Dayton Daily News

Pixar animator created Woody from ‘Toy Story’

Artist’s work included ‘Peanuts,’ ‘Sesame Street.’

- By Harrison Smith Washington Post

Bud Luckey, an Oscar-nominated animator who crafted hand-drawn, two-dimensiona­l characters for more than three decades before using new digital tools to create Woody, the pull-string star of Pixar’s “Toy Story,” died Feb. 24 at a hospice center in Newtown, Connecticu­t. He was 83.

He had suffered a stroke in 2013, said his son, Andy Luckey.

Luckey began his career as a protege of Art Babbitt, the Walt Disney animator who developed the long-eared character Goofy and the wicked queen of “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.”

Working out of San Francisco, he animated the original Alvin and the Chipmunks television series, collaborat­ed with “Peanuts” creator Charles M. Schulz on advertisem­ents for Dolly Madison snack cakes, and devised entire segments for “Sesame Street,” in which his hillbilly-fiddler character Donnie Budd introduced young viewers to the numbers two through six.

By the early 1990s, however, Luckey’s curiosity was piqued by plans for a computer-generated film at Pixar, the Bay Area studio that Apple co-founder Steve Jobs had helped establish in 1986. He was soon hired as the studio’s fifth animator and worked variously as a character designer, storyboard artist or voice performer for “Toy Story” (1995) and nearly every Pixar movie that followed.

Luckey was “one of the true unsung heroes of animation,” John Lasseter, who directed “Toy Story” and went on to become the studio’s chief creative officer, said in a 2004 Pixar documentar­y on the animator.

Known to some colleagues as Bud Low-Key, Luckey helped shape the whimsical worlds and characters of movies such as “A Bug’s Life” (1998), “Toy Story 2” (1999), “Monsters, Inc.” (2001), “Cars” (2006) and “Ratatouill­e” (2007).

He also performed voice work, lending his native Montana baritone to characters including government agent Rick Dicker in “The Incredible­s” (2004), the despondent clown Chuckles in “Toy Story 3” (2010) and Eeyore in the 2011 adaptation of “Winnie the Pooh.”

Although animation is almost always a collaborat­ive process, Luckey was granted near-total control of “Boundin’, “a 2003 Pixar short that was shown in theaters before “The Incredible­s” and received an Academy Award nomination for best animated short film.

Inspired by Luckey’s western upbringing, the five-minute movie featured a tap-dancing sheep who is shorn of his wool and his confidence, but is encouraged to keep “bounding” by a friendly jackalope. Both characters were voiced by Luckey, who also directed and wrote the short and composed its banjo-driven score.

Still, he remained best known for his work on “Toy Story,” which set a benchmark for computer-generated animation and made more than $370 million worldwide.

The movie’s characters toys that come to life whenever they are separated from their owner, who shared the same name as Luckey’s son Andy - included an astronaut named Buzz Lightyear (voiced by Tim Allen) and, initially, a decidedly creepy-looking ventriloqu­ist’s dummy.

Luckey suggested a change: Turn Woody (Tom Hanks) into a cowboy. “As soon as he said that, I knew it was just perfect,” Lasseter recalled in Karen Paik’s book “To Infinity and Beyond!: The Story of Pixar Animation Studios.” “The whole idea of a buddy picture is to pair up two characters who are as opposite as possible, and you can’t get more opposite than a spaceman and a cowboy.”

Luckey said he “did 200 Woodies,” sketching different possibilit­ies with a pencil and pen, before Lasseter selected the rosy-cheeked version that appeared in the movie. Luckey and his Pixar colleagues - many of them half his age - then set to work turning the sketch into a computer-generated character.

“When I started working with a computer,” Luckey later told CBS, “to me it was kind of like animating with a backhoe. But when you see the results, it just blows your mind.”

William Everett Luckey was born in Billings, Montana, on July 28, 1934. According to family lore, he was known since childhood as Bud because an older sibling called him “budder,” mispronoun­cing “brother.” His mother was a schoolteac­her, and his father was a commercial printer.

“When I was 4 years old I used to draw on the sidewalk with broken brick,” he told the San Francisco Chronicle in 2004. “Before World War II I would draw Hitler and Mussolini and Tojo. And all the kids would gather round to spit and stamp on them...

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