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ROCKY & BULLWINKLE Animator dies in truck crash...

Father Geek here with some tragic uncool news... Long time animator "Tex" Henson has died... I've met TEX many times over the years, listened to his tall-tales for days gone-by in the animation biz, watched as he drew various comic characters for my kids (Harry and Dannie)... he was a great, fun guy full of history and laughs... and a good friend who never turned his back on the fans. As I flip thru my stack of his art that he gave me over the last 30 years I can't help but shed a tear, not only for "TEX", but for the industry he was soooo much a part of... its changed so much...

Gone for the most part are animation studios like the ones he drew for and oversaw. Drawing and painting by hand is fast becoming lost to the world of modern animated features, REAL cels and pencil tests from recent films are becoming rare as hen's teeth to collectors, annnnd that's sad indeed. "TEX" once told me that when he was over seeing the Mexico operation for Jay Ward during the ROCKY & BULLWINKLE hay-day, that they would run out of paint... that he would send out an assistant to get more to a local Mexican hardware store where they would buy regular house paint, bring it back and paint the cels. They would shoot the cels while they were still tacky... the stacks of used cels would instantly stick to each other, annnnnd that's why there are sooooo few old original cels around from that early series. Well, that's not a problem any more... cels have become extinct...

Damn, I'm going to miss hearing him tell those stories...

Here's what Reuters and CNN had to say...

DALLAS, Texas (Reuters) -- William Henson, the animator behind the wise cracking chipmunks Chip 'n Dale, flying squirrel Rocky and the beloved dimwitted moose Bullwinkle, died earlier this week at the age of 78 after being hit by a pi ckup truck in suburban Dallas, a local medical examiner said Thursday.

Known in the industry as "Tex" Henson, the animator joined the Disney animation studios in California after graduating from high school in Dallas. He was a cartoonist for Disney films such as "Song of the South", "Pecos Bill" and "Peter and the Wolf." Henson's first major claim to fame was when he joined forces with another Disney animator to campaign for the comic chipmunk duo of Chip 'n Dale to become regular characters in Disney animation. The chipmunks were then featured in about two dozen films.

Henson left Disney, and after a stint in New York where he worked on cartoons such as "Casper the Friendly Ghost", he went to Mexico to supervise a studio that turned out some of the more memorable animated character on American television. He supervised a team of about 180 animators who brought characters such as Rocky, Bullwinkle and the spies Boris and Natasha to life. The studio also turned out other cartoons featuring Underdog, Tennessee Tuxedo, and the cartoon rabbit of Trix cereal fame.

"There wasn't much expected from those cartoons," Henson told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in an interview about 10 years ago. "We were hackin' 'em out on the cheap, getting' the job done," he said, adding that most of his employees did not speak English or understand the humor of their work. "But we made 'em as funny-looking as we could under the circumstances and I guess something clicked between the writing and the cartooning," he told the paper.

Henson later moved to the east Dallas suburb of Terrell and taught animation in the Dallas school system. He also drew cartoons for a small newspaper in the area. He died at Parkland Memorial Hospital of head injuries suffered in the auto accident, the Dallas County Medical Examiner said.

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