Early life and education
Scott was born in Omak, Washington on February 23, 1916. She graduated from Seattle's Roosevelt High School in 1934. Scott received two scholarships over the course of her education. The first was from the Seattle Art & Music Foundation, who awarded her with a scholarship in the 4th grade that she used to attend 10 years of creative art classes. She later received 3-year scholarship to attend the Chouinard Art Institute, so she moved to Los Angeles, California. She spent much of her free time sketching wildlife at the nearby Griffith Park zoo. Her ambition was to mold a career in Fine arts. As her time at the Chouinard Art Institute ended, its director, Vern Caldwell, urged Scott to apply for work with Walt Disney, based on her passion for animals. She was initially uninterested due to the cartoon shorts the company was known for, but Caldwell recommended her to work on '' Bambi'', a full film which was in production. She eventually joined the company in 1938 to work in the Story Department. According to Country Life, the Seattle Art Museum showcased Scott's paintings as part of a 1940 exhibit.Career at Disney
Scott worked on storyboards to develop scenes of Bambi, his mother, and the film’s hunting dogs, on which she spent weeks to develop them into “vicious, snarling, really mean beasts.” Male artists in the company were stunned, who initially assumed that only a man could create drawings with such intensity and technical skill. Her sketches caught the eye of Disney, so when the film went into production she was assigned to animate scenes of hunting dogs chasing Faline. She worked under the film's supervising director, David D. Hand, and was tutored by Disney animator Eric Larson. This was a significant coup for the young woman, since at the 1930s-era Disney studio, women were considered only for routine tasks: "Ink and paint art was a laborious part of the animation process, and was solely the domain of women..." Her promotion to animator was in part thanks to the success of herself and other women such asLater work
Scott and her husband moved to Washington, D.C, where she illustrated books such as ''The Santa Claus Book'' and ''Happy Birthday''. She also continued working with Disney through freelance jobs such as illustrating the Big Golden Book edition of Disney's Cinderella. Her work caught the attention of past and current Disney employees, including Jonas Rivera, producer of Up, who commented, “I’ve always loved the Retta Scott Cinderella because it doesn’t look like the movie, but somehow it feels like the movie.” Retta and her husband divorced in 1978, and she remained an active illustrator until she was again hired as an animator in 1982 for the Luckey-Zamora Moving Picture Company. She continued to impress artists, especially male artists who initially underestimated her work, and was eager to teach her skills. Scott suffered a stroke in December 1985 and died on August 26, 1990 at her home in Foster City, California.Filmography
References
Further reading
*Gabler, Neal. “ City on a Hill.” ''Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination'', Alfred A. Knopf, 2006, p. 550. ''Internet Archive''. *Ghez, Didier. ''They Drew As They Pleased: The Hidden Art of Disney's Musical Years, the 1940s''. Chronicle Books, 2016. pp. 131. * *Nathala Hollt,''The Queens of Animation'', Little Brown, 2019. *Thomas, Frank, and Ollie Johnston. '' The Illusion of Life: Disney Animation'', Hyperion, 1995, p. 338. ''Internet Archive''. *Usher, Shaun. �External links