From Snow White to Bugs Bunny: Gimli cottage was childhood home to artist who shaped cartoon history - Action News
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Manitoba

From Snow White to Bugs Bunny: Gimli cottage was childhood home to artist who shaped cartoon history

When Andy Blicq bought an old cottage in Gimli, Man., to renovate and turn into his year-round home, he had no idea he was buying a connection to some of the greatest cartoon characters in history.

Charles Thorson credited with radically changing Warner Bros.'s animation style, developing iconic characters

The first cartoon appearance of Bugs Bunny, before he was officially named as such, in the 1938 cartoon Porky's Hare Hunt. (Internet Movie Database)

When AndyBlicqbought a century-old cottage inGimli, Man., to renovate and turn into his year-round home, he had no idea he was buying a connection to some of the greatest cartoon characters in history.

Builtin 1918, the cottage in the Manitoba Interlake townis the childhood home of Charles Thorson, who moved to Hollywood in 1934 and became a cartoonist who created prototypes for Bugs Bunny, Elmer Fudd, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, and the Flintstones(he alsodevelopedstory ideas for the animated TVseries featuring the latter).

A view of the Thorson/Blicq house as seen today. (Submitted by Andy Blicq)

TheSnow White character created forDisney Studios is widely believed to bebased on a waitress Thorson met and flirted with at a diner in West End Winnipeg.

Heleft Disney in anger at the lack of screen creditsgiven to him, especially for Snow White, and was hired by Warner Bros.to conceive star characters they hoped would challenge Disney's reign in animated entertainment.

Bugs Bunny and other characters designed by Charles Thorson, as seen in Gene Walz's book Cartoon Charlie: The Life and Art of Animation Pioneer Charles Thorson. (Great Plains Publications)

His new bosses asked Thorson to design a rabbit for acartoonto be directed by Cal Dalton and Ben "Bugs" Hardaway.

Thorsonlabelledhis model sheet as "Bug's Bunny" and the name stuck, according to a biography by former University of Manitoba film studies professor Gene Walz calledCartoon Charlie:The Life and Art of Animation Pioneer Charles Thorson.

History in the walls

The history in the home on Gimli's Fourth Avenue is so deep "you can feel it in the walls,"Blicqsaid.

"We love it. It is a piece of the past."

That history was recognized this week as the home turned100.

The Thorson home can be seen tucked against trees behind the house in the centre of this old photo of Gimli. (Submitted by Andy Blicq)

A Canada Dayceremony was hosted by the municipality to honour the homeand the handful of others in the area that remain from the earliest days of the Icelandic-settled community in Manitoba's Interlake.

"These cottages are disappearing pretty quickly. There are a few around still but many have been taken apart or renovated right out of recognition," Blicqsaid.

Whenever one is demolished,Blicqhas tried to salvagethe lumber and put it back into his own cottageto maintain the original feel and history.

"We've wanted to maintain that as much as we possibly could. This is about us, it's about our pastand it's important to save them."

Kristin Solvadottir, right, is believed to be the muse for Charles Thorson's drawing of Snow White for Disney Studios. From Gene Walz's Cartoon Charlie: The Life and Art of Animation Pioneer Charles Thorson. (Great Plains Publications)

The home was originally builtforStefanThorson, a former Gimli mayor. He and his wife,Sigridur,emigrated from Iceland to Winnipeg in 1887. They had two sons Charles andJoseph before moving the family toGimliin 1912.

The homebelonged to three other families after the Thorsons. WhenBlicqbought it in 1997 it was showing its age.

"It was in pretty tough shape by that point but we've had this ongoing renovation for about 20 years," he said.

"I think I've touched every single board in it."

He didn't know anything about thehistory until theGimliMunicipal Heritage Advisory Committee didsome research to find out who the previous owners were.

Charlie Thorson was born in Winnipeg but grew up in Gimli. (University of Manitoba Archives and Special Collections)

"When you have a building like this, you're kind of caretakers as it goes through different families and incarnations in its lifetime."

He has since learned the home was constructed byHjalmarThorsteinson, a master carpenter who also built boats in the harbour community on Lake Winnipeg.

The walls were made out of Douglas fir, which would have been shipped in from the West Coast at the time.

"It's irreplaceable wood, very strong. Largely, that's why many of these buildings [built the same way] remain," Blicqsaid.

Calling himself "a glutton for punishment,"Blicqrecently bought the cottage next to his another old one and plans to embark on a renovation to saveit.

"It's really original," hesaid, adding that the history of that one has yet to be uncovered.

A 1919 penny found by Andy Blicq while gardening a few years ago. It is from a year after the home was built. (Submitted by Andy Blicq)

Thorson'sroller-coaster career

Early in his career, Thorson did some cartooning for Icelandic-language newspapers as well as the Winnipeg Free Pressand theGrain Growers Guide,according to Historica Canada'sCanadian Encyclopedia.

From1914 until 1934,he was chief illustrator for the Eaton's catalogue, in which goods were all hand-drawn. But he also did freelance work, including designing souvenir posters and postcards after the Winnipeg Falconshockey team wonthe 1920 Olympic gold medal inAntwerp.

But it was also a tumultuous time in his life. His first wife died oftuberculosis shortlyafter the birth of their son, who then died three months later, according to the University of Manitoba archives, which contains much of Thorson's work.

Gene Walz has written extensively on Charles Thorson's life and career. (Great Plains Publications/AbeBooks.com)

The deaths rattled him and he wandered for a time, living homeless throughout Western Canada. He eventually remarriedin 1922, but tragedy struck again. The couple'ssonlived only three days.

They had another in 1925 but the couple split up a few yearslater. Single once more, Thorsonspent a great deal of time drinking away his sorrows and drawing at the Weevil Cafe, a dinernear the corner of Sargent Avenue and Victor Street in Winnipeg's West End.

That's where he met waitress Kristin Solvadottir, who was fromIceland and visitingrelatives in Manitoba. She worked at the diner to cover her expenses while away from home.

Thorson, at 44,was twice her age andSolvadottirshowed little interest, according toGeneWalz's Cartoon Charlie. He sketched drawings with love notes to her but when she left the city, he headed forLos Angeles.

After leaving Disney, Thorson"radically revised the Warner style towards anthropomorphic animals" and set the company on a strong animated course, according to the U of M archives.

Known as someone who didn't stay at a job too long, Thorsonleft WBafterdeveloping Bugs and the rabbit's antagonist,ElmerFudd, along with several other lesser-known characters.

Punkinhead, designed for Eaton's, was featured in storybooks, songs, records and television commercials. (Archives of Ontario)

He moved on to Fleischer Studios in Miami, where he redesigned Raggedy Ann and Andy and the Popeye characters and created theFlintstones.

AfterFleischer, heworked as a children's-book illustrator, in billboard and magazine advertising, and for a few other studios. Hethen moved back to Winnipeg in 1946, where he created one of his other iconic characters.

Punkinhead, a teddy bear with a mop ofblondhair, was designed for Eaton's and marketed through storybooks,songs, records and television commercials.The character was a big hit and Eaton's eventually promoted him to Santa's sidekick during the store's Christmas parades.

Thorsonlikely could have lived off Punkinhead royaltiesif not for a big blunder on his part.

According to Walz, Thorsonwas drunk during a party at the Fort Garry Hotel in his honour and got into an argument with an Eaton's executive. Thorsonthrew a punch and was promptly fired, Walz says.

In 1952, Thorsondesigned Elmer the Safety Elephantfor a school-based safety campaign but struggled to find work beyond that and eventually retired to British Columbia in 1956.

He died a decade later.

While these days, many Manitobans may not know about his contribution to cartoon history, his former home has now been recognized in the town where he once lived.

The Gimli cottageowned by Andy Blicqis now amunicipally designated historic site, with a plaque commemorating its significance.

"More than anything, it makes you feel connected to the community's history," said Blicq.


Read an article by Gene Walzon Winnipeg's Bugs Bunny connection, from the summer 1997 issue of the film magazine Take One: Film& Television in Canada (digitized by Athabasca University Library and Scholarly Resources):

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