Wednesday, November 04, 2020

Tony Eastman, Veteran East Coast Animator And Director, Passes Away

Tony Eastman, a mainstay of the East Coast animation scene, has passed away.


An industry artist since the 1970s, Eastman enjoyed a prolific career working in series and commercials. At various times, he was an animator, storyboard artist, and director. He was the director of the pilot for Nickelodeon’s Doug (pictured at top) and went on to become the supervising director of the show’s first season. Other series he worked on include KaBlam!, Eureeka's Castle, Saturday Night Live: The Best of Saturday TV FunhouseCodename: Kids Next Door, Courage the Cowardly Dog, Daria, Beavis and Butt-Head, Sheep in the Big City, and Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law. He also served as a creative consultant on Disney's version of Doug following the company's acquisition of the intellectual property.

Like many New York animators, the better part of Eastman’s work was done in the advertising industry and he animated countless commercial spots at studios like The Ink Tank and J.J. Sedelmaier Productions.

Peter Anthony “Tony” Eastman was born in 1942 into an animation family. His father Phil “P.D.” Eastman was a story artist who worked at Disney and UPA before finding fame as a children’s author and illustrator. Tony’s mother Mary Lou Whitham was a color model supervisor at Disney, where she met Phil before the pair left during the strike of 1941.

As a child, Tony Eastman showed a precocious talent for drawing. In a blog post, the cartoonist Kim Deitch (son of animation filmmaker Gene Deitch, who worked with P.D. Eastman) recalls a 14-year-old Tony showing him hundreds of flipbooks he had drawn. “Really,” Deitch adds, “he had already outgrown flipbooks and had started doing animation on regulation animation paper.”


Home Savings Bank spot directed and designed by J.J. Sedelmaier and animated by Tony Eastman at J.J. Sedelmaier Productions.

In a comment on the same blog post, Eastman elaborated on his artistic development: “I wanted to shoot my flip books onto film … but instead, my dad suggested that I do new 12-field-size artwork to shoot (he probably figured it would lead me into thinking more long form about story, which it did). This led to the purchase of a 16 mm, 50-foot magazine load Bell & Howell camera.”

In a tribute to his late friend posted publicly on Facebook, J.J. Sedelmaier wrote: “He could work in ANY style of design and animation. People in the studio clamored to work on his stuff. He was FAST! He was thorough. He was a joy …”


Later in life, Eastman followed his father into children’s books. As “Peter Eastman,” he wrote and illustrated a trio of books featuring Fred and Ted, the canine stars of P.D. Eastman’s classic book Big Dog…Little Dog. He also contributed illustrations to the reissues of several of his father’s works.



Spots designed by Gary Baseman and animated by Tony Eastman at The Ink Tank.

This obituary will be updated with additional details as they become available.

R.I.P. Tony Eastman

Original source: Cartoon Brew.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Have your say by leaving a comment below! NickALive! welcomes friendly and respectful comments. Please familiarize with the blog's Comment Policy before commenting. All new comments are moderated and won't appear straight away.