One of the unfortunate disadvantages your friendly Yowp has when it comes to getting specific material for this blog is I’m neither in the animation industry nor anywhere close to southern California where the cartoons you read about here were made. So I’m at a loss to help when people ask for information, especially biographical information that’s not available on-line.
I’ve received an e-mail from Maria Enriqueta Guardia at, I think, the University of Costa Rica looking for anything on background painter Fernando Montealegre for an essay. I’m afraid I’m not too helpful. So this is, as the kids say, a shout out to anyone who can provide even a snippet of information about him (I don’t mean the films he worked on; that’s easily found on the web).
You can either post a comment here, or if you wish to e-mail Ms Guardia, send me a note and I can pass on an e-mail address.
John Kricfalusi is one of a number of readers here who is a big fan of the backgrounds in the early Hanna-Barbera cartoons. Monte, Bob Gentle and Art Lozzi were the studio’s main painters in the 1950s and all brought their own particular styles which enhanced the cartoons. John and Art have been in correspondence for a number of years and here’s what Art told him in a comment after this post:
Monte? Fernando Montealegre, Costa Rican, a charmer (at times), a good artist, funny guy, sort of conceited and family-proud. We started the same day at MGM and became close friends. He had studied classical painting in San Jose. When Bob needed assistance, Monte was sent in to help out, following the oldish MGM technique. As I already mentioned, because of the fact that in the new Hanna/Barbera set-up, we had to work fast and simple, we established a style that allowed us both to work on one cartoon without noticeable differences. When we each had a complete cartoon to do, which became more and more frequent, then our styles began to show. But we managed to keep it all Hanna-and-Barbera-identifiable.
Presuming I have the right person in the California death records, Monte was born June 23, 1926. It’s unclear when he arrived in the U.S. He seems to have begun his animation career working on six cartoons for Mike Lah at M.G.M. Then the studio closed and he moved with a number of the artists to H-B Enterprises. He seems to have preferred being credited as ‘Montealegre’ at the newly-formed studio, at least at the outset.
His artistry graced the backgrounds of all the early Hanna-Barbera cartoons and all the studio’s half-hour series—the Flintstones, the Jetsons, Top Cat, Jonny Quest—on features like Charlotte’s Web and The Man Called Flintstone and even the combined live action/animation shows like The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. His last work in animation, according to one internet site, was on a 1983 TV special called The Great Bear Scare, directed by Hal Mason, an animator for Walter Lantz in the ‘40s, with animation by Virgil Ross and some other familiar names. Oh, and music was by a chap named Bill Loose.
Monte passed away in Los Angeles on April 29, 1991.
Kevin Langley did a blog post some time ago of some of Monte’s early backgrounds at Hanna-Barbera. You can see them here.
Monte was one of countless talented, but virtually unknown, artists who jumped into the nascent world of television animation from the autumnal years of the Golden Age of Hollywood Animation. Handiwork which provided memories for countless youngsters of several generations is not a bad legacy. And it would be nice to be able to read more about them because there are probably some fascinating stories waiting to be told.
I believe the full title of that 1983 TV special was TED E. BEAR AND THE GREAT BEAR SCARE. It was produced by a lady who worked with Chuck Jones in the late 1970s-early 1980s, Mary Roscoe. The interesting thing about TED E. was that Mary was paid the budget for a fully-animated (or reasonably so) TV special, by CBS, I believe. However, she took the money and ran, to some exotic foreign location, and what was delivered to the network was essentially a "pose reel", nice illustrations, but little or no actual cel animation. I don't remember Montealegre working on the backgrounds, but they looked pretty good I think, admittedly it's been a long time since I have seen TED E. It's one of the most infamous unrecorded chapters in TV animation special history.
ReplyDeleteMark Kausler
I would be interested in buying any of Fernando Montealegre's original artwork. He was a dear friend of the family.
ReplyDeleteIn interview on Stu's Show http://www.stusshow.com/archives.php?q=jerry+eisenberg longtime H-B layout man, Jerry Eisenberg recollected glowingly about Monty's BG work and said he kept some of his BG's from back in the day. I also recall Eisenberg saying how Monty took some photographs of actor, Jack Nicholson when latter worked at MGM cartoon studio as office boy. It's too bad, there is little info about Monty to be found out there.
DeleteWould you be interested in selling them? I'd like to buy them.
ReplyDeleteWhat do you think his paintings (artwork) would be worth now? He did some really nice paintings in the early 1970's at his home. Not the usual background type paintings, but very nice artwork.
ReplyDeleteI am Maria E. Guardia . I have beeing looking for Fernando Montealegre´s works, because I am working on a tesis from Universidad de Costa Rica and I need information and photos of his work. I know some wonderfull works back in Costa Rica. My email is maria.guardia@ucr.ac.cr
DeleteI don't know, Anon. I've never seen them.
ReplyDeleteI doubt his name is known outside those who watch old cartoons.
There seem to be many fans of his background work which I find very cool. His friends have not forgotten him.
DeleteAnyone else notice how early HB background artist had cool latin surnames like Fernando Montealegre, Art Lozzi, Fernando Arce, Ron Dias and Rene Garcia.
ReplyDeleteI have a photo of Uncle Nano (aka Monty aka Fernando Montealegre) at a family holiday dinner with the picture he painted of my father, Ron Brown). My dad gave Uncle Nano the painting for safe keeping. Sure wish we had it in our family.
ReplyDeleteTrying to figure out how to get a photo in this thread of the picture Fernando or Monte as his friends called him, Uncle Nano to us kids, painted of my father, Ron Brown. Ron & Monte were room mates at USC.
ReplyDeleteHi - I worked with Monte at H&B in the early 70's and had a fun time as well as creative input. He definitely had firm opinions - never bothered me. I believe there may have been alcohol problem, especially by later 70's. Last time I saw him was at a bus stop across from H&B - he had a folder of what might have been layouts, freelance work. There was a sadness about him, I still recall that day
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your memory. About what year was the last time you saw him?
DeleteMy father tells me that he was real good friends with Fernando, said they sailed together a few times among other things. Fernando gave my father a few oil on canvas pieces he painted but not of anything Hanna Barbera had him doing, something he was doing on his own time. If anyone would like to see the artwork he gave my father email me at frost1974@protonmail.com.
ReplyDelete