Vegas Disney Fan
Well-Known Member
Baxter would be #1 on my list, it gets harder after that… my mountain would probably end up with 7-8 heads on it. If I HAD to choose 4 I’d likely go with X, Gurr, Baxter, and Rhodes.
WoahSubject to change on a whim:
Hench, Sklar, Rhodeh, Ryman.
Hench & Sklar for their work and influence during imagineering's peak, notably EPCOT Center.
Rohdhe for his monumental work of making an underfunded park be this interesting. DAK could have looked like DCA. Same for making the somewhat uneasy choice of Avatar actually work.
Herb Ryman perhaps the outlier here. For me the greatest concept art maker of all, that had influenced many a great park look and design.
Bob Gurr designed so many things that had never been done before.
I saw him at an event around the time Disneyland's new monorails couldn't even run mid-afternoon due to heat and lack of air flow.
Bob Gurr designed the original monorail which had no such issues. Someone asked him why Disney didn't consult on the new design. Great question.
He designed things like doom buggies. Who among us could come up with something so unusual? Now, they're iconic.
If he's not on the list what are we even doing?
Bob was a 'make it happen' guy.. while essential, I don't think he sets the tone of what made people love Disney.
People like Ryman, X, etc really set the environment, look, and feel that people fell for. Those types, along with Hench, etc basically setup the table. I find it hard to stack people like Hench vs someone like X or Marc Davis.. so the conversation gets difficult when you try to pick one vs the other.
But I would focus on the architects of the type of environments and entertainment - so I'm less inclined for people like Mary Blair, Rolly, Gurr, etc.
People like Baxter, Rhode, etc.. sorry, but you're second generation. You were studied under these men, and while your individual work may be pinnacle achievements, you are still following the path laid out by the trend setters before you. But I'd still put Baxter up as a show producer for the total product over Rhode.
I agreeBaxter stands out amongst the second generation and I feel is equal to the first purely because of the amount and consistent quality he produced. Big Thunder, Splash, Imagination, Indy, and of course his crowning achievement Parc Disneyland (Joe is great, but AK has nothing on DLP) he was the total package.
I look at it the same way as Rushmore.. those leaders were not the best of all time, they were impactful influencers who set the table for everything that came after them. They are the leaders.. the tip of the spear.. the trend setter.I was with you until the last paragraph. I don’t dock Baxter any points for being second generation. His body of work is more impressive to me than any other imagineer.
I look at it the same way as Rushmore.. those leaders were not the best of all time, they were impactful influencers who set the table for everything that came after them. They are the leaders.. the tip of the spear.. the trend setter.
That's why I say it's not a knock on Baxter's work to exclude him, nor is it to say something like BTMRR is not 'the best', but simply that Baxter didn't set this type of plan in motion.. He was able to take what those before him established and elevate it to even new levels with new takes as well. So my take is more about the monument being about the architects and not necessarily the 'best' -- if that makes sense.
Baxter can get the nod on Indy alone.
To truly follow the Rushmore analogy, you'd need 2 founding fathers (Washington & Jefferson), 1 preserver during the Civil War (Lincoln), and one "modern day" (at the time Teddy Roosevelt was quite recent).
So there.
Now who do you pick?
I pick Marc Davis & John Hench for the first two slots, Tony Baxter in the Lincoln role, and... who's still there (not as an advisor)? Scott Trowbridge?
I know that doesn't quite seem right (no shade to Trowbridge intended). But a lot of America thought it was silly to see Teddy up there next to the other three presidents when it was completed too.
Again I repeat… it’s a travesty that Tony Baxter isn’t more involved with modern day WDI. He’s relatively young. He’s healthy. He is one of the greatest if not the greatest imagineer of all time and he’s sitting at his house a few miles from the park while WDI lost a ton of institutional knowledge and has fumbled quite a few projects since. Why isnt Bruce Vaughn doing everything in his power to get Tony back on board?
Tony is a talented wild card. It makes sense, him being super creative, but I've frequently been surprised by some of his opinions. He's (if I'm remembering correctly) the one to say to JK Rowling "No, we're not going to build a replica of Hogsmede & Hogwarts. We're going to find a tidy little corner for you within Fantasyland." He's the one that recommended to John Lasseter (right after John got the job as WDI advisor) that the only way to fix DCA would be to make it a publicly accessible part of Downtown Disney and charge for individual tickets for the individual rides already there (in otherwords, there's no way to make it as good as Disneyland, so cut bait and give up).
It's possible Bruce has reached out to him, but Tony may have simply too many opinions and demands that clash with management's objectives. I really don't know.
Gurr is an amazing talent worthy of WDI hall of fame, but I always tend to think of him more on the "Engineer" side of "Imagineer." It was John Hench that had the atommobile/doombuggy idea. Gurr figured out how to build it.Bob Gurr designed so many things that had never been done before.
I saw him at an event around the time Disneyland's new monorails couldn't even run mid-afternoon due to heat and lack of air flow.
Bob Gurr designed the original monorail which had no such issues. Someone asked him why Disney didn't consult on the new design. Great question.
He designed things like doom buggies. Who among us could come up with something so unusual? Now, they're iconic.
If he's not on the list what are we even doing?
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