
Director
George Dunning
Born 1920 · Toronto, Ontario
George Garnett Dunning was a Canadian filmmaker and animator. He is known for animating and directing the 1968 film inspired by the Beatles, Yellow Submarine. Dunning was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and studied in at the Ontario College of Art, and soon found freelance work as an illustrator. Dunning joined the National Film Board of Canada in 1943, where he worked with Norman McLare and contributed to several episodes of the Chants Populaires series. From 1944 to 1947 Dunning created many original short films and developed his skills animating articulated, painted, metal cut-outs. In 1948, he spent a year working for UNESCO in Paris under the mentorship of Czech-born animator Berthold Bartosch. Then in 1949, he and fellow NFB grad Jim McKay created one of Toronto's first animation studios, Graphic Associates, where he produced commercials and gave Michael Snow his first job in film. Dunning later moved on to New York City working on UPA's The Gerald McBoing-Boing Show and in 1956 he moved to England to manage UPA's new London office. After the office went under, he hired many of the UPA staff to work for him and his newly established production company, T.V. Cartoons Ltd. (renamed TVC London). Among the animators working for TVC were Richard Williams and Jimmy Murakami. By 1961, TVC was producing about one hundred commercials a year. During this time Dunning also managed to make many personal short films noted for their surrealistic atmosphere and Kafkaesque themes. The Flying Man earned him the Annecy Cristal Grand Prix in 1962 while The Apple won the 1963 BAFTA Award. Dunning also oversaw the cartoon series The Beatles for ABC, and this led to his involvement with Yellow Submarine (1968). Dunning was also responsible for the opening credits of Blake Edwards' A Shot in the Dark, along with a series of shorts and inserts including "the digger", for the BBC's Vision On series for children. About the time of his death he was working on an animated version of Shakespeare's The Tempest, which was never completed. His company was briefly resurrected in the 1990s, before being merged with Varga Studio.
Directed

Yellow Submarine
Director · 1968

Chants populaires nº 3
Director · 1943

Chants populaires nº 4
Director · 1946

The Gerald McBoing-Boing Show
Director · 1956

Damon the Mower
Director · 1972

Grim Pastures
Director · 1944

Chants populaires nº 2
Director

Family Tree
Director · 1950

Cadet Rousselle
Director · 1947

The Flying Man
Director · 1962
The Three Blind Mice
Director · 1945

The Apple
Director · 1963

Hands, Knees and Bumps a Daisy
Director · 1969

The Maggot
Director · 1973
The Ever-Changing Motor Car
Director · 1963
Canada Is My Piano
Director · 1967

The Wardrobe
Director · 1958

The Ladder
Director · 1967

