Veteran animator Ann Sullivan, who worked on Disney classics such as The Little Mermaid and The Lion King, has died from complications due to the coronavirus. She was 91.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, Sullivan’s retirement community, the Woodland Hills-based campus of the Motion Picture and Television Fund (MPTF), confirmed the news of her death. Sullivan is the third member of the industry retirement home to die as a result of COVID-19.
At MPTF, the animator was nicknamed Giggles by staff, with chaplain Dina Kuperstock saying in a statement, She had the best laugh of any person I’ve ever known. Ann didn’t just laugh with a sound. When she giggled, her whole body would shake and light up with joy, and it was contagious for everyone in the room.
Originally from North Dakota’s Fargo, Sullivan matriculated at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena the alma mater of Zack Snyder and Michael Bay, among other famous alums.
After graduation in the 1950s, she started working as a member of the animation paint lab at The Walt Disney Company. Sullivan left her job to raise four children, but she re-entered the business in 1973, when she started at Filmnation and Hanna Barbera. She is survived by four children, eight grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. -Indian Express