It’s Bio Wednesday!
Harriet Burns
As
the first woman ever hired by Walt Disney Imagineering in a creative rather
than an office capacity, Harriet Burns helped design and build prototypes for
theme park attractions, as well as final products featured at Disneyland and
the New York World's Fair of 1964. And while she worked padded-shoulder to
shoulder with men in the model shop, wielding saws, lathes and sanders, she was
still the best-dressed employee in the department.
"It
was the 1950s," she explained. "I wore color-coordinated dresses, high
heels and gloves to work. Girls didn't wear slacks back then, although I
carried a pair in a little sack, just in case I had to climb into high
places."
Born
August 20, 1928, in San Antonio, Texas, Harriet received her Bachelor's Degree
in Art from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, and went on to study
advanced design for another year at the University of New Mexico in
Albuquerque.
In
1953, she moved to Los Angeles with her husband and small daughter. There, she
accepted a part-time position at Dice Display Industries Cooperative Exchange,
where she helped design and produce props for television's "Colgate Comedy
Hour" along with interiors and sets for Las Vegas Hotels, including the
Dunes. Adept at her work, she was asked to spearhead the creation of the
fanciful Southern California tourist destination Santa's Village located near
Lake Arrowhead.
When
Dice went out of business in 1955, a co-employee who had once worked at Disney,
beat tracks back to the Studio and invited Harriet to come along. Subsequently,
she was hired to paint sets and props for the new Mickey Mouse Club television
show. Harriet soon began coordinating the show's color styling and even
designed and built the famous "Mouse Clubhouse." Her appearance caused her to stand out on the set, as she dressed in high
heels and a skirt to work with the hardware and tools, such as the drill press
and sanders.
Burns shared a workstation at the
Disney Studio with a fellow Disney employee named Fred Joerger. Joerger was a model
builder for WED Enterprises, which is now known as Walt Disney Imagineering. He
was working on prototype models for the future Disneyland theme park. In
addition to her job as a set builder, Burns began working with Joerger in
Disney's model shop building miniature prototypes of Disneyland buildings and
attractions. WED Enterprises originally consisted of just three members —
Harriet Burns, Fred Joerger and Wathel Rogers — and became known as the WED
Model Shop.
WED Enterprises was eventually renamed to Walt Disney Imagineering, which
alluded to the engineering and imagination needed to design Disney theme park
attractions.
Burns contributed greatly to the
development of Disneyland at WED Enterprises by creating both miniature models
and actual theme park attractions. One of Burns's first assignments was to
craft a model of Sleeping Beauty Castle, a Disneyland landmark which opened
with the theme park on July 17, 1955. She continued to work on Disneyland
expansions after the park's grand opening. Burns designed models of the Matterhorn
bobsleds attraction as a 1/100th scale replica of the famous Matterhorn in Switzerland.
Among
other contributions, Harriet worked on everything from figure finishing to
stage design for attractions featured at the New York World's Fair in 1964,
including Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln and The Carousel of Progress. On
occasion, when Walt would introduce new theme park attractions to television
audiences, she would appear on segments of "Walt Disney's Wonderful World
of Color."
Harriet
Burns died in Los Angeles on July 25, 2008, at the age of 79. She was a
resident of Santa Barbara, California where she had been active in the arts and
music community.
http://disney.go.com/disneyinsider/history/legends
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