Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Apr 4, 2024 · Joe Grant!Joe Grant is a trail running artistic icon. His photography goes beyond the typical landscape scenery and into a more thoughtful and creative realm in powerful black-and-white imagery: long exposures of water, the contrasting bark of aspen trees, moody storms, and a hint that he’s always on foot or bike when taking the images.

  2. May 11, 2005 · Joe Grant, an artist and writer who created Disney characters like the queen-witch in ''Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs'' and was a co-writer of ''Dumbo,'' died here on Friday. He was 96. Mr.

  3. Oct 24, 2018 · He’s an athlete and adventurer who likes to push his mind and body to the limits of what’s possible. Knowing this, our editor Tim Skyped Joe wondering what to expect. But far from a stern and chiseled foot-warrior, the bloke who picked up in Colorado could have been Tim’s hippy older brother. Joe Grant trail running on the Barrhorn Trail ...

  4. Nov 1, 1999 · At age 91, Joe Grant serves as a bridge between Disney's illustrious past and their current successes. He began his career at the Disney studio in 1933 as a conceptual artist and story man and still works there today! During the studio's first Golden Age, Grant was head of the Character Model Department. He worked on the studio's first feature ...

  5. Joe Grant is a highly accomplished professional ultra-runner and all-around endurance athlete who has completed some of the endurace world’s most challenging events—several Hardrock 100s, UTMB 100, Western States 100, and Bighorn 100, as well as the Arizona Trail Race (750 miles on mountain bike), Iditarod Trail Invitational 350, and many, many more.

  6. Joe Grant. Writer: Fantasia. Joe Grant was born on 15 May 1908 in New York City, New York, USA. He was a writer, known for Fantasia (1940), Dumbo (1941) and Alice in Wonderland (1951). He was married to Jenny Grant. He died on 6 May 2005 in Glendale, California, USA.

  7. Apr 10, 2014 · Lady & Joe Grant. In 1937, Disney story man Joe Grant brought Walt Disney an idea about a spaniel named “Lady.”. Walt encouraged Grant to develop the idea further, but after a follow-up series of storyboards fell flat, the idea was scrapped and the S.S. Tramp was mothballed for a few years. In the early ‘40s, Walt Disney read Ward Greene ...