|
JOYCE CARLSON, LEGENDARY DISNEY IMAGINEER,
DESIGNER AND
MODEL MAKER FOR MORE THAN 56 YEARS;
MODEL AND DOLL DESIGNER FOR CLASSIC it’s a small world ATTRACTIONS
Joyce
Carlson was a legendary Disney “Imagineer,” artist and model-maker for 56
years, Joyce helped create the
original model for it’s a small world for the New York World’s Fair in
1964, and later refitted it for its permanent home in Disneyland.
Joyce was born in Racine, Wisconsin, on March 16, 1923, and moved with
her family to Southern California in 1938. After graduating from Santa
Monica High School, she followed a friend to Walt Disney Studios in
Burbank in 1944, where she took a job in the traffic department
delivering pens, pencils, paints and brushes to animators.
Six months later, she joined the Ink and Paint department, or the
"nunnery" as it was called, since mostly women worked there. Within two
weeks, she was working on short animated training films for the army.
Because of her good eye and steady hand, Joyce worked as an inker for
the next 16 years on such films as The Three Caballeros, Victory Through
Air Power, Cinderella, Peter Pan, and Sleeping Beauty.
In 1960, when inkers were being replaced by the new Xerox electrostatic
process, which transferred animators' pencil drawings to cels, Joyce
parlayed her talents to Walt Disney Imagineering, formerly called WED,
"Walter Elias Disney" Enterprises. There, she worked alongside two of
her mentors, Disney Legends Mary Blair and Marc Davis, creating
miniature prototypes of attractions for the 1964 World's Fair pavilions,
and was among a small group of artists Walt Disney sent to New York to
install it’s a small world. Joyce not only worked on the original model
for the attraction, but also worked as the artist behind many of the
singing dolls on this classic Disney ride, soon to be open in every
Disneyland theme park around the world.
Because of her extensive experience with it's a small world for
Disneyland, she was a natural to later help bring the attraction to Walt
Disney World and Tokyo Disneyland. With her later involvement with the
Paris and Hong Kong rides, she touched every it’s a small world
attraction Disney created. After spending 10 months in Tokyo in 1982,
Joyce returned to the States making Florida her new home. There, the
show designer helped maintain many Walt Disney World attractions - and
the Audio-Animatronics characters featured in them - including the
Carousel of Progress and of course, it's a small world.
The first woman in The Walt Disney Company to reach both the 50- and
55-year service milestones, Carlson had no intentions of resting on her
laurels and continued mentoring Imagineers’ creative spirits and passing
her knowledge and experience on to the next generation until early 2007.
Joyce was made a Disney Legend (an honor bestowed by the Company on
individuals who have made major contributions over the years) in 2000,
and was further honored with her own “window on Main Street” in the
Magic Kingdom (at Walt Disney World). On a second floor shop window,
looking down Main Street toward the Castle, the inscription on a window
above the Emporium, reads “Dolls by Miss Joyce, Dollmaker for the
World.”
Joyce passed away on January 2, 2008 at her home in Florida following a
long battle with cancer. She was 84 years old.
|