- Recognition is fine if the rewards are high enough to repay me for loss of privacy and freedom of expression.
- I have no cartoonists in my ancestral tree whatsoever, no artists that I know of, no writers that I know of. I was just sort of a mutant that came along.
- Donald [Duck] is my favorite character, because he's like all my friends, my neighbors, myself, he's just Mister Everyman.
- One of the greatest difficulties in handling characters is in figuring out how each character is going to react to a certain situation. In that respect, Uncle Scrooge is fairly easy to keep in line. He will always choose the cheapest way to meet an emergency.
- I've always looked at the ducks as caricatures of human beings.
- I finally decided to do a watercolor to show that I'm really a hairy-chinned rebel at heart.
- "My age is 80 and I don't look a day over 79 1/2." (1981)
- Some of the main people who influenced my drawing style were Winsor McCay, Opper [Frederick Opper], and Hal Foster. Roy Crane, who drew 'Buzz Sawyer', also had a direct, simple style.
- It wasn't genius or even unusual talent that made the stories good, it was patience and a large waste-basket.
- Errors and boo-boos bother me years after I've forgotten every other feature of a story.
- I polished and polished on the scripts and drawings until I had done the best I could in the time available.
- If you were a prima donna down at the Disney studio, if you went in thinking you were a genius and then you had to work with a bunch of geniuses, why you soon got the ego knocked out of you.
- I was a fizzle as a cowboy, a logger, a printing press feeder, a steelworker, a carpenter, an animator, a chicken grower, and a barfly. Perhaps that all helped in writing my stories of the ineptitudes of poor old Donald.
- I visualized stories in plot sequences.
- Writing stories is a lot like writing poetry. It all has to be set to a certain tempo. Everything has to be in its right place at the right time.
- "I want to thank the Disney Studio. Not for myself, but for all those comic book fans -- the kids who used to buy my comic books for a dime and are now selling them for $2,000." (Disney Legend trophy acceptance speech, October 22, 1991)
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content