Marty Sklar Steps Down

speck76

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Disney Legend Steps Down
Marty Sklar leaves his post as Imagineering's principal creative executive but will remain the group's 'ambassador.'


Richard Verrier | Los Angeles Times
Posted February 17, 2006

In a move that signals the end of an era at Walt Disney Co., Marty Sklar is giving up his mantle as the principal creative executive of Walt Disney Imagineering, the company's storied theme park design and development arm.

In a memo to colleagues made public Thursday, the 72-year-old former speechwriter for Walt Disney said he was leaving his job to serve as an "ambassador" for the group he has led for the last three decades.

Sklar is one of the last remaining employees who once worked closely with the Burbank company's co-founder.

Reflecting on those deep ties, Sklar said in an interview that he had long planned to step down after reaching two milestones — the 50th anniversary of Disneyland and his own half-century at the company.

Last year, he reached the former and this June will mark the latter.

"It's going to be hard for me to leave this building," said Sklar, who works out of an office in Glendale and is seen as a father figure by many of his colleagues.

"All my kids have grown up," he said. "I'll miss that day-to-day contact with them."

The move follows Disney's recent announcement that in the wake of its planned acquisition of Pixar Animation Studios this summer, Pixar's creative chief, John Lasseter, will help design rides for Disney's theme parks. Lasseter also will become chief creative officer of both animation studios.

Lasseter is expected to bring fresh ideas and new energy to the Imagineering group, which employs 1,100 people and has faced cutbacks in the last year amid a slowdown in new projects.

Disney officials said the timing of Sklar's decision was unrelated to Lasseter's pending arrival.

Sklar had largely scaled back his duties in recent years, allowing his protege Tom Fitzgerald to run the day-to-day operations.

"It is impossible to describe the breadth and depth of Marty's contributions," said theme parks chief Jay Rasulo, who has begun a search for someone to replace Sklar and assume added responsibilities.

Low-key and unimposing, Sklar is deeply revered by Imagineers for his mentoring and his links to the company's heritage. Sklar condensed Walt Disney's ideas into a widely circulated creed called "Mickey's Ten Commandments."

"He understands the Disney way because he learned it at Walt's knee," said Jim Cora, a former chairman of Disneyland International. "He is the keeper of the keys, the conscience, the Jiminy Cricket for the organization."

For years, Sklar headed the creative development of Disney's theme parks and led the company's ventures in the cruise business, interactive TV, housing development and the redesign of Times Square in New York.

Sklar was known as a survivor. He publicly defended former Disney Chief Executive Michael Eisner when critics blasted his record, including the poor performance of Disney's California Adventure theme park in Anaheim.

In his new role, Sklar said he would recruit new talent, develop traveling exhibitions about the Imagineers and pass on Walt's ideas to a new generation.

"I'm probably the only person in the company that can do this," he said.
 

Horizons78

Grade "A" Funny...
speck76 said:
\"He understands the Disney way because he learned it at Walt's knee," said Jim Cora, a former chairman of Disneyland International. "He is the keeper of the keys, the conscience, the Jiminy Cricket for the organization."
Hmmm....I hate to see anyone go with that kind of history and presence - Even if it is in the search for "new ideas". Definately a bittersweet moment for many IMHO.

Thanks for the years of service Marty....:wave:
 

DisneyJill

Well-Known Member
Mr. Sklar should be very proud of his accomplishments over the last 50 years-what a phenomenal career he's had and what an honor it must have been to meet and work with the people he has. Here's to hoping he continues to impact the company, albeit in a smaller way. Hats off. :)
 

Magicot

Member
Is there any way to contact Mr. Sklar through e-mail or letters? I really would like to thank him for all of his contributions.
 

nibblesandbits

Well-Known Member
Wow...it is sad to see someone like that go. Especially someone who learned what he knows from Walt himself.

I wish nothing but the best for him in the future.
 
Not to be mean or anything, but you guys know in recent years he did not stand up for WDI at all and basically became a "yes man" for the suits and especially Eisner (even going as far as writing a letter praising Eisner for his vision and that the company is doing great...totally contradicting Roy Disney's Save Disney campaign). He is also partly responsible for the mediocre garbage the parks have been getting for the past few years. All the cheap tie-ins and "overlays" and barebone attractions because he couldnt stand up and tell the boss "hey listen guys its better we spend X amount of money now and build a good attraction..rather then slashing the budget and then having to go back and spend even more money fixing the attraction/park later". He also slept through alot of presentations and meetings. So just imagine an Imagineer pooring their heart and soul into something like Beastly Kingdom only to have Sklar sleeping through the presentation and being like "what? what? no no too expensive. Totally unnecessary!".
 

speck76

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Ghostbuster626 said:
Not to be mean or anything, but you guys know in recent years he did not stand up for WDI at all and basically became a "yes man" for the suits and especially Eisner (even going as far as writing a letter praising Eisner for his vision and that the company is doing great...totally contradicting Roy Disney's Save Disney campaign). He is also partly responsible for the mediocre garbage the parks have been getting for the past few years. All the cheap tie-ins and "overlays" and barebone attractions because he couldnt stand up and tell the boss "hey listen guys its better we spend X amount of money now and build a good attraction..rather then slashing the budget and then having to go back and spend even more money fixing the attraction/park later". He also slept through alot of presentations and meetings. So just imagine an Imagineer pooring their heart and soul into something like Beastly Kingdom only to have Sklar sleeping through the presentation and being like "what? what? no no too expensive. Totally unnecessary!".
ummm.....ok
 

Magicot

Member
Ghostbuster626 said:
Not to be mean or anything, but you guys know in recent years he did not stand up for WDI at all and basically became a "yes man" for the suits and especially Eisner (even going as far as writing a letter praising Eisner for his vision and that the company is doing great...totally contradicting Roy Disney's Save Disney campaign). He is also partly responsible for the mediocre garbage the parks have been getting for the past few years. All the cheap tie-ins and "overlays" and barebone attractions because he couldnt stand up and tell the boss "hey listen guys its better we spend X amount of money now and build a good attraction..rather then slashing the budget and then having to go back and spend even more money fixing the attraction/park later". He also slept through alot of presentations and meetings. So just imagine an Imagineer pooring their heart and soul into something like Beastly Kingdom only to have Sklar sleeping through the presentation and being like "what? what? no no too expensive. Totally unnecessary!".

Wait!- You were there!? What was it like being around all those imagineers?

:rolleyes:
 

peter11435

Well-Known Member
Ghostbuster626 said:
Not to be mean or anything, but you guys know in recent years he did not stand up for WDI at all and basically became a "yes man" for the suits and especially Eisner (even going as far as writing a letter praising Eisner for his vision and that the company is doing great...totally contradicting Roy Disney's Save Disney campaign). He is also partly responsible for the mediocre garbage the parks have been getting for the past few years. All the cheap tie-ins and "overlays" and barebone attractions because he couldnt stand up and tell the boss "hey listen guys its better we spend X amount of money now and build a good attraction..rather then slashing the budget and then having to go back and spend even more money fixing the attraction/park later". He also slept through alot of presentations and meetings. So just imagine an Imagineer pooring their heart and soul into something like Beastly Kingdom only to have Sklar sleeping through the presentation and being like "what? what? no no too expensive. Totally unnecessary!".
Considering you were not there for any of that. I think I will take it for what its worth. Absolutly nothing.
 

wannab@dis

Well-Known Member
Ghostbuster626 said:
even going as far as writing a letter praising Eisner for his vision and that the company is doing great...totally contradicting Roy Disney's Save Disney campaign).

He just went up a few notches in my view. :D

Whatcha think, Corrus?
 

wannab@dis

Well-Known Member
STR8FAN2005 said:
A few notches up the idiot ladder?
I wasn't a big fan of the Save Disney stuff. I think Roy was looking out more for himself than the company. I think a FEW of his ideas were good, but overall, they lacked substenance.
 

CaptainMichael

Well-Known Member
wannab@dis said:
I wasn't a big fan of the Save Disney stuff. I think Roy was looking out more for himself than the company. I think a FEW of his ideas were good, but overall, they lacked substenance.
I was talking about Ghostbuster, but you were talking about Marty.
 

Woody13

New Member
Mickey's Ten Commandments:

1. Know your audience.
2. Wear your guests' shoes.
3. Organize the flow of people and ideas.
4. Create a "Weenie" (Visual Magnet).
5. Communicate with visuals.
6. Avoid overload - Create turn ons.
7. Tell one story at a time.
8. Avoid contradictions - Maintain identity.
9. "Ounce of treatment - Ton of treat".
10. Keep it up (Maintain it).
 

nibblesandbits

Well-Known Member
Ghostbuster626 said:
Not to be mean or anything, but you guys know in recent years he did not stand up for WDI at all and basically became a "yes man" for the suits and especially Eisner (even going as far as writing a letter praising Eisner for his vision and that the company is doing great...totally contradicting Roy Disney's Save Disney campaign). He is also partly responsible for the mediocre garbage the parks have been getting for the past few years. All the cheap tie-ins and "overlays" and barebone attractions because he couldnt stand up and tell the boss "hey listen guys its better we spend X amount of money now and build a good attraction..rather then slashing the budget and then having to go back and spend even more money fixing the attraction/park later". He also slept through alot of presentations and meetings. So just imagine an Imagineer pooring their heart and soul into something like Beastly Kingdom only to have Sklar sleeping through the presentation and being like "what? what? no no too expensive. Totally unnecessary!".
Ah...apparently Ghostbuster believes that Jim Hill isn't the crock that he is...I found where he got that information from:

http://jimhillmedia.com/article.php?id=1845

Here is the basics of what Jim Hill had to say on the topic:

From Jim Hill
Well, you get the idea, right? That Marty would really rather not retire from Walt Disney Imagineering. That he still enjoys his role as WDI's elder stateman. And that -- if Sklar had his druthers -- he'd probably prefer to go out the way that John Hench did. Still on Disney's payroll at the age of 95, still having some sort of say about the various projects that Imagineering then has in the works.

The only problem is -- given that Marty has done really well with the political gamesmanship portion of his job (I mean, how else do you think that this man has managed to hang at the Walt Disney Company for 50+ years? Through multiple Mouse House management teams, through good times & bad? Sklar's got great survival skills. More to the point, Marty's perfectly willing to throw someone else's pet project under the bus if it will ultimately further his own career) -- the man's also acquired a large number of enemies over the years. People who would just as soon see Marty finally keep his promise and actually retire from Walt Disney Imagineering sometime very soon.

Besides, were you to ask anyone at WDI what Sklar is best known for these days, it wouldn't be his creative input or his sense of Disney company history. But -- rather -- Marty's amazing ability to nod off right in the middle of virtually every meeting that he attends.

I'm serious, people. No matter how grave the matter is that's being discussed, no matter how heated the debate is and/or who's doing all the shouting ... Invariably, at some point in that meeting, Sklar's eye will close and then he'll start to doze.

Now the general rule of thumb at Imagineering is that -- given that Marty can sometime be a bit crotchety when he's awaken -- that it's always the person with the least seniority in the room that has to wake up Mr. Sklar.
 
If Roy Disney didnt launch the Save Disney campaign..Micheal Eisner would still be Chariman and CEO of the Walt Disney Company and we would NOT have John Lasseter Principal Creative Advisor of WDI and Animation, nor would we have Steve Jobs and Ed Catmull on board either. If Roy Disney didnt launch the Save Disney campaign Pixar would have gone its seperate ways from Disney and Disney would have continued down the path of becoming a souless company like the Wal-Mart and General Motors of today that couldnt give a damn about the company founders vision. As a result, we would also still have David Stainton in charge of animation poping out medoicre movie after mediocre movie and tons of cheap sequels to pixar films ruining the Toy Story and Finding Nemo franchises and damaging pixars name in the process. And lets not forget that we would still have the Strategic Planning Division that killed such projects as Beastly Kingdom. FACT.
 

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