Winner of the 1968 Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film, “Blustery Day” also serves as Disney’s introduction to Piglet, Pooh’s loyal friend, and Tigger, the scene stealing bouncing tiger. When Gopher warns Pooh that it’s Winds-Day in the Hundred Acre Wood, Pooh goes off to wish Piglet a Happy Windsday, but Piglet is lifted into the air by the strong winds, Pooh grabs Piglet’s sweater string and looks to be flying Piglet like a kite. They arrive at Owl’s house, the wind blows it down and Owl inquires as to if Pooh did it. Eeyore agrees to find a new house for Owl, but a huge rain storm soon sets on the Hundred Acre Wood. —IMDb
Wolfgang “Woolie” Reitherman once described himself as “full of life and ginger” and his animation as having “vitality and … quality.” Indeed, Woolie’s boundless energy and personality spilled over into his animation. With an unusual knack for action sequences, Woolie animated such memorable sequences as the dramatic dinosaur battle in “Fantasia,” the climactic whale-chase scene in “Pinocchio,” and the fire-breathing clash between Prince Phillip and the Dragon in “Sleeping Beauty.”
Born in Munich, Germany on June 26, 1909, Woolie came to the U.S. as an infant and was raised in Sierra Madre, California. Fascinated with airplanes and flying, he attended Pasadena Junior College with the intent of becoming an aircraft engineer and later, took a job at Douglas Aircraft. In 1931, Woolie changed his course of flight, however, when he decided to become an artist and enrolled at Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles to study watercolor. While there, he met an instructor who taught classes… read more
The weirdest (and best) Winnie the Pooh episode ever--Pooh trips out! I can still remember how strange (and fun) this was when I was a little kid.