Dr. Ed Catmull: President Walt Disney and Pixar Animation Studios
Dr. Ed Catmull is president and co-founder of Pixar Animation Studios and president of Walt Disney Animation Studios.Dr. Catmull has been honored with five Academy Awards®, including the Gordon E. Sawyer Award for his lifetime of technical contributions and leadership in the field of computer graphics for the motion picture industry, the Academy Award of Merit, two Scientific and Engineering Awards and a Technical Achievement Award.
Dr. Catmull also received the ACM SIGGRAPH Steven A. Coons Award for his lifetime contributions in the computer graphics field and the animation industry’s Ub Iwerks Award for technical advancements in the art or industry of animation, and the Randy Pausch Prize from Carnegie Mellon University’s Entertainment Technology Center in 2008. He is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering and the Visual Effects Society.
Dr. Catmull earned B.S. degrees in physics and computer science and a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Utah. In 2005, the University of Utah presented him with an Honorary Doctoral Degree in Engineering.
Previously, Dr. Catmull was vice president of the Computer Division of Lucasfilm Ltd., where he managed development in the areas of computer graphics, video editing, video games and digital audio.
John Lasseter: Chief Creative Officer, Walt Disney and Pixar Animation StudiosPrincipal Creative Advisor, Walt Disney Imagineering
John Lasseter is a two-time Academy Award®-winning director and oversees all films and associated projects from Walt Disney and Pixar Animation Studios. He directed the groundbreaking and award-winning films Toy Story, A Bug’s Life, Toy Story 2 andCars. Additionally, his executive producing credits includeMonsters, Inc., Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Ratatouille, WALL•E, Bolt, and last year’s critically acclaimed Up, which enjoyed the distinct honor of opening the 2009 Cannes Film Festival and was awarded two Academy Awards® for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Score. Lasseter also served as executive producer for Disney's Oscar®-nominated The Princess and the Frog, a musical comedy set in the great city of New Orleans, as well as Disney•Pixar’s most recent critical and box office hit, Toy Story 3, which is based on a story by Lasseter, Andrew Stanton and Lee Unkrich.
Lasseter has written, directed and animated a number of Pixar’s early short films, including Luxo Jr. (1986), Red’s Dream (1987), Tin Toy (1988) and Knick Knack (1989). He has also been producer or executive producer on a number of shorts including Geri’s Game, For the Birds, One Man Band, Lifted, Presto,Partly Cloudy and Day & Night. Pixar’s Tin Toy became the first computer animated film to win an Academy Award® when it received the 1988 award for Best Animated Short Film. Pixar earned two more Academy Awards® forGeri’s Game (1997) and For the Birds (2000).
Under Lasseter’s supervision, Pixar’s animated feature and shorts films have earned a multitude of critical accolades and film industry honors. Lasseter received a Special Achievement Oscar® in 1995 for his inspired leadership of theToy Story team. His work on Toy Story also earned an Academy Award® nomination for Best Original Screenplay, the first time an animated feature had been recognized in that category.
In 2004, Lasseter was honored by the Art Directors Guild with its prestigious “Outstanding Contribution to Cinematic Imagery” award and he also received an honorary degree from the American Film Institute. Lasseter received the 2008 Winsor McCay Award from ASIFA-Hollywood for career achievement and contribution to the art of animation. In 2009, Lasseter and his fellow directors at Pixar were honored at the 66th Venice International Film Festival with the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement award. Lasseter was also honored with the Producers Guild of America’s 2010 David O. Selznick Achievement Award in Motion Pictures, making him the first producer of animated films to receive this award.Prior to the formation of Pixar in 1986, Lasseter was a member of the Computer Division of Lucasfilm Ltd., where he designed and animated the computer-generated Stained Glass Knight character in the 1985 Steven Spielberg-produced film Young Sherlock Holmes.
Lasseter attended the inaugural year of the Character Animation program at California Institute of the Arts and received his B.F.A. in film in 1979. While attending California Institute of the Arts, Lasseter produced two animated films, both winners of the Student Academy Award® for Animation - Lady and the Lamp (1979) and Nitemare (1980). His very first award came at the age of five when he won $15.00 from the Model Grocery Market in Whittier, California, for a crayon drawing of the Headless Horseman.
http://www.pixar.com/companyinfo/about_us/execs.htm
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