Everything about Roy Edward Disney totally explained
Roy Edward Disney KCSG (born
January 10,
1930) was a longtime senior executive for
The Walt Disney Company, which his father
Roy Oliver Disney and his uncle
Walt founded. He is still a major shareholder (over 16 million shares or about 1%), and currently serves as a consultant for the company and Director Emeritus for the Board of Directors. He is perhaps best known for organizing the ousting of two top Disney executives: first,
Ron Miller in
1984, and then
Michael Eisner in
2005. He graduated from
Pomona College in
1951.
Early career at Walt Disney Productions
Disney is the son of
Roy Oliver Disney and Edna Francis, and nephew of
Walt Disney. He first began working for the
Walt Disney Company as an assistant director of Walt Disney and produced "
True-Life Adventure" films in
1954. He married Patricia Ann Dailey in
1955 and is a father of four. He continued to work as a
writer,
director and producer until
1967 when he was elected to the Board of Directors of the company.
First "Save Disney" war (1984)
He resigned as an executive in
1977 due to disagreements with his colleagues' decisions at the time. As he claimed later, "I just felt creatively the company wasn't going anywhere interesting. It was very stifling."
But he retained a seat on the board of directors. His resignation from the board in
1984, which occurred in the midst of a corporate takeover battle, was the beginning of a series of developments that led to the replacement of company president and CEO
Ronald William Miller (married to Walt's daughter
Diane Marie Disney) by
Michael Eisner and
Frank Wells. Roy soon returned to the company as vice-chairman of the board of directors and head of the animation department.
Partnership with Eisner
He set his goal as revitalizing the company's
tradition of animated feature
films and by the end of the decade there were successes in this department. Although Roy acted largely as a figurehead, he could wield significant power, even over Eisner, his ostensible boss, and employees of the department have praised Roy for ensuring them plenty of artistic freedom on their projects. During the
1990s Roy's department produced a number of commercially successful, critically acclaimed films and the era has been called a
renaissance for the company and animation in general, though there was a decline in profits starting at the end of the decade. On
October 16,
1998 in a surprise presentation made at the newly unveiled Disney Legends Plaza at the company's headquarters, Disney Chairman
Michael Eisner presented him with the prestigious
Disney Legends Award.
Roy's pet project was the film
Fantasia 2000, a sequel to the
1940 animated movie
Fantasia produced by his uncle
Walt Disney. Walt Disney had planned a sequel to the original movie but it was never made. Roy decided to make this long-delayed sequel, and he was the executive producer of the film that took nine years to produce and was finally released on
December 17,
1999. Like its predecessor the film combines high-quality contemporary animation and classical music. Also like its predecessor, it wasn't a financial success at the US box office.
Roy has gained celebrity status. He was the last member of the
Disney family to be actively involved in the company. He has been compared to both his uncle
Walt Disney and his father
Roy Oliver Disney, and he's said to resemble them both in appearance and personality. Forbes magazine has estimated his personal fortune at about
USED$1.2 billion.
Second "Save Disney" war (2003-05)
After a struggle with CEO
Michael Eisner, Roy Disney's influence began to wane as more executives friendly to Eisner were appointed to high posts. When the board of directors rejected Disney's request for an extension of his term as board member, he announced his resignation on
November 30,
2003, citing "serious differences of opinion about the direction and style of management" in the company. He issued a letter criticizing Eisner for mismanaging the company, neglecting the studio's animation division, failures with
ABC, timidity in the
theme park business, instilling a corporate mentality in the executive structure, turning the Walt Disney Company into a "rapacious, soul-less" company, and of refusing to establish a clear succession plan.
After his resignation, Disney helped establish the website SaveDisney.com, intended to oust Michael Eisner and his supporters from their positions and revamp the Walt Disney Company.
On
March 3,
2004, at Disney's annual shareholders' meeting, a surprising and unprecedented 43% of Disney's shareholders, predominantly rallied by former board members Roy Disney and
Stanley Gold, voted to oppose the re-election of Eisner to the corporate board of directors. This vigorous opposition, unusual in major public corporations, convinced Disney's board to strip Eisner of his chairmanship and give that position to former
U.S. Senator George Mitchell. However, the board didn't give Eisner's detractors what they really wanted: his immediate removal as chief executive. In fact, Roy Disney's campaign regarded Mitchell himself unfavorably; 25% of shareholders opposed Mitchell's re-election to the board in the same election.
As criticism of Eisner intensified in the wake of the shareholder meeting, however, his position became more and more tenuous, and on
March 13,
2005, Eisner announced that he'd step down as CEO on
September 30, one year before his contract expired.
On
July 8, Roy and the Walt Disney Company, then still nominally headed by Eisner but, in fact, run by Eisner's long-time lieutenant,
Bob Iger, agreed to "put aside their differences." Roy rejoined the Walt Disney Company as a non voting Director
Emeritus and consultant. Roy and Gold agreed to shut down their SaveDisney.com website, which went offline
August 7.
On
September 30, Eisner resigned both as an executive and as a member of the board of directors, and, severing all formal ties with the company, he waived his contractual rights to perks such as use of a corporate jet, a
Golden Pass and an office at the company's Burbank headquarters. Eisner's replacement was Bob Iger.
One of Roy Disney's stated reasons for engineering his second "Save Disney" initiative had been Eisner's well-publicized but financially unjustified dissatisfaction with long-time production partner
Pixar Animation Studios and its CEO
Steve Jobs, creators of shared hits
Toy Story,
Monsters, Inc.,
Finding Nemo, and other critically acclaimed
computer animated motion pictures. This estrangement was quickly repaired by successor
Iger upon Eisner's exit, and on
January 24,
2006, the company announced it would acquire Pixar in an all-stock deal worth US $7.4 billion, catapulting Jobs, also co-founder and CEO of
Apple Computer, to Disney's largest shareholder with 7% of the corporation's outstanding shares. Jobs also gained a new seat on Disney's board of directors. Former CEO Eisner, who still holds 1.7% of shares, became Disney's second largest shareholder, and Director Emeritus Roy Disney, with 1% of shares, became its third largest owner.
Roy Disney's efforts to oust Eisner from the company were chronicled by
James B. Stewart in his best-selling book,
DisneyWar.
Other work
On the initial VHS release of
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Disney hosted a mini-documentary chronicling the progress made by his uncle and the Walt Disney Company.
Disney holds a position of Trustee to the
California Institute of the Arts.
He was among the first people to conceive of the
Kingdom Hearts videogame series.
He voiced a cameo of himself in the animated show,
Disney's House of Mouse where
Mickey had accidentally sent him an angry fax meant for
Mortimer Mouse.
He was the Executive Producer of the Multiple Network anti-drug Program "Cartoon All-Stars To The Rescue" in 1990.
Personal life and interests
- Shamrock Holdings, which Roy Disney Chairs and Stanley Gold runs as CEO, is an investment company that manages Roy Disney's personal investments.
- Disney is well known in the sailing community. He has held several sailing speed records including the Los Angeles to Honolulu monohull time record. He set it on his boat Pyewacket in July of 1999. (7 days, 11 hours, 41 minutes, 27 seconds).
- On January 19, 2007, Roy Disney, 77, filed for divorce from his wife, Patricia, 72, citing "irreconcilable differences," according to court documents. The couple, married 52 years, had been living apart for an unspecified amount of time, according to the Los Angeles County Superior Court filing. The Disneys have four adult children.
- On April 26, 2008, Roy Disney, received an Doctorate honoris causa from The California Maritime Academy for his many contributions to the state and the nation, including international sailing.
Further Information
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