Dan Bessie
Dan Bessie was born in rural Vermont, where his parents eked out a hardscrabble existence during the Great Depression. His early years were also spent in New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and finally, Southern California. Following high school, Dan became a shipboard steward in the merchant marine, a longshoreman, and an automobile assembler. Dan worked at various factory jobs to support his wife and children until 1956 when he realized his childhood dream-to become a cartoonist.Following an...See more
Dan Bessie was born in rural Vermont, where his parents eked out a hardscrabble existence during the Great Depression. His early years were also spent in New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and finally, Southern California. Following high school, Dan became a shipboard steward in the merchant marine, a longshoreman, and an automobile assembler. Dan worked at various factory jobs to support his wife and children until 1956 when he realized his childhood dream-to become a cartoonist.Following an apprenticing at MGM Studios working on "Tom & Jerry", Dan enjoyed a more than forty-year career in the industry, animating TV commercials and Saturday morning children's programs, like "The Marvel Superheroes", "Spiderman", and "Linus the Lionhearted". When Dan transitioned to live action, he directed a series of patient advice films for doctors' offices. Between 1970 and 1975, he ran his own studio, producing films (including several award winners) for schools and libraries, and co-produced the feature "Executive Action" (starring Burt Lancaster) that dramatized the assassination of JFK.Dan relocated to Santa Cruz, California, in 1978, and until 1995, he continued to write and direct educational and TV films, including the highly successful "Peter and the Wolf", featuring Ray Bolger (Scarecrow in "The Wizard of Oz"). Between 1986 and 1987, Dan wrote and directed "Hard Traveling", a feature film that recalled an incident in his mother's life. By 2006, Dan had authored three published titles and illustrated books written by his then-partner, Helen Garvy. The same year, Dan and his wife Jeanne Johnson moved to southwestern France, where they both continue to write and Dan creates cartoons. See less