Bill Justice graduated as a portrait painter from the John Herron Art
Institute in Indianapolis in 1935. He joined the Disney Organisation
two years later, after moving to California. Highlights of his 42-year
long career with
Walt Disney as
director/animator include bringing to life the characters of Thumper
('Bambi') and Chip'n'Dale, as well as animating the title sequence
('Mickey Mouse Club March') from the 1950's TV series
The Mickey Mouse Club (1955).
He also directed a number of animated short films, three of which
received Academy Award nominations:
The Truth About Mother Goose (1957)
(with
Wolfgang Reitherman),
explaining the background of classic nursery rhymes,
Noah's Ark (1959), and a 'new twist on
the old ragtime' theme,
A Symposium on Popular Songs (1962).
After 1965, Bill became part of the imagineering/programming team for
Disney's Audio-Animatronics figures at Disneyland, specifically
involved with the Hall of Presidents, Mission to Mars, Haunted Mansion
and Pirates of the Caribbean attractions. He was also noted as an
expert in the use of stop motion animation technique in conjunction
with live action films, such as
Mary Poppins (1964), usually in
collaboration with
T. Hee and
Xavier Atencio. Bill retired in 1979 and
was pronounced a Disney Legend in 1996.