James Algar | |
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Born |
Modesto, California, United States | June 11, 1912
Died | February 26, 1998
Carmel, California, United States | (aged 85)
Occupation(s) | Film director, screenwriter, film producer |
Years active | 1934–1977 |
James Algar (June 11, 1912 – February 26, 1998) [1] was an American film director, screenwriter, and producer. [2] He worked at Walt Disney Productions for 43 years and received the Disney Legends award in 1998. [3] He was born in Modesto, California and died in Carmel, California.
In 1958, Algar directed an Oscar-winning documentary White Wilderness, which contains a scene that supposedly depicts a mass lemming migration, and ends with the lemmings leaping into the Arctic Ocean. In 1982, the CBC Television news magazine program The Fifth Estate broadcast a documentary about animal cruelty in Hollywood called Cruel Camera, focusing on White Wilderness, as well as the television program Wild Kingdom. Bob McKeown, the host of the CBC program, discovered that the lemming scene was filmed at the Bow River near downtown Calgary, and not in the Arctic Ocean as implied by the film. McKeown interviewed a lemming expert, who claimed that the particular species of lemming shown in the film is not known to migrate, much less commit mass suicide. [4] [5]