Alexander Williams | |
---|---|
Born | London, England | 18 October 1967
Education | Westminster School |
Alma mater | Merton College, Oxford |
Known for | Animation, cartoons |
Notable work | Queen's Counsel |
Parent |
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Website | Alex Williams Animation |
Alexander Williams (born 18 October 1967 in London) is an English cartoonist and animator. He is the son of animator Richard Williams. He has worked on many animated films, and is the author of the Queen's Counsel cartoon strip in The Times , for which he was awarded the Cartoon Art Trust Award for Strip Cartooning in October 2017.
Williams was born in London in 1967, the son of Canadian animator Richard Williams. [1] He played the voice of Tiny Tim in his father's 1971 television adaptation of A Christmas Carol . [2] [3] He was educated at Westminster School, Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts, and Merton College, Oxford.
In 1987 Williams was 20 years old and in his first year of studies at the University of Oxford when he started work as an in-betweener on Who Framed Roger Rabbit , working under animator Simon Wells and later as an assistant animator to Marc Gordon-Bates. Williams initially worked unpaid as an intern, and was later invited by producer Patsy de Lord to work on the film full-time. [4] The university agreed to his taking a suspension of studies for a year. [3] The following year, in 1988, he joined the Disney-MGM Studio in Orlando, Florida, working on the short film RollerCoaster Rabbit. [5]
In 1993 Williams and Graham Francis Defries created the comic strip Queen's Counsel , a satire on law and lawyers, published in the law pages of The Times newspaper, under the pseudonyms Steuart and Francis. [6] [7] At the time, Williams and Defries were working as research assistants for Members of Parliament at the House of Commons. [8] [4]
A number of collections of the cartoons have been published by Robson Books and HarperCollins. [9]
Williams also drew Writer's Block , a cartoon strip published in the books section of The Times from 2005–6, and The Dealers , published in The Tatler from 1994–95. [10] He also illustrated the characters for the Baby Barista blog by fellow ex-barrister Tim Kevan. [11]
Williams was a barrister at 12 King's Bench Walk Chambers in London before leaving in 1996 to pursue a full-time career in film animation, [12] joining Warner Bros Feature Animation, where he was lead animator on the villain "Ruber", voiced by Gary Oldman, in Quest for Camelot . Williams gave the character a "nervous twitch", a "wrestler's strut" and "big hands with broken nails that look creepy on close-ups". [13]
His work as an animator includes Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), The Princess and the Cobbler (1993), The Lion King (1994), Quest for Camelot (1998), The Iron Giant (1999), The Road to El Dorado (2000), Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron (2002), Piglet's Big Movie , Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas (2003), Robots (2005) and Open Season (2006). [2]
Williams has also worked on visual effects in Racing Stripes (2005), Monster House (2006), Underdog (2007), Beverly Hills Chihuahua , Inkheart (2008), Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009), Marmaduke (2010) and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader (2010) [2]
He has contributed designs to Deckchair Dreams, a fundraising event organised by the Royal Parks Foundation in support of the London Royal Parks. [14] In 2012 he contributed a design for The Big Egg Hunt, a charity fundraiser billed as the world's largest ever Easter egg hunt. [15]
He lives in London and teaches at various academies and studios including Escape Studios, however now tutors animation at Bucks New University in High Wycombe as a senior lecturer. [16] [17]
Williams has also founded the world's first online based MA in animation at Buckinghamshire New University, beginning in September 2015. [18] [19]
In 2012 he founded an online animation school, Animation Apprentice. [20]
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Graham Francis Defries is a partner in the law firm Goodwin Procter. He is the co-creator with Alexander Williams of the Queens Counsel featured in the law pages of The Times since 1993.
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