Romano Scarpa(1927-2005)
- Director
- Animation Department
- Writer
Romano Scarpa was born in Venice in 1927 and growing up there he developed a
particular love for American cartoons and Disney comics, that, at the
time, were published in the big format of the "Topolino Giornale" which
was then printing now classic Floyd Gottfredson's stories. In the
Forties he opened an Animation Studio in Venice in which he produced
his first works: some commercials, a short named _E poi venne il
diluvio_ and another very good short, named _La piccola fiammiferaia
(1953)_, distributed in Italy together with Robert Aldrich's Attack (1956). Right
after that he stopped working in animation for a while and dedicated
wholly to creating Disney comics. In the late Fifties and up to about
1963 he wrote and penciled some of the best-known comic masterpieces of
all time: stories like "Topolino e la collana Chirikawa" (1960) or
"Paperino e la leggenda dello Scozzese volante" (1957) that have,
later, been translated in lots of different languages throughout the
world. Many of these stories have their backgrounds in movies, for
example "Topolino nel favoloso regno di Shan Grillà" (1961) is based
upon Frank Capra's Lost Horizon (1937); not to talk about all the stories starring Snow
White or the Seven Dwarfs, obviously based on Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). Sometimes the
exact opposite happens; Will Our Heroes Be Able to Find Their Friend Who Has Mysteriously Disappeared in Africa? (1968) is based on Scarpa's story "Topolino e
il Pippotarzan" (1957). Around 1963 he relaxed a bit and practically
stopped writing his stories for 6 or 7 years, while still penciling
stories written by other people, generally not up to the same high
standards of his. Then, in the Seventies he went back to writing too,
and he's still doing it now, though he has moved to Spain and is
working for a different publisher. Among the last things he made while
he was still in Italy, at the beginning of the Nineties, there are some
wonderful strip stories, the same kind of stories that he loved when he
was a child. One of these, "Topolino e l'enigma di Brigaboom" (1989)
was partially based on Brigadoon (1954). In the meanwhile he has had time enough
for some more animation, so we have _Aihnoo degli Icebergs (1972)_,
The Fourth King (1977) and a new TV series, _The Adventures of Marco and Gina (Sopra i
tetti di Venezia) (2001)_. In his career Scarpa created many characters
that are now widely accepted by everybody to be part of the Disney
Universe, characters like Brigitta McBridge, Dickie Duck and
Ellsworth's adoptive son, Bruto. Since 1988 some of his comic stories
have been published in the USA by Gladstone (a publisher); it was the
first time that this happened to an Italian Disney author.