Ron Diamond | |
Birth Date: | 30 July 1958 |
Birth Place: | Los Angeles, California, US |
Other Names: | Ronald J. Diamond |
Occupation: | Executive producer, film distributor, speaker |
Known For: | Founder of Acme Filmworks |
Notable Works: | Curator and producer of the Animation Show of Shows; executive producer of Drew Carey's Green Screen Show |
Ronald J. Diamond (born July 30, 1958) is an American film producer from Los Angeles, CA. He is the founder of Acme Filmworks, the Animation Show of Shows and the co-founder of Animation World Network.[1] [2] [3]
Diamond has lectured at animation schools, served as a juror and a guest speaker at film festivals. He has been a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Shorts Films and Feature Animation[4] branch since 2002, and is a collaborator with the LA Opera creative team.[5] [6] [7]
Diamond has contributed to the restoration and preservation efforts of films that are in the permanent collections of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Academy Film Archive, UCLA Film and Television Archive and Library of Congress.[8]
Diamond was born in Covina, California and was raised in Ontario, California. He studied at the University of California, Los Angeles, where he earned Bachelor of Arts and Master of Fine Arts degrees.[9]
Ron Diamond has had two primary producing, distributing and curating careers in live-action film making (1980–1990), and in animation film production (1990–present). Diamond spent nine years producing live action films including, The Chocolate War and The Dark Backward before refocusing his career towards animation.[10] [11]
In 1983, Diamond's first professional producing credit for The Disney Channel was one episode of a series entitled, Future Tense, The Disney Showcase Series.[12] It was composed of two original short films: one film written by Ed Bryant, Prairie Sun and Ron Clements, Solitaire Creature.
In the 1980s, Diamond produced and post-produced numerous compilations of short films for festivals such as: the International Tournées of Animation, The Animation Celebration. The Outrageous Animation Show, The Computer Animation Show, Streams of Consciousness: New American Animation, Liquid Television, The Oscar Showcase Tour, and Will Vinton's Festival of Claymation.[13] [14] [15]
In 1998, Diamond founded the Animation Show of Shows (ASOS), a 501(c)(3) non-profit. He recognized an absence of animated short films in the theatrical circuit, "so he set out to curate a collection of new, significant, artistic, narrative and experimental animated shorts from those he had seen during the past year at major animation festivals."[16] [17] [18]
Diamond has presented ASOS and his annual Oscar Showcase Tour to students and industry professionals alike at venues such as Harvard University, DreamWorks, Pixar, and the Walt Disney Family Museum. As of 2020, 41 films featured in the ASOS have gone on to receive Academy Award Nominations with 11 Oscar wins.[19] [20] [21] [22]
Diamond founded the commercial animation company Acme Filmworks in 1990. It has produced animated commercials for companies including: Levi's Jeans for Women, United Airlines, AT&T, Microsoft, Charmin, Ad Council and the Alzheimer's Association. Acme Filmworks has produced logos and main title sequences including: the Scott Free Productions logo, Universal Pictures' Robin Hood, Disney's The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit, The Path, and Ken Follet's Pillars of The Earth.[23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28]
Through Acme, Diamond produced the Academy Award-nominated short film Nibbles, and the animated feature film for PBS' American Playhouse Drawn From Memory. He was also the executive producer of Drew Carey's Green Screen Show and has produced segments for the following Simpsons episodes: The Incredible Lightness of Being a Baby, Orange Is the New Yellow, What to Expect When Bart's Expecting.[29] [30]
As an executive producer through Acme, Diamond has been nominated for a BAFTA, an Emmy, and an Academy Award. He has won awards including a Clio and an Annie Award, and has earned Annecy honors.[31] [32] [33] [34]
In 1995 Diamond partnered with Dan Sarto and founded the Animation World Network. AWN is an online magazine that covers animator profiles, film distribution, animation studio activities, licensing, CGI and other animation technologies, as well as current events in all fields of animation.
A year after Toy Story debuted, Sarto and Diamond produced their first issue.[35]
Diamond has contributed to film restoration and preservation through Acme Filmworks and the Animation Show of Shows.[36] Most of the films he's restored are at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Academy Film Archive, and the UCLA Film and Television Archive. The entire Acme Filmworks digital archive is at the Library of Congress.[37] [38]
Short film commissions | ||
---|---|---|
Title | Role | |
The Animation Show of Shows, 1-21[39] [40] [41] | Distributor, curator and producer | |
Nibbles[42] | Producer | |
Bigmouth US Unwired: Woman | Executive producer | |
Suite for Freedom | Producer | |
Hair High | Associate producer | |
Hot Seat, Short | Producer | |
Good Vibrations[43] | Producer | |
The Blue Car, Short | Producer | |
Johnny's Home, Short, ACLU[44] | Executive producer |
Television | ||
---|---|---|
Title | Role | |
Drawn From Memory | Producer | |
Drew Carey's Green Screen Show, TV Series | Executive producer, co-creator | |
30 Days TV Series documentary two seasons of animation | Producer | |
The Path[45] Main titles | Executive producer | |
Re\Visioned: Tomb Raider Animated TV Series, Raising Thaumoplois | Executive producer | |
Re\Visioned: Tomb Raider Animated TV Series, Keys to the Kingdom: Part 3 | Executive producer | |
The Pillars of the Earth, TV Mini-Series[46] Main titles | Producer | |
The Simpsons: What to Expect When Bart's Expecting, Couch Gag, "Inside Homer"[47] | Producer | |
The Simpsons: Orange Is The New Yellow, Cöuch Gag Manual | Producer | |
The Simpsons: The Incredible Lightness of Being a Baby, "The Extremesons" Couch Gag | Producer |
Commercial animation | |
---|---|
Title | Role |
Woman Finding Love for Levis[48] | Executive producer |
Whiskas, Burnt Offerings[49] | |
Irritability Gene, Starbucks Coffee | |
United Airlines Short[50] | |
Weird Al Yankovic[51] | |
Charmin[52] | |
Child Mind Institute[53] | |
PNC Financial[54] | |
Super Invictus[55] | |
Hilton Hotels[56] | |
CVS Brand[57] | |
Wheel of Fortune[58] | |
Toyota, Typographers Dream[59] | |
Janus Funds, Detached Worker Ants[60] | |
Goldman Sachs[61] | |
Principal Financial Group[62] | |
ACLU's Campaign for Smart Justice[63] | |
Alzheimer's Association PSA |
Feature productions | |||
---|---|---|---|
Title | Type | Role | |
The Strange Case of Mr. Donnybrook's Boredom | Short film | Post-production supervisor | |
Sorority House Massacre | Feature film | Producer and unit production manager | |
The Chocolate War | Feature film | Line producer and production manager | |
The Dark Backward | Feature film | Producer and unit production manager | |
Robin Hood[64] | Feature film, main titles | Producer | |
The Motel Life | Feature film | Executive producer and special effects administrator |