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FROM 2007
HOWARD GREEN
talks about getting his start at Disney
by Scott Wolf

The first time I met Howard I was most impressed by his passion for
the people he's worked with. He is known amongst many of Disney's
legends as extremely generous with a heart of gold, and in getting to
know Howard and even working with him on a couple projects, I couldn't
agree more.
Working with Howard on a tribute to Fulton Burley of Disneyland's
"Golden Horseshoe Revue" remains a highlight of my life and I will be
eternally grateful that Howard trusted me and was humble enough to sit
back and let me take the project and run with it.
I'm so thrilled to bring you my interview with Howard, whom I have the
utmost respect for and who has literally changed my life.
Scott Wolf: Were you a Disney fan before you worked for Disney, and
how did you come to work for Disney?
Howard Green: Like every kid growing up when I did, I was born in 1954,
Disney is a huge part of your lives.
The first movie I ever saw was “Sleeping Beauty,” 1959, so I was five
years old and I remember that very vividly, and of course “101
Dalmatians” really hit me right at that main period and “Sword in the
Stone,” I can remember buying all the merchandise for that and
everything. So that was the period of my childhood where those are the
movies that I remember vividly.
And “Darby O’Gill and the Little People” I saw when I was a kid. I
remember seeing that on a New Year’s Eve and it scared the heck out of
me. Those banshees… the imagery from that you just never forget.
So Disney did make a big impression on me when I was a child. By the
time “Jungle Book” came around I was not seeing Disney films regularly.
I was already past the age so there was a big gap in my Disney
knowledge. I didn’t see “Aristocats,” I didn’t see “Robin Hood.”
By the time “Rescuers” came around I was out here. I came out here to go
to grad school at USC and I went to undergrad at Temple University. I
came out here for a one year MBA program and a friend of mine in the
program was a Disney stockholder and he took me to a Disney annual
shareholder meeting. I think it was at the Dorothy Chandler or the
Ahmanson (theatre)… one of those, and they showed “The Rescuers.”
It was terrific and it sort of reconnected me with Disney, started me
thinking about Disney again, and I knew by the time I came out to USC
that I wanted to apply my business background to the entertainment
industry because I loved movies. I was a movie buff from early on,
really.
When I graduated from USC I sent out about 60 letters to every
entertainment company… to heads of marketing, heads of distribution,
heads of publicity, because that was the area that seemed to overlap
best with my skills which were qualitative rather than quantitative. I
was never good with math or anything like that but I could always write.
I was always interested in movie ads. Even as a kid I would pay
attention to trailers and movie ads and it kind of registered with me,
so it seemed like if I could combine that business background and
marketing background with entertainment, then I’d have something really
special.
I had interviews with Gary Kreisel who was with Walt Disney Records and
Merrill Dean, head of the Music Company back then. They were trying to
find a job for me, it didn’t quite work. But then Irving Ludwig hired me
and liked me and actually created the position for me.
SW: What was Irving Ludwig's job?
HG: He was the head of distribution. I don’t know if he was actually
given the title President then or not but he was certainly head of Buena
Vista Distribution. Irving Ludwig went back to the days of “Fantasia”
when he was hired to oversee the road show productions of “Fantasia” and
set up all the 100 speakers or whatever in San Francisco and the various
markets. So Irving was connected with Disney for a long time.
Irving was one of the great showmen of our time and I spent a year
working for him at Buena Vista Pictures Distribution and I learned so
much from him. He just enthused you. It was a great Disney spirit and a
great Disney immersion working for Irving because he loved the company,
he loved the films. It was so exciting to be there and to be part of it.
It just reawakened my whole love for Disney being at the studio.
So that was the first job really that I took out of grad school. I
started in November, graduated in the summer. I did a few little
temporary things waiting for somebody to hire me and Irving was the
first one to come thru and created the job for me.
I started as a sales trainee which meant I might have gotten shipped off
to Ohio to sell films to the exhibitors and things like that.
SW: Exhibitors are the theatres?
HG: Theatre owners, yes. But I ended up falling in with a guy named
Malcolm Barbour who was sort of the guy who was writing stuff within
distribution, like coming up with contest ideas for local markets and
writing the press books they used to do. A thing called a press book
which gave exhibitors ideas and had sort of “canned” stories about how
to promote the movie in the local market. So I started doing some of
that, I started writing bid letters which is the letters that you would
send out to the exhibitors telling them about the movie.

Mal was a really great punster and fun guy and I kind of picked up some
of that. I was already a Marx Brothers fan so I knew all the puns in the
world. I learned from that job how to have more fun with my writing and
to write more of a “hypey” kind of publicity style.
So within a year of being in distribution I was able to switch over to
Publicity. I worked for a guy named Bob King and Tom Jones and Leonard
Shannon, some wonderful folks who went way back with the company. So I
became sort of a bridge between the old and the new.
More from Howard:
Re-discovering missing Disney people
Various Disney assignments
See other interviews
NOTE: The views and opinions expressed by
the participants in the interviews are solely those of the interviewee
and do not necessarily reflect the views of Mouse Clubhouse. Mouse
Clubhouse accepts no legal liability or responsibility for any claims
made or opinions expressed within.
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