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Ron Clements

Ronald Francis Clements (born April 25, 1953) is an animator, , , and producer renowned for his decades-long collaboration with at , co-directing landmark animated features such as The Little Mermaid (1989), (1992), (1997), (2002), (2009), and (2016) that helped define Disney's Renaissance era and beyond. Born and raised in Sioux City, Iowa, Clements developed a passion for animation at age nine after watching a reissue of Disney's Pinocchio (1940), prompting him to create his own short films using a super-8 camera as a teenager. After high school, he moved to California, briefly working as an animator at Hanna-Barbera while studying life drawing at the Art Center College of Design, before being accepted into Disney's Talent Development Program in the early 1970s. There, he apprenticed for two years under Disney Legend Frank Thomas, one of the Nine Old Men, and advanced from in-betweener to animator and storyman, contributing to early projects like Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore (1983), The Rescuers (1977), Pete's Dragon (1977), The Fox and the Hound (1981), and The Black Cauldron (1985). Clements' directorial partnership with Musker began with (1986), which he co-directed alongside Musker, Dave Michener, and , marking the duo's first full collaboration as writer-directors. Their subsequent films revitalized Disney's animation division during the late 1980s and 1990s, with earning two for Best Original Score and Best Original Song (""), while won for Best Original Score and Best Original Song (""). Clements and Musker received three Oscar nominations for Best Animated Feature for (2003), (2010)—which revived Disney's hand-drawn animation tradition—and (2017). After retiring following the release of Moana in 2016, Clements returned to Walt Disney Animation Studios in June 2025 in an advisory role to mentor emerging animators, reflecting on the influence of his own mentors like Thomas in shaping his career. His work has been honored with inductions such as the 2017 Art Directors Guild William Cameron Menzies Award and a 2025 spot in the Annecy International Animation Film Festival's Walk of Fame.

Early life and education

Childhood and family

Ronald Francis Clements was born on April 25, 1953, in Sioux City, Iowa, to parents Joseph Clements and Gertrude Clements (née Gereau). He grew up in Sioux City, where his early years were shaped by the local cultural scene, including frequent visits to the Orpheum Theatre. Clements attended Bishop Heelan Catholic High School in Sioux City, graduating in 1971. During his time there, he served as the staff cartoonist for the school newspaper, Heelan Highline, and took art classes under Sister Mary de Lourdes. His English teacher, Helen Socknat, encouraged his artistic pursuits by allowing him to draw caricatures during lessons. From a young age, Clements developed a passion for drawing and storytelling, influenced by comics and classic films. This interest crystallized at age nine when he first saw Disney's (1940) at the Orpheum Theatre, igniting his aspiration to work in animation. As a teenager, he experimented with films and, at age 15, joined the art department at local television station KCAU, where he created his debut hand-drawn animated short, .

Training in animation

Clements lacked formal higher education in animation, instead developing his skills through self-directed efforts during his youth. Growing up in Sioux City, Iowa, he honed his drawing abilities independently, inspired by classic Disney films such as Pinocchio, which he first viewed at age nine. This early passion led him to study animation techniques via books like Bob Thomas's The Art of Animation, where he learned about pioneering animators and foundational methods. To apply these concepts practically, Clements created experimental short films using a Super 8 camera, most notably Shades of Sherlock Holmes (1972), a 15-minute animated adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle's stories that he wrote, directed, animated, and voiced single-handedly. Following his high school graduation in 1971, Clements relocated to in the early 1970s to pursue opportunities in the animation industry. Lacking immediate entry into , he supported himself through freelance sketches and odd jobs, working briefly as an animator at while studying life drawing at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. These experiences exposed him to the practicalities of cel animation, the traditional hand-drawn technique involving transparent sheets for layering characters and backgrounds, which he explored through self-study and observation of industry practices. His key influences during this period included classic animators from the studio's , whose innovative approaches to character movement and storytelling shaped his foundational understanding of the craft. Clements' primary structured training came through Disney's Talent Development Program in the mid-1970s, a selective initiative designed to nurture emerging animators under veteran guidance. After persistent outreach to Disney recruiters, including Eric Larson of the Nine Old Men, he gained acceptance following an initial trial period of free animation work. The program provided intensive instruction in classical animation principles, emphasizing squash-and-stretch mechanics, timing, and appeal—core elements of cel-based production. This apprenticeship, lasting two years under legendary animator Frank Thomas, bridged Clements' self-taught foundations to professional proficiency, preparing him for industry roles without relying on traditional academic pathways.

Professional career

Early roles at Disney

Ron Clements joined Productions in the early 1970s through the studio's Talent Development Program, an initiative designed to train new talent following 's death in 1966. He began as an assistant on the short film and Too (1974), contributing to character movements under veteran supervision. By 1975, Clements had advanced to a full character role, focusing on expressive gestures and personality-driven sequences that brought life to animal and human-like figures. Clements made his debut as a character animator on (1977), where he helped animate the mice protagonists Bernard and Miss Bianca during their adventurous escapades, emphasizing subtle emotional expressions and dynamic interactions in swamp and urban settings. He continued this work on the hybrid live-action/animated film Pete's Dragon (1977), animating the title dragon Elliott's playful and protective behaviors alongside the young boy Pete, including scenes of whimsical flight and emotional bonding that integrated seamlessly with live footage. These contributions occurred amid a challenging period for the studio, as the post-Walt era saw significant downsizing, including the 1979 departure of key animator and 11 colleagues who formed a rival studio, reducing the animation department by over 15% and straining resources for ongoing productions. As Clements progressed from animator to story artist in the late 1970s and early 1980s, he participated in internal tests and short-form projects that honed his narrative skills, such as experimental sequences testing character arcs and visual storytelling techniques. By 1981, he had become a supervising on The Fox and the Hound, overseeing animation teams while beginning to pitch story ideas internally. A notable example was his 1982 suggestion to adapt Eve Titus's book series, proposing a mouse detective adventure set in a Victorian-inspired world, which he developed with story artist Pete Young during a period of studio uncertainty around The Black Cauldron's troubled production. This pitch highlighted his growing role in conceptual development, bridging his animation background with broader creative contributions at a time when Disney was navigating financial pressures and seeking fresh directions.

Partnership with John Musker

Ron Clements and first met in the early 1980s while working as animators at Walt Disney Productions on (1981), where Clements served as a character animator and Musker as a supervising animator. Their bond strengthened during production on The Black Cauldron (1985), from which both were removed due to creative differences with studio leadership, prompting them to begin collaborating on story ideas. This early partnership involved co-writing treatments for unproduced projects, including initial pitches required by new studio executives and in 1985, where they developed concepts drawn from fairy tales and adventure tales before focusing on realized works. The duo shared a creative philosophy rooted in the Golden Age of Disney animation, emphasizing the integration of adventure, humor, and musical elements to create expressive, character-driven stories that honored the medium's traditions while appealing to contemporary audiences. Influenced by mentors from Disney's Nine Old Men—such as Frank Thomas for Clements and Eric Larson for Musker—they prioritized hand-drawn animation's ability to convey emotion and action over technological novelty, viewing their work as a continuation of Walt Disney's legacy of innovative storytelling. Their first major joint development came with the pitching and scripting of (1986), marking their debut as co-directors and demonstrating their ability to revive Disney's feature animation through a blend of mystery and whimsy. As their partnership evolved during the of the late 1980s and 1990s, they made deliberate choices to adapt non-traditional source material, such as Arabian folklore for (1992) and for (1997), pushing boundaries by incorporating diverse cultural elements and modern humor while maintaining musical spectacle. Off-screen, Clements and Musker's complementary styles profoundly shaped their production processes, with Clements focusing on visual composition, story structure, and overall tracking to ensure cohesive pacing, while Musker drove narrative development through dialogue, improvisation, and character dynamics. This division allowed for efficient dovetailing during writing and directing: Musker generated raw comedic and action sequences, which Clements refined into polished dramatic arcs, fostering a unified vision that balanced levity and depth across their projects. Their prior individual early roles at Disney as animators on films like The Rescuers (1977) for Clements and The Fox and the Hound for Musker provided the foundational skills that informed this synergistic approach.

Later projects and return to Disney

Following the successes of the Disney Renaissance, Clements and his longtime collaborator John Musker directed Treasure Planet (2002), an ambitious adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island reimagined in a science fiction setting. The film pioneered a hybrid animation technique that combined traditional hand-drawn 2D characters with 3D computer-generated environments and elements, such as the cyborg pirate Long John Silver's mechanical appendages and dynamic space vistas achieved through innovative Deep Canvas software for 360-degree camera movements. Despite its technical innovations, Treasure Planet faced significant commercial challenges, grossing approximately $110 million worldwide against a $140 million production budget, marking it as one of Disney's largest box-office disappointments at the time and contributing to the studio's pivot away from traditional animation amid rising competition from CGI films. In 2009, Clements and Musker returned to direct , Disney's first major hand-drawn animated feature in five years, set in New Orleans and drawing from E.D. Baker's novel . This project represented a deliberate revival of classic 2D animation techniques, with animators using pencil-and-paper methods to capture fluid character movements and lush backgrounds, even as Disney had largely shifted toward under leaders like following the success of Pixar's films. The film earned critical praise for its artistic return to roots but underperformed relative to expectations, grossing $267 million against a $105 million budget, which reinforced Disney's commitment to and effectively ended large-scale hand-drawn productions at the studio. Clements and Musker's final directorial collaboration, (2016), co-directed with Don Hall, blended their expertise in musical storytelling with contemporary Disney animation styles, centering on a Polynesian voyaging heroine inspired by ancient mythology. The production involved extensive cultural research, including trips to Polynesian islands starting in 2011 and the formation of the Oceanic Cultural Trust—a panel of anthropologists, historians, linguists, and practitioners from , , , and other regions—to ensure authentic depictions of traditions, designs, and deities like the . This approach bridged Clements and Musker's hand-drawn legacy with modern , resulting in a visually hybrid that grossed $643 million worldwide and earned two Academy Award nominations. After 's release, Clements retired from in 2016 following more than 40 years with the studio, expressing satisfaction with his achievements and a desire for rest after the exhaustive demands of back-to-back landmark projects like and . In June 2025, at the , Clements announced his return to in an advisory and mentorship capacity, focusing on guiding younger writers and animators rather than directing. He stated, "I really have been enjoying ... but I’m excited about just returning to kind of mentor… There aren’t as many old people around as there used to be, and there certainly are so many young people who want to work in animation."

Personal life

Marriage

Ron Clements married Tamara Lee Glumace on February 25, 1989. Tamara, a non-public figure also known as Tami, shares Clements' interest in animal welfare; the couple founded the Daphneyland Basset Hound Rescue in 2002 to support homeless basset hounds in California. By 2025, their marriage has lasted 36 years, coinciding with Clements' most prolific period in Disney animation.

Family and residence

Clements and his wife, Tamara "Tami" Clements, to whom he has been married since 1989, have built a private family life centered in . The couple resides in the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles, a location that allows them to maintain a low profile while remaining close to the Disney studios. Having relocated from his Sioux City, Iowa, birthplace to pursue animation opportunities at Disney in the 1970s, Clements established a permanent family home in the region during the 1990s, reflecting a commitment to balancing professional demands with personal stability. Public glimpses into their family dynamics are rare, though Tami has occasionally accompanied Ron to industry and hometown events, underscoring a supportive partnership away from the spotlight.

Filmography

Directed feature films

Ron Clements co-directed his first feature film, The Great Mouse Detective (1986), alongside John Musker, with additional direction from Burny Mattinson and Dave Michener; Clements also contributed to the story adaptation based on Eve Titus's Basil of Baker Street books. In (1989), Clements again co-directed with Musker, adapting Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale into a musical fantasy that revitalized Disney's animation renaissance, achieving a worldwide gross of $211.3 million. Clements and Musker co-directed (1992), a loose adaptation of the Arabian Nights tale featuring as the Genie, which became the first animated film to surpass $200 million in domestic earnings. Their next collaboration, (1997), co-directed by Clements and Musker, reimagined in a comedic musical format and earned $252.7 million worldwide at the . (2002), co-directed with Musker, blended Robert Louis Stevenson's with elements and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Feature. Clements and Musker co-directed (2009), Disney's return to traditional 2D animation set in New Orleans, which grossed $267 million worldwide. In (2016), their final directorial collaboration to date, Clements and Musker helmed a Polynesian-inspired adventure that earned two Academy Award nominations: Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song for "." Clements has no directorial credits on feature films following , though he has taken on advisory roles at Disney Animation Studios thereafter.

Writing and production credits

Clements' early contributions to Disney animation included work as a on (1977). Prior to his feature film involvement, he created the short animated film (1972), which he wrote and directed as a high school project. Throughout his career, Clements amassed numerous writing credits on Disney animated features, often collaborating with John Musker. He contributed to the story of The Great Mouse Detective (1986). For The Little Mermaid (1989), he co-wrote the screenplay with Musker. In Aladdin (1992), Clements co-wrote the screenplay alongside Musker, Ted Elliott, and Terry Rossio. He received similar co-screenplay credit for Hercules (1997) with Musker, Bob Shaw, Don McEnery, and Irene Mecchi. Clements co-wrote the screenplay for Treasure Planet (2002) with Musker, Rob Edwards, and John Norville. For The Princess and the Frog (2009), he co-wrote the screenplay with Musker, Rob Edwards, and Gregory Pierce. Additionally, Clements contributed to the story development of Moana (2016). In production roles, Clements served as a producer on (1992), (1997), and (2002), sharing duties with Musker and other team members. Clements also made cameo appearances in films he helped create, including as one of the marketplace citizens in (1992).

Awards and nominations

Academy Awards

Ron Clements earned his first Academy Award nomination for directing Treasure Planet (2002) in the Best Animated Feature category at the 75th Academy Awards in 2003, marking one of the initial entries when the category debuted for films released in 2001 and later. The film, co-directed with , competed against strong contenders including the eventual winner, (2001), directed by . Prior to this, Clements had no Oscar nominations, as the Best Animated Feature category did not exist before the in 2002. Clements received another nomination in the same category for The Princess and the Frog (2009) at the in 2010, again co-directed with Musker. This traditional 2D-animated film was nominated alongside Up (winner), , , and , reflecting the competitive field of innovative animated storytelling at the time. His most recent nominations came for Moana (2016) at the in 2017, where the film, co-directed with Musker, was nominated for Best Animated Feature—losing to Zootopia—and Best Original Song for "How Far I'll Go," composed by . These accolades highlighted Clements' role in Disney's animation resurgence during the late 2000s and , a period when the studio rebounded from earlier commercial struggles with critically praised projects blending hand-drawn and computer-generated techniques. Despite these honors, Clements has not secured an win in any category.

Other industry honors

In addition to his Academy Award nominations, Ron Clements received a BAFTA Film Award nomination for Best Animated Feature Film in 2017 for , shared with . Clements earned an Award nomination from the in 1987 for Best Motion Picture, recognizing his adaptation work on , shared with and the production team. For , Clements shared a 1993 Hugo Award nomination for Best Dramatic Presentation with John Musker, Ted Elliott, and Terry Rossio. The Los Angeles Film Critics Association honored Clements with its Best Animation Award on multiple occasions, including wins in 1989 for (shared with John Musker), 1992 for (shared with John Musker), and 1997 for (shared with John Musker). In recognition of his influence on production design and animation artistry, Clements and received the Art Directors Guild's Award in 2018, announced in late 2017. At the 2025 , Clements was inducted into the Walk of Fame for his lifetime contributions to , coinciding with his announcement of returning to as a mentor.

Legacy

Impact on Disney animation

Ron Clements played a pivotal role in the , a period from 1989 to 1999 that revitalized the studio's animation division following a creative and financial slump in the 1980s marked by underperforming films like The Black Cauldron. Co-directing (1989) with , Clements helped launch this era by blending classic fairy-tale elements with innovative animation techniques and Broadway-inspired songs, earning critical acclaim and reestablishing Disney's dominance in feature animation. The film's success, grossing over $222 million worldwide, restored financial stability and paved the way for subsequent hits like (1992), which further solidified Disney's commercial resurgence through adventurous storytelling and cultural flair. Clements consistently advocated for hand-drawn animation amid the industry's shift toward in the early 2000s, emphasizing its expressive potential for character-driven narratives. This stance was evident in (2002), where he and Musker pioneered a hybrid of and to update Robert Louis Stevenson's while preserving traditional artistry, despite the film's modest $92 million gross. More notably, (2009) marked Disney's return to full hand-drawn animation under their direction, countering the CGI dominance seen in films like Chicken Little (2005) and introducing the studio's first African American princess in a New Orleans-inspired tale. These efforts highlighted Clements' commitment to 's tactile charm, influencing Disney's occasional nods to traditional methods even as prevailed. In storytelling, Clements innovated by integrating Broadway-style musicals into animation, collaborating with composers like and to create memorable scores that elevated emotional depth and commercial appeal, as seen in 's Oscar-winning "." He also championed diverse cultural narratives, drawing from Middle Eastern folklore in , African American heritage in , and Polynesian mythology in (2016), where extensive research with Pacific Island communities ensured authentic representation of traditions and empowered female leads. This approach not only broadened Disney's audience but also set precedents for inclusive world-building in later films. The collective box office performance of Clements' co-directed Disney features, including The Great Mouse Detective (1986), The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Hercules (1997), Treasure Planet, The Princess and the Frog, and Moana, exceeded $2 billion worldwide, underscoring his commercial impact and helping Disney navigate economic challenges through the 1990s and beyond. Throughout his tenure, Clements mentored emerging animators by sharing techniques honed under Disney legends like Frank Thomas, fostering a new generation that carried forward the studio's narrative traditions and prefiguring his 2025 advisory role.

Mentorship and cultural influence

In June 2025, Ron Clements returned to after retirement, taking on an advisory and role to guide emerging talents and contribute to ongoing projects. The announcement came during the , where Clements, then 72, expressed enthusiasm for sharing his expertise without resuming directing duties. Clements has significantly influenced diversity in animation by championing inclusive narratives and culturally authentic representation, particularly through strong female leads such as in The Little Mermaid (1989) and the titular character in (2016). For Moana, he collaborated with anthropologists and cultural consultants to ensure respectful portrayal of Polynesian heritage, advancing Disney's shift toward multicultural storytelling. His cultural legacy encompasses the advocacy for preserving hand-drawn animation techniques amid the industry's digital transition, exemplified by the integration of 2D elements like the character Mini-Maui in Moana to honor traditional artistry. Clements has further enriched animation history through extensive interviews and co-authoring the 2025 book Making Disney Magic . . . from a Mermaid to Moana with John Musker, which details 45 years of Disney's evolution with over 1,000 archival images. Clements' broader impact inspires animators globally, as demonstrated by festival honors such as his 2025 induction into Annecy's Walk of Fame and joint appearances with Musker at events like LightBox Expo, alongside enduring fan communities celebrating his contributions to classics.

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