Jules Engel
Jules Engel (born Gyula Engel; March 11, 1909 – September 6, 2003) was a Hungarian-American animator, filmmaker, painter, sculptor, and educator renowned for bridging commercial animation with abstract and experimental art forms.[1][2] Born in Budapest and immigrating to the United States as a child, Engel began his animation career at Walt Disney Studios in 1939, where he contributed choreography to iconic sequences in Fantasia (1940), including the "Dance of the Hours" featuring hippos and alligators, the dancing mushrooms in the "Chinese Dance," and the bottle-dancing thistles in the "Russian Dance."[3][4][1] He later co-founded United Productions of America (UPA) in 1944, pioneering stylized, modern graphic approaches in shorts like Gerald McBoing-Boing (1950) and characters such as Mr. Magoo, influencing a shift away from Disney's realism toward artistic abstraction.[3][4] In 1959, he co-established Format Films, earning an Academy Award nomination for the short Icarus Montgolfier Wright (1962).[2][4] Engel created over 30 abstract animated films, such as Coaraze which won the Prix Jean Vigo, and exhibited Kandinsky-inspired paintings at institutions like the Whitney and LACMA.[2][3] As founding director of the Experimental Animation program at the California Institute of the Arts starting in 1968, he mentored generations of animators including John Lasseter, Glen Keane, and Henry Selick, shaping contemporary animation education and production.[4][1][2]