
Directing
Born May 28, 1943
John Canemaker has won an Academy Award, an Emmy and a Peabody Award for his animation and is an internationally-renowned animation historian and teacher. A key figure in American independent animation, Canemaker’s work has a distinctive personal style emphasizing emotion, personality and dynamic visual expression. His film, The Moon and the Son: An Imagined Conversation, won an Oscar in 2005 for Best Animated Short, as well as an Emmy. A 28-minute autobiographical essay about a troubled father/son relationship, The Moon and the Son marked a personal and professional breakthrough in animation storytelling. Canemaker is also a noted author who has written nine books on animation, as well as numerous essays, articles and monographs for The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, among other publications.

Camera Three
Self/Host

Cartoon Carnival
Self

Hands

Tyrus
Self

King-Size Comedy: Tex Avery and the Looney Tunes Revolution
Self

Dalí & Disney: A Date with Destino
Self

Taking Flight: The Making of Dumbo
Himself

Chuck Jones: Memories of Childhood

Forging the Frame: The Roots of Animation, 1921-1930
Self

Walt & El Grupo
Self

Forging the Frame: The Roots of Animation, 1900-1920
Himself

Lady's Pedigree: The Making of Lady and the Tramp
Self

From Rags to Riches: The Making of Cinderella
Self

Cartoon Logic
Self

The Moon and the Son: An Imagined Conversation

The Art of Mary Blair
Self

Shadowplay

Celebrating Dumbo
Self

Disney's 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs': Still the Fairest of Them All
Himself

The Fantasia Legacy: The Concert Feature
Self

A Letter from the Western Front

Frank and Ollie
Himself

Earthday Birthday
(voice)

Lyle, Lyle Crocodile: The Musical - The House on East 88th Street

Bottom's Dream

Otto Messmer and Felix the Cat
Narrator

Remembering Winsor McCay