Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Nancy Marlow obit

 Actress Nancy Marlow has died

 She was not on the list.


Nancy Marlow was born on June 1, 1922 in the USA. She was an actress, known for Double Trouble (1992), Sing Your Way Home (1945) and The Streets of San Francisco (1972). She was previously married to Roger E. Kelly and Robert H. Trump. She died on February 28, 2018 in Santa Barbara, California, USA.

Actress

 

    The Little Samaritan (2009)

    The Little Samaritan

        Snooty Woman

        Short

        2009

 

American Crude (2008)

American Crude

 

    Mrs. Grand

 

    2008

 

Tom Sizemore in Robbery Homicide Division (2002)

Robbery Homicide Division

 

    Mrs. Bocce

 

    TV Series

 

    2002

 

David Paul and Peter Paul in Double Trouble (1992)

Double Trouble

 

    Mrs. Larson

 

    1992

 

Harry Anderson, Selma Diamond, Ellen Foley, John Larroquette, Richard Moll, and Charles Robinson in Night Court (1984)

Night Court

 

    Mrs. Aronson (uncredited)

 

    TV Series

 

    1990

 

Vicki Lawrence in Mama's Family (1983)

Mama's Family

 

    Contestant #4

 

    TV Series

 

    1987

 

Angela Lansbury in Murder, She Wrote (1984)

Murder, She Wrote

 

    Lady

 

    TV Series

 

    1985

 

Martin Balsam, Carroll O'Connor, Danielle Brisebois, and Jean Stapleton in Archie Bunker's Place (1979)

Archie Bunker's Place

 

    Mrs. Thompson

 

    TV Series

 

    1983

 

The Streets of San Francisco (1972)

The Streets of San Francisco

 

    Nancy Evers

 

    TV Series

 

    1972

 

Brian Keith, Linda Brent, and Beverly Garland in Chicago Confidential (1957)

Chicago Confidential

 

    'B' Girl (uncredited)

 

    1957

 

Sydney Greenstreet, Dane Clark, and Martha Vickers in That Way with Women (1947)

That Way with Women

 

    2nd Party Girl (uncredited)

 

    1947

 

Frederick Brady, Walter Catlett, Paula Drew, and Sheila Ryan in Slightly Scandalous (1946)

Slightly Scandalous

 

    Receptionist (uncredited)

 

    1946

 

Jack Haley, Anne Jeffreys, Marcy McGuire, and Glen Vernon in Sing Your Way Home (1945)

Sing Your Way Home

 

    Patsy

 

    1945

 

Tom Conway and Ann Rutherford in Two O'Clock Courage (1945)

Two O'Clock Courage

 

    Hat Check Girl (uncredited)

 

    1945

 

Pat O'Brien, Carole Landis, and George Murphy in Having Wonderful Crime (1945)

Having Wonderful Crime

 

    Guest (uncredited)

 

    1945

 

Robert Benchley, Audrey Long, Phillip Terry, and Ernest Truex in Pan-Americana (1945)

Pan-Americana

 

    Pretty Office Girl (uncredited)

 

    1945

 

Robert Young and Dorothy McGuire in The Enchanted Cottage (1945)

The Enchanted Cottage

 

    Bit Role (uncredited)

 

    1945

 

What a Blonde (1945)

What a Blonde

 

    Showgirl (uncredited)

 

    1945

 

Tom Conway, John Abbott, Jean Brooks, and Rita Corday in The Falcon in Hollywood (1944)

The Falcon in Hollywood

 

    Mail Clerk (uncredited)

 

    1944

 

Gloria Jean, Chic Johnson, Ella Mae Morse, Martha O'Driscoll, and Ole Olsen in Ghost Catchers (1944)

Ghost Catchers

 

    Jitterbug Dancer (uncredited)

 

    1944

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Lieux Dressler obit

Actress Lieux Dressler Has Died

She was not on the list.


Lieux Dressler (born Louise Aldrich; February 27, 1930 – February 8, 2018) was an American film and television actress.

Before becoming known as an actress, Dressler worked as a nightclub singer in Dallas. During this time, she was married to trombonist Morris Repass, with whom she had two sons. In the 1960s, her marriage ended, and she moved to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career. She operated an acting workshop named the Patio Playhouse, where she developed techniques that continue to be taught at acting classes.

During the 1970s, she appeared on various television series, including Columbo, Gunsmoke, Kolchak: the Night Stalker, and The Rockford Files. She was mostly recognized as Alice Grant, the long suffering mother of Heather Grant Webber on the long running daytime drama General Hospital from 1978-1983. She also appeared in feature films, most notably Truck Stop Women (1974), Kingdom of the Spiders (1977), and Point of No Return (1993), and then she retired from acting.

Lieux Dressler Repass died on February 8, 2018, at the age of 87.

 

 

Actress

Bridget Fonda in Point of No Return (1993)

Point of No Return

6.1

Johnny's Mom

1993

 

Days of Our Lives (1965)

Days of Our Lives

5.2

TV Series

Mabel

1988–1989

5 episodes

 

TV 101 (1988)

TV 101

7.5

TV Series

Secretary

1989

1 episode

 

Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd in Moonlighting (1985)

Moonlighting

7.6

TV Series

Molly's Landlady

1986

1 episode

 

Maurice Benard, Ingo Rademacher, Julie Berman, Steve Burton, Tyler Christopher, Nancy Lee Grahn, Rebecca Herbst, Kelly Monaco, Kirsten Storms, Laura Wright, Dominic Zamprogna, and Chad Duell in General Hospital (1963)

General Hospital

6.6

TV Series

Alice Grant

1978–1983

43 episodes

 

The Storyteller

6.5

TV Movie

Housewife

1977

 

Rafferty (1977)

Rafferty

7.0

TV Series

Fran Milligan

1977

1 episode

 

William Shatner, Tiffany Bolling, and Woody Strode in Kingdom of the Spiders (1977)

Kingdom of the Spiders

5.7

Emma Washburn

1977

 

Willie Aames, Betty Buckley, Grant Goodeve, Dianne Kay, Connie Needham, Lani O'Grady, Adam Rich, Susan Richardson, Dick Van Patten, and Laurie Walters in Eight Is Enough (1977)

Eight Is Enough

6.6

TV Series

Waitress

1977

1 episode

 

The Bob Newhart Show (1972)

The Bob Newhart Show

8.1

TV Series

Lady on Elevator

1977

1 episode

 

Noah Beery Jr. and James Garner in The Rockford Files (1974)

The Rockford Files

8.2

TV Series

Margaret Raucher

1976

1 episode

 

Robert Blake in Baretta (1975)

Baretta

6.7

TV Series

Minnie

1976

1 episode

 

Larry Hagman in The Return of the World's Greatest Detective (1976)

The Return of the World's Greatest Detective

6.4

TV Movie

Mrs. Slater

1976

 

James Daly in Medical Center (1969)

Medical Center

7.1

TV Series

Belle

1976

1 episode

 

Nick Nolte, Peter Strauss, and Susan Blakely in Rich Man, Poor Man (1976)

Rich Man, Poor Man

8.2

TV Mini Series

Elsa

1976

1 episode

 

Angie Dickinson in Police Woman (1974)

Police Woman

6.6

TV Series

Arlene DeWitt

Mrs. Kelso

1974–1975

2 episodes

 

The Blue Knight (1975)

The Blue Knight

6.9

TV Series

Waitress

1975

1 episode

 

Kolchak: The Night Stalker (1974)

Kolchak: The Night Stalker

8.4

TV Series

Minerva Musso

1975

1 episode

 

Robert Culp and Elayne Heilveil in A Cry for Help (1975)

A Cry for Help

6.7

TV Movie

Mae Dowd

1975

 

A Shadow in the Streets

7.2

TV Movie

Lila

1975

 

Rex Harrison Presents Stories of Love (1974)

Rex Harrison Presents Stories of Love

8.6

TV Movie

Mrs. Hastings

1974

 

Truck Stop Women (1974)

Truck Stop Women

4.8

Anna

1974

 

Love, American Style (1969)

Love, American Style

6.8

TV Series

Ruthie (segment "Love and the Golden Memory")

1973

1 episode

 

James Arness, Amanda Blake, Milburn Stone, and Dennis Weaver in Gunsmoke (1955)

Gunsmoke

8.1

TV Series

Liz

Victoria

Susie

1971–1973

5 episodes

 

Henry Fonda and Maureen O'Hara in The Red Pony (1973)

The Red Pony

6.3

TV Movie

Dearie

1973

 

Grave of the Vampire (1972)

Grave of the Vampire

5.0

Olga

1972

 

The New Centurions (1972)

The New Centurions

7.0

Orville's Wife (uncredited)

1972

 

George Kennedy in Sarge (1971)

Sarge

7.2

TV Series

Wanda Harris

1971

1 episode

 

Peter Falk in Columbo (1971)

Columbo

8.3

TV Series

Ceil Gentry

1971

1 episode

 

The Bold Ones: The Senator (1970)

The Bold Ones: The Senator

8.1

TV Series

Mrs. Ford

1971

1 episode

 

Michael Constantine, Lloyd Haynes, Denise Nicholas, and Karen Valentine in Room 222 (1969)

Room 222

7.7

TV Series

Mrs. Barnaby

Waitress

1970

2 episodes

 

The Young Lawyers (1969)

The Young Lawyers

7.1

TV Series

Maria Morusco

1970

1 episode

 

Marlo Thomas in That Girl (1966)

That Girl

7.3

TV Series

Secretary

1970

1 episode

 

Additional Crew

William Shatner, Tiffany Bolling, and Woody Strode in Kingdom of the Spiders (1977)

Kingdom of the Spiders

5.7

creative consultant

1977

Monday, February 26, 2018

Paul De Meo obit

Original Flash TV Series Co-Creator 

Paul DeMeo Has Passed Away

 

He was not on the list.


June 4, 1953 - February 26, 2018 It is with great sadness that we share the unexpected passing of screenwriter and producer, Paul De Meo (64). Paul, along with longtime writing partner and dear friend Danny Bilson, wrote and produced for motion pictures, television, video games and graphic novels including,"The Flash," "The Sentinel," "Viper," the beloved Disney film, "The Rocketeer" and the hit video game, "The Sims." Paul spent much of the last decade as an admired screenwriting professor at the USC School of Cinematic Arts. Paul was a devoted, caring and compassionate husband to Lauren Glassman and father to daughters, Miranda and Annabella. Paul is also survived by brothers, Pete and Michael, sister Sarah, as well as nephews, nieces, and extended family. Paul's enduring kindness, patience, humor, wisdom and gentle heart make him an individual whose sudden loss is indescribably felt by anyone who had the privilege of knowing him. Memorial to be scheduled for a later date.

The modern Flash TV series is a marvel, but a lot of elements from the show come from the original Flash TV series which aired in 1990.

The show starred John Wesley Shipp as Barry Allen/The Flash, and of course, he has had a presence on the new series as Henry Allen and Jay Garrick. Other veterans from that series who have shown up on the new show have been Mark Hamill (whose Trickster pre-dated his Joker by several years), Amanda Pays (Dr. Tina McGee), Alex Desert (Julio Mendez), Corinne Bohrer (Prank), and Vito D’Ambrosio (Anthony Bellows, the former Mayor on the new show who was a cop on the original).

The original Flash series was developed by writer-producers Danny Bilson and Paul DeMeo, who originally had the Flash as part of a larger DC series called “Unlimited Powers” that they were directing. At the time, it was one of the most expensive series CBS had ever had. The team of Bilson & DeMeo also had their hands on a few other comic book properties over the years, including The Rocketeer movie and the first Human Target TV series. There was talk at one point about getting the pair to write for the new show at some point but it never transpired; they did, however, return to The Flash with a brief comic book run after the Infinite Crisis event for DC Comics.

Sadly, Bilson has Tweeted this morning that his “brother, friend, and creative partner in all things” has passed away. No details about DeMeo’s passing have been revealed as of yet.

Current Flash writer Sterling Gates — who was a co-writer on the Flash episode “The Elongated Knight Rises” which had many callbacks to the original show — posted his own tribute on Twitter this morning.

“I had the honor of meeting Paul DeMeo twice: once when he was writing Flash: The Fastest Man Alive and once at the ’90s Flash Anniversary event at Cinefamily. His contributions to all things Flash are immeasurable (not to mention The Rocketeer!). Rest in peace, Paul,” Gates said.

John Wesley Shipp himself has also posted a tribute.

“I’m shocked and terribly sad to learn of Paul’s passing,” the actor posted on Twitter. “@DannyBilson and Paul DeMeo changed the course of my life 28 years ago by trusting me with their Barry Allen, and I am forever grateful. My heart goes out to family and friends.”

We will share more information when and if it becomes available. In the meantime: Thank you, Mr. DeMeo, for some really fun adventure.

 

Writing credits

Year     Title            Notes

1985            Trancers          

Zone Troopers

1986            Eliminators      

1987    Kung Fu: The Next Generation            TV series

1988    Pulse Pounders         

The Wrong Guys   

1989    Arena  

1990-1991            The Flash    TV series

1991    The Rocketeer       

1992    Human Target  TV series

1996-1997            The Sentinel            TV series

1996-1999            Viper            TV series

2003    Medal of Honor: Rising Sun            Video game

James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing            Video game

2004            GoldenEye: Rogue Agent   Video game

2011    Red Faction: Origins            Video game

2013            Company of Heroes    

Metro: Last Light     Video game

Company of Heroes 2            Video game

2020    Da 5 Bloods            Posthumous release

Benjamin Melniker obit

Benjamin Melniker, Prolific ‘Batman’ Producer and MGM Exec, Dies at 104

Melniker was credited on every big-screen version of the DC superhero since Tim Burton's 1989 film. 

He was not on the list.


Benjamin Melniker, best known as a producer on Warner Bros.’ many Batman projects, has died. He was 104.

Melniker died Monday in Roslyn Harbor, New York. His fellow Batman producer Michael E. Uslan shared the news on his Facebook page.

Born on May 25, 1913, Melniker started at MGM in 1939 and worked his way upward at the company, eventually becoming an executive vp and chairman of the film selection committee at the studio. The so-called “MGM Lion,” as Melniker became known, was involved in a number of important deals at the studio, including those for Ben Hur, 2001: A Space Odyssey and Dr. Zhivago.

Upon leaving MGM, Melniker became an executive producer on movies including 1975’s Mitchell and 1976’s Shoot, but it was a decision in 1979 that changed his career. That was the year he teamed with Uslan to buy the movie rights to DC Comics’ Batman, a decision that would lead to his placement in the credits for everything from 1989’s Batman to 2017’s Justice League all the way through this year’s animated Batman: Gotham by Gaslight and Batman: Ninja movies.

Again with Uslan, Melniker’s name appeared on a number of different comic book properties, including 1982’s Swamp Thing, 2005’s Constantine and 2008’s The Spirit, directed by Frank Miller. In television, he also was an executive producer of Fish Police — another comic book adaptation — and Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?

“Ben was a humble man, never wishing attention,” Uslan wrote on Facebook. “He turned down endless requests to write his book or do interviews about the Golden Age of Hollywood, especially in his latter years as he became the last mogul standing from that era. He told me that he knew all the stories of what transpired behind the curtain at MGM in those decades but would never reveal things that could negatively impact those people, their children or their grandchildren. Ben was a mensch.”

Melniker is survived by his son, Harvey, and daughters-in-law Heather Melniker and Deanie Melniker, as well as five grandchildren — Douglas, Carly, Avital, Sophie and Lara — and a growing number of great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his wife of 70 years, Shirley, and son, Charles, former head of theatrical business affairs at CAA.

 

Filmography

 

Films

Year     Title            Notes

1975    Mitchell           

1976    Shoot  

1982    Swamp Thing   

1989    The Return of Swamp Thing  

Batman

1992    Batman Returns

1993    Harmful Intent            Television film

Batman: Mask of the Phantasm           

1995    Batman Forever           

1997    Batman & Robin          

1998    Batman & Mr. Freeze: SubZero            Direct-to-video

2000    Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker

Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman

2004            Catwoman     

National Treasure          

2005            Constantine    

Batman Begins 

The Batman vs. Dracula            Direct-to-video

2008            Batman: Gotham Knight

The Dark Knight 

The Spirit        

2009            Superman/Batman: Public Enemies            Direct-to-video

2010            Batman: Under the Red Hood

Superman/Batman: Apocalypse

2011            Batman: Year One

2012            Superman vs. The Elite

The Dark Knight Rises    

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns Part 1            Direct-to-video

2013            Batman: The Dark Knight Returns Part 2

Lego Batman: The Movie - DC Super Heroes Unite

2014    The Lego Movie     

Son of Batman            Direct-to-video

Batman: Assault on Arkham

2015    Batman vs. Robin

Batman Unlimited: Animal Instincts

Justice League: Gods and Monsters

Batman Unlimited: Monster Mayhem

Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League: Attack of the Legion of Doom

2016            Batman: Bad Blood

Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League: Cosmic Clash

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice           

Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League: Gotham City Breakout            Direct-to-video

Batman: The Killing Joke

Batman Unlimited: Mech vs. Mutants

Batman: Return of the Caped Crusaders

2017    The Lego Batman Movie 

Teen Titans: The Judas Contract[2]            Direct-to-video

Batman and Harley Quinn

Batman vs. Two-Face

Justice League 

2018            Scooby-Doo! & Batman: The Brave and the Bold     Direct-to-video

Batman: Gotham by Gaslight

Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: The Flash    Direct-to-video; posthumous release

Batman Ninja

Teen Titans Go! To the Movies            Posthumous release

2019    Justice League vs. the Fatal Five            Direct-to-video; posthumous release

Batman vs. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

Batman: Hush

Television

Year     Title            Notes

1985            American Playhouse            1 episode

1987    TV's Greatest Bits            Television special

1987            Dinosaucers    5 episodes

1990-1993            Swamp Thing: The Series   48 episodes

1991    Swamp Thing    5 episodes

1992    Fish Police   6 episodes

1994-1995            Where on Earth Is Carmen Sandiego?            13 episodes

 

Shorts

Year     Title

2003    Chase Me


Saturday, February 24, 2018

Bud Luckey obit

Bud Luckey: Toy Story Woody's designer dies

He was not on the list.




Bud Luckey, the Oscar-nominated animator who designed Toy Story's Woody, has died, his son has announced.

Luckey, who was born in 1934, also worked on films like A Bug's Life, Monsters, Inc and Cars.

He also voiced characters including Chuckles the Clown in Toy Story 3, Rick Dicker in The Incredibles and Eeyore in the 2011 Winnie the Pooh film. He made his name working for Sesame Street, where he was responsible for the popular animated counting songs. Luckey died after a long illness at a hospice in Connecticut on Saturday. He was 83.

"He loved his work but got even greater satisfaction from seeing others enjoy it," Andy Luckey wrote on Facebook. Bud Luckey 1934-2018 With great sadness I announce the passing of my Dad: Bud Luckey. My Dad was best known for his...Posted by Andy Luckey on Saturday, 24 February 2018

Bud Luckey joined Pixar in 1992 - he was the fifth animator hired by the company. Pixar and Disney animation chief John Lasseter has previously called Luckey "one of the true unsung heroes of animation".

Before the first Toy Story film came out in 1995, he suggested making Woody - voiced by Tom Hanks - a cowboy instead of a ventriloquist's dummy, which was the original idea. "People had kind of a spooky feeling about ventriloquists after The Twilight Zone," Luckey said. He was nominated for an Oscar in 2004 for his short film Boundin'.

Toy Story 3 and Coco director Lee Unkrich was among those paying tribute. So sad to hear that Bud Luckey passed away today. He voiced Chuckles in Toy Story 3, but that was the least of his many amazing accomplishments. A tweet is not sufficient to sing his praises. pic.twitter.com/VR2ORNzwiP— Lee Unkrich (@leeunkrich) February 25, 2018


Prior to Pixar, Luckey created and animated educational number cartoons for Sesame Street including The Ladybugs' Picnic, featuring the number 12. In a 2004 interview Luckey said: "I like to think 30 years ago, I used animation to teach kids their numbers and now these kids are teaching me how to animate with numbers. So it was a good deal."

During the Korean War, Luckey served in the United States Air Force. He later served as an Artist-Illustrator (a specialty now called "Visual Information Specialist") with the NATO Allied Occupation Forces in Europe and North Africa from 1953 to 1954 and, finally, with the Strategic Air Command from 1954–57.

Among Luckey's Air Force duty stations was Nouasseur Air Base (also known as Nouasseur Air Depot), a nuclear bomber strike base and nuclear weapon storage depot south of Casablanca, Morocco. There, he served with the Third Air Force Air Material Command, Southern District (now part of the Air Force Materiel Command). Additional duty stations were Lackland AFB and Kelly AFB (now collectively part of Joint Base San Antonio), as well as Portland AFB (now known as Portland Air National Guard Base). Through the mid-1960s, he remained an Air Force reservist.

After leaving active Air Force duty and with the benefits of the Korean War G.I. Bill, Luckey attended Chouinard Art Institute (which later merged with the California Academy of Music to form California Institute of the Arts (Cal Arts)) from 1957 to 1960. He was a Disney scholar, and received professional animation training at the University of Southern California with Disney veteran animator Art Babbitt. After graduation, Luckey worked for a time as Babbitt's assistant / apprentice at Quartet Films in Los Angeles.

In 1961, he served as an animator for The Alvin Show. He also worked as an animator and sequence director on a pilot for Mad magazine television special produced by longtime friends Jimmy T. Murakami and Gordon Bellamy. Luckey would later serve as an animator on The Mouse and His Child and as an uncredited assistant animator on Don Bluth's first animated feature The Secret of NIMH.

As an advertising agency Art Director and Producer from 1961 to 1969 at the Guild, Bascom, & Bonfigli (Advertising) Agency (which later merged with Dancer Fitzgerald Sample, now Saatchi & Saatchi, in 1967), Luckey worked on television commercials for Kellogg's Frosted Flakes (Tony the Tiger), Froot Loops (Toucan Sam), and Rice Krispies (Snap, Crackle and Pop), as well as Interstate Bakeries' Dolly Madison products featuring Charles M. Schulz' Peanuts characters. He created the "Bosco Dumbunnies" characters for the Best Foods Chocolate Flavor Milk Amplifier product Bosco Chocolate Syrup – the commercial spots were animated by renowned animators Fred Wolf and Jimmy Murakami. In 1966, Luckey won a Clio Award for the General Mills commercial Betty Crocker – "Magic Faucet."

Luckey also worked with Alex Anderson, who created the characters of Rocky the Flying Squirrel, Bullwinkle, and Dudley Do-Right, as well as the more obscure Crusader Rabbit. Anderson was the Vice President of Television at the Guild-Bascom-Bonfigli Agency at that time.

Despite its San Francisco location, the Guild-Bascom-Bonfigli Agency was also well known for its work on political campaigns. The agency's Creative Director Maxwell "Bud" Arnold was considered a foremost expert in the budding field of television advertising for politics and Arnold's expertise brought many key political figures to the agency's roster. In that regard, Luckey also did work on the presidential campaigns of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Hubert Humphrey, who were clients of the agency during his tenure.

Charles M. Schulz's Peanuts characters such as Charlie Brown and Snoopy were used by the Dancer Fitzgerald Sample agency for its client Interstate Bakeries's products sold under the Dolly Madison brand name. Luckey was placed in charge as the Senior Art Director/Producer for all advertising containing Schulz characters. As a result, Luckey often visited Schulz to review material as well as famed animator Bill Melendez, whose studio produced the animation containing the Schultz characters. Luckey's relationship with Schultz and Melendez was such that after Luckey left the agency in 1969 to form his own animation company, Dancer Fitzgerald Sample contracted him for several years to continue working on the Dolly Madison campaigns featuring Schultz's characters.

While working at the Guild Bascom & Bonfigli / Dancer Fitzgerald Sample agency, Luckey first collaborated with copywriter Don Hadley. The two became lifelong friends until Hadley's death in 2007. After leaving the agency, Hadley and Luckey co-created numerous short films for Sesame Street.

During the mid-1960s, Jim Henson worked with Luckey on commercials. They remained close friends until Henson's death in 1990. That friendship later resulted in Luckey's work on Sesame Street and his illustration work featuring Henson's Muppet characters in the 1970s and 1980s.

During the 1970s, Luckey wrote and animated many short films for Sesame Street and the Children's Television Workshop, often doing the voice work himself as well. Among them are "The Ladybugs' Picnic," which was performed by Jim Kweskin, "That's About the Size of It," the Donnie-Bud Series (with co-writer Don Hadley) featuring numbers 2 to 6, "Penny Candy Man," "Martian Beauty," "#7 The Alligator King," (with Turk Murphy) "Lovely Eleven Morning," "The Old Woman Who Lived in a Nine," and the award-winning "Longie and Shorty the Rattlesnakes" miniseries. He returned to work on one more segment for Sesame Street in 1990 titled "Z – Zebu." Many of Luckey's Sesame Street works were created with his long-time friend and creative collaborator writer / lyricist Don Hadley (1936–2007).

Luckey founded his own animation studio titled the Luckey-Zamora Picture Moving Company in the early 1970s and merged its operation with Colossal Pictures in the late 1980s before joining Pixar in 1992. The company then took studio space in the Produce District of San Francisco. In the 1970s and 1980s, it was the largest animation studio in the San Francisco Bay Area.

His film credits included The Extraordinary Adventures of the Mouse and His Child.

He worked on Betty Boop's Hollywood Mystery and did character design for Back to the Future: The Animated Series from 1991 to 1992.

In the 2005 DVD release of Pixar's The Incredibles, in addition to Bud Luckey's Oscar-nominated short Boundin', the studio included a short biography of Luckey entitled "Who is Bud Luckey?" In that video biography, Pixar (and now Disney's) former Creative Executive Vice President John Lasseter declared: "Bud Luckey is one of the true unsung heroes of animation."

In 1990, Luckey joined Pixar as a character designer, storyboard artist, and animator for Toy Story. John Lasseter credits Luckey with the creation and design of the star of Toy Story, Woody, a cowboy. Originally, the character was a ventriloquist's dummy like Edgar Bergen's character Charlie McCarthy. He evolved into a talking doll with a pull string and an empty gun holster.

His character designs can also be seen in A Bug's Life, Toy Story 2, Monsters, Inc., Finding Nemo, Cars, Ratatouille, WALL-E, Up, and Toy Story 3.

In 2003, Luckey gained attention for the short film Boundin', which was released theatrically as the opening cartoon for The Incredibles. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Short in 2003. Luckey wrote and designed the short, and also composed the music and lyrics, and sang and performed banjo on the soundtrack for the cartoon. Boundin' won the ASIFA Hollywood Annie Award that same year.

In The Incredibles, Luckey voiced the role of National Supers Agency (NSA) Agent Rick Dicker. In the film's DVD commentary, director Brad Bird jokes that he had an idea to start Boundin' with Rick Dicker coming into his office late at night, pulling out a bottle of "booze" and a banjo to start singing the song about the dancing sheep who is sheared and has his confidence restored by the Jackalope. In the film's sequel, released in June 2018, the role of Agent Dicker was recast with Jonathan Banks as Luckey had retired in 2014. The film was dedicated to Luckey's memory. He also lent his voice to Chuckles the Clown in Toy Story 3 and Hawaiian Vacation.

Luckey designed and illustrated more than 100 children's books containing his characters, including the Golden Book Mater and the Ghostlight, which featured the Cars character Mater.