, Australian Centre for the Moving Image, Add a tag
“DreamWorks Animation: The Exhibition” opened last month at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI). Clearly inspired by “Pixar: 20 Years of Animation,” which was shown at the Museum of Modern Art in New York back in 2005, the DreamWorks show includes over 400 items, and covers the studio's twenty-year history right up to the present—there are displays about "Mr. Peabody & Sherman" and "How to Train Your Dragon 2," which will be released next month. It is the largest exhibition in the twelve-year history of the ACMI.
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Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Events, dreamworks, DreamWorks Animation, Bill Damaschke, Conrad Vernon, Australian Centre for the Moving Image, Add a tag
“DreamWorks Animation: The Exhibition” opened last month at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI). Clearly inspired by “Pixar: 20 Years of Animation,” which was shown at the Museum of Modern Art in New York back in 2005, the DreamWorks show includes over 400 items, and covers the studio's twenty-year history right up to the present—there are displays about "Mr. Peabody & Sherman" and "How to Train Your Dragon 2," which will be released next month. It is the largest exhibition in the twelve-year history of the ACMI.
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Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: John Lasseter, Brave, Pixar, dreamworks, Brenda Chapman, DreamWorks Animation, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Bill Damaschke, Add a tag
Yesterday’s New York Times delivered a glowing profile of DreamWorks chief creative officer Bill Damaschke. The pieces describes how CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg is relinquishing oversight of creative matters to Damaschke, who for his part is trying to make the studio more creator-friendly.
It reads like your typical puff piece until it gets to the part about Brenda Chapman. The article reveals that Chapman, who co-directed the first DreamWorks film The Prince of Egypt before jumping to Pixar where she made Brave, has recently returned to DreamWorks. First, Chapman explains why she left DreamWorks:
“I left in part because I felt like I was being asked to do the same story over and over. I look at the movies DreamWorks is doing now, and I see the exact opposite happening.”
Then, it gets juicy when she places the blame for her removal as director of Brave squarely on the shoulders of John Lasseter:
She was pushed out of Pixar after clashing with that studio’s chief creative officer, John Lasseter. Although she could have joined another studio, she said she chose to return to Glendale in part because of Mr. Damaschke, who started at DreamWorks Animation in 1995 as a production assistant on The Prince of Egypt.
“As Jeffrey has gained experience and age, and DreamWorks has grown, he has stepped back and allowed other people to run creative,” Ms. Chapman said. “At Pixar, it’s all John’s show.” She added of DreamWorks Animation, “you can butt heads here and not be punished for it, unlike at another place I could name.”
It’s not exactly news that there was some kind of a conflict between Lasseter and Chapman, but it begins a new chapter in the story when Chapman publicly claims that Lasseter’s micromanagement was the cause of her rift with Pixar. And on another note, who would have ever thought that directors like Chapman and Chris Sanders would begin migrating to DreamWorks for its liberal creative environment. In the animation world, the times they are a-changin.
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