Aniforms

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An Aniform is a two-dimensional cartoon character operated like a puppet, to be displayed to live audiences or in visual media. The concept was invented by Morey Bunin with his spouse Charlotte, Bunin being a puppeteer who had worked with string marionettes and hand puppets.[1] The distinctive feature of an Aniforms character is that it displays a physical form that appears "animated" on a real or simulated television screen. The technique was used in television production.

Patent history[edit]

Example Aniform figure from Bunin's patent

After forming Aniforms, Inc., Bunin filed for a patent on the process on August 4, 1960, and was granted U.S. Patent 3,070,920 on January 1, 1963.[2]

According to the patent, Aniforms are "open two-dimensional figures…constructed to simulate many objects." The figures are flexible to allow free manipulation, which is accomplished by "rods or wires … attached to the figures" for both support and movement. The controls are arranged or painted to be invisible to the audience.[2]

Bunin later improved the process to take advantage of emerging Chroma key technology. All background and control surfaces were painted blue, and the black-white signal polarity was reversed without altering the color signals. This resulted in a black outline figure on a white background, which could then be superimposed or keyed on another scene without the object background showing through. Bunin filed for a patent on the improved process on January 20, 1975, and was granted U.S. Patent 3,899,848 on August 19, 1975.[3]

Application in Television Production[edit]

The Aniforms process has been used on several television productions:

  • Captain Kangaroo for the character of "Fred," who appeared on the fictional "Channel One" for conversations with The Captain and other human characters.[4]
  • The Surprise Show, a children's program that was broadcast by WPIX-TV, New York City, from 1965 to 1967. The program featured Aniforms during its first season, but station executives dropped the concept for the run of the show because of the expense. The characters were voiced by Wayland Flowers, Cleavon Little, and Jimmy Boyd.[5]
  • Barney's Army, a children's program produced and broadcast by WPTF-TV 28, Raleigh, North Carolina from 1979 to 1983. Aniforms, Inc. supplied the characters, which were operated and voiced by local actors. A production assistant, Tony Madejczyk, recalled that use of the puppets was subject to non-disclosure agreements, and that when the puppets were not in use "we had to drape a tarp over the puppet." Puppets could not be stored at the station when the show was out of production.[6]
  • Malcolm, a 1983 pilot for a game show co-hosted by Alex Trebek and an Aniforms character named Malcolm. The premise was that three contestants appearing in boxes on a screen alongside Malcolm were asked a question with a two-word answer by Trebek; the first two to "buzz in" had to supply the answer, collaboratively, in order. If they failed to do so correctly, Malcolm would offer the third contestant a clue. The pilot was commissioned by NBC, and the show was not picked up.[7]

Successors[edit]

"Fred" and other Aniforms characters are considered more puppet than animation.[7] Their relatively crude, two-dimensional forms and lack of locomotion was appealing primarily because of the illusion of human interaction in real-time with an animated character.

Adam Reed and Matt Thompson founded Floyd County Productions in 2009 after they closed 70/30 Productions following the cancellation of the company's shows. Floyd County Productions grew from a small eight-person studio into a competitive animation house, which produces the animated TV shows Archer, Unsupervised, Chozen, and Dicktown for FX, in addition to providing animation for various live-action shows.[citation needed]

The Late Show host Stephen Colbert and his production company, Spartina Productions, founded Late Night Cartoons, Inc., an animation studio that has collaborated with developers of Adobe Character Animator to produces and providing real-time interactive animations for broadcast. Their topical productions range from a live interview with an animated cartoon version of Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton in 2016 to several animated series including; Showtime's Our Cartoon President, Paramount+/Comedy Central’s Tooning Out the News, and Comedy Central’s Fairview, as well as upcoming series Washingtonia.[citation needed]

The Adobe technology uses motion capture to track hand-drawn characters in real-time. In contrast to Aniforms, which requires only a puppeteer and an optional voice artist, it takes "25 to 30 animators total" to produce a 10-minute episode in the 24-hour turnaround cycle required before airtime for the concept to stay current.[8]

Network studios have used CrazyTalk and CrazyTalk Animator in their daily production due to short delivery deadlines. Television shows like Jimmy Kimmel LIVE! use both CrazyTalk and CrazyTalk Animator 2D applications to produce real-time animations for broadcast.[9]

Live2D also can be used to generate real-time 2D animations—usually anime-style characters—using layered, continuous parts based on an illustration, without the need of frame-by-frame animation or a 3D model. This enables characters to move using 2.5D movement while maintaining the original illustration.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Gussow, Mel (March 16, 1997). "Morey Bunin is dead at 86; pioneer television puppeteer". The New York Times. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Puppet like figure and animation apparatus" (PDF). Free Patents Online. FreePatentsOnline.com. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  3. ^ "Animated Cartoon Character and Method" (PDF). Patent Images. Retrieved June 15, 2022.
  4. ^ Kurer, Ron. "Fred, from Channel One". Ron Kurer. Archived from the original on June 21, 2012. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  5. ^ "The Surprise Show". ToonaRific. ToonaRific Cartoons. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  6. ^ "Aniforms". We Now Return to…Barney's Army. April 23, 2018. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  7. ^ a b Keeley, Matt (February 8, 2019). "The lost 1983 game show pilot 'Malcolm' was surprisingly innovative with its puppet sidekick". Kittysneezes. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
  8. ^ Dowling, Amber (April 14, 2020). "How 'Tooning Out The News' pivoted its animation process amid coronavirus pandemic". Variety. Retrieved June 15, 2022.
  9. ^ "Crazy Talk gives voice to pictures". Phys.Org. Retrieved December 16, 2022.