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The Wonderful Art of Dean Yeagle







Mandy, by Dean Yeagle



This page is dedicated, in its entirety, to Dean Yeagle,
and his Tantalyzing, Erotic, and Sexy Animation-Art.

You can also check out some more super
Sexy Drawings by other great artists over here!...


The following extract about Yeagle, is from wikipedia.com:

"Dean Yeagle is an accomplished animator, most likely best known for his character 'Mandy', who has frequented the pages of Playboy Magazine. As a young Disney fan, Yeagle set his sights on becoming an animator for Disney around the age of 10. During this time he often drew Disney characters, but later began to develop his own.

After graduating from High School, Dean Yeagle went to art school, leaving after a year. He began his animation career in a small studio in Philadelphia, PA with a summer job, giving him his first taste of the industry. He served four years in the Navy during the Vietnam era, and later worked for Jack Zander (who once animated Tom and Jerry cartoons for MGM) in Zander's Animation Parlour, New York.



You can see some of my own work by CLICKING on the image to the left...

Seven years after starting at Zander's Animation Parlour, Dean Yeagle began freelancing, working for most of the New York animation studios before starting his own - Caged Beagle Productions - in 1986 with Nancy Beiman. Caged Beagle produces TV commercials, CD-ROMs, sub-contracts or consults on features and character design.

Dean Yeagle has worked as a designer, animator and director, and he was nominated by the National Cartoonist Society (NCS) for the 2003 Gag Award for his work in Playboy Magazine. Clients have included Animus Productions, The Biondo Group, Blue Sky Studios, Brand X Design, Brøderbund, The Coleman Group, Dannon, Grey Advertising, Hahnfilm, Hanna-Barbera, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, ImaginEngine, Jim Henson Associates, JuniorNet, Kraft, Marvel Comics, MGM, Muppet Magazine, Nestle, Playboy Enterprises, Proctor & Gamble, Random House, Rick Reinert Productions, Saatchi & Saatchi, Swan Studios, Video Gaming Technologies, Walt Disney Productions, Wallace/Church, Warner Bros. and Western Publishing."




Please CLICK on the Small Images below, to see them a bit BIGGER...

Mandy Moons The Moon, by Dean YeagleMandy Mmmmm, by Dean Yeagle

Button Up, by Dean Yeagle


The following interview with Dean Yeagle, is by Jake Friedman (August 27th 2007)

"Dean Yeagle has been animating and designing for decades, from licensed characters to his own creations. His work can be seen from Bugs Bunny to Playboy magazine, and his sketchbooks,including that of the sexy character dubbed “Mandy,” are a trove of quality draftsmanship. He was also assigned the unique task to revitalize a 65-year-old Disney property in the World War II-era comic book, “Return of the Gremlins,” for Dark Horse Comics. Look for it on the shelves.

Recently I had the chance to talk to Dean Yeagle about his rise to success, the Gremlins project, and his sexy pin-ups.

Jake: Let’s start with your background. What was your first job?
Dean Yeagle: I started working in Philadelephia – that’s where I’m from. It was a tiny company called “Animation Arts Incorporated” and it had some very good people working there. They were able to teach me some stuff that I might not have been able to learn going cold into a place like Disney, being pegged into one job or another. I got to do a little bit of everything.Then I had to go into the service during Viet Nam; I was in the navy. After that my wife and I moved to New York. For the first seven years I worked at Zander’s Animation Parlour as a designer and animator and eventually a director. Jack Zander was a great animator of the old Tom & Jerry cartoons; he recently celebrated his 99th birthday. Afterwards I opened my own company called “Caged Beagle Productions” with Nancy Beiman and Daryl Cagle. Nancy is a great animator who worked for Disney and is now teaching in Rochester New York. Daryl is editor of the MSNBC editorial cartoon site now. And as of 2006 I’m living in Southern California.


Mandy Dancing, by Dean Yeagle


Jake: How did you get involved in such a fringe project as reviving “The Gremlins?”
Dean Yeagle: It was originally Dark Horse’s idea. Mike Richardson is the company head, and he also works in movies as a producer and director, and it was his idea to reprint the original book that Disney put out in 1943. It was Roald Dahl’s very first book, and Dahl was a flyer for the British air force at the time. The basic premise is that there are these little gremlins who are messing up the British airplanes. People started saying that when anything went wrong, it was the work of the gremlins. After he wrote it, it got to Disney, Disney bought the book, and they were going to do a feature film. In fact, I have storyboards from it that they sent me.

But various things happened, including the war ending, and they never made the movie. Another thing was that Warner Brothers took the gremlin idea and came out with a couple very funny gremlin cartoons by Bob Clampett, and that was another reason why Disney killed the project. The gremlin from the Bugs Bunny cartoon “Falling Hare” looked very much like Disney’s, as a matter of fact.




Please CLICK on the Small Images below, to see them a bit BIGGER...

Cmon now wake up, by Dean YeagleDog Wash, by Dean Yeagle

Dog Catcher, by Dean Yeagle


Jake: Do you think the current wartime climate explains the newfound interest in this old product?
Dean: I don’t think so. I think it was just brought up to them, and Disney decided it was a good thing to pursue.
Jake: Do you know of any of the original Gremlins artists?
Dean Yeagle: The original books came out without artists’ names; it just said “art by the Disney Studio.” However, Walt Kelly, of Pogo fame, did little one-page and two-page inserts into the old Disney Comics and Stories during the war. They were little pantomime things with no dialogue and starring Gremlin Gus – he has a little mustache and he wears a derby over one horn. This was before Kelly started Pogo in 1949.
Jake: How do the gremlins behave differently now than they did in 1943?
Dean Yeagle: Well they’re not working on planes anymore. In the original story the air force came in and built aircraft factories in their woods. So they were so angry they started wrecking the airplanes. And the lead flyer came to an agreement with them to stop wrecking the airplanes, and let them live in the big house that he had, which is where they’re living now. In our story, they find out that their house might be sold, and they begin to wreak havoc again, on the more villainous characters. So they’re still up to their old tricks, but they don’t do them to planes; they do them to houses, cars and things.


Tug of Danger, by Dean Yeagle


Jake: How much freedom did you have with the project?
Dean Yeagle: Disney is pretty hands-off, except I was approved by Disney to do this. I am in their database as an approved Disney artist, which was actually news to me, but Dark Horse found that out. And I have a reasonably free hand with what I can do.
Jake: Tell me about Mandy. Where did she come from?
Dean: Mandy is a character I developed in 2002 for an online workship I hosted at bellefree.com. A group of us cartoon pin-up types got together as an offshoot of sketchbook sessions, and that’s what I started on. I originally based her on what the Coppertone girl might look like grown up, in the style of my Playboy cartoons. Now she has a wide audience with both men and women. She doesn’t use guns or karate chops – she’s just herself, a sexy but innocent and, I hope, charming character. I get a lot of fans from my websites, and a good number of projects come up as well…for instance, she’s been licensed as the iconic character for coffee by a company in Russia – they’re actually calling it ‘Café Mandy’, and her picture’s on every package. They have big plans for the brand in Japan, Europe, China, and here in the US.

And I’ve been publishing my own sketchbooks for several years now, all of which feature Mandy on the covers, and two of which, ONE MANDY MORNING and MANDY’S SHORTS, are sort of storybooks about her. And a French publisher, Akileos, is putting out a 128 page book of my work in general, including some animation, children’s illustrations, and a good selection of my Playboy cartoons. It’s called MÉLANGE, and should be out here in the US in October.



Nightingale, by Dean YeagleMandy and the Bear, by Dean Yeagle

Mandy without Soap, by Dean Yeagle


Jake: How did you get involved with drawing Playboy cartoons?
Dean Yeagle: Some time ago Playboy sent around a poster to animation companies all over the country because they were having a contest on their website for a little piece of animation that they would use on their site. And there was a cash prize for the winner. Of course animation is very time-consuming and I’m a one-man company now, so instead I did a couple cartoons like the ones they use in the magazine, and sure enough I got a call from the cartoon editor and she actually said, “where have you been?” And I‘ve been working for them ever since. By then I’d been working on the computer and coloring in Photoshop. The computer has opened new worlds as well.
Jake: How did you hone your digital skills?
Dean: All I can say is practice. I never read the Photoshop book, but you learn a few tricks that serve you well: ways of doing rendering on a character using a couple of filters, and the rest is painting. You can adjust the color and undo as many times as you want, and that’s priceless.
Jake: What’s the hardest part about your job today?
Dean: Getting the time to do it. The Mandy stuff is on my own time.
Jake: What’s the biggest perk?
Dean: The whole job in general. I get to work from home on my own time. I get to adjust my hours- I tend to be a night person, and I often work until 2 in the morning; it’s quiet, no calls, no interruptions.


Coppertone Mandy, by Dean Yeagle


Jake: Why did you choose to do what you’re doing?
Dean Yeagle: It’s what I always wanted to do. At the time I went to the Disney Studio years ago, animation was pretty dead. So I ended up in New York doing animation, children’s books and Playboy cartoons. It’s been a pretty varied career. You never know what will happen to it. I did a lot of CD Roms, and now stuff for the web. A lot of new options open up all the time. You have to keep changing your career direction.Jake: How do I get to be where you are now?
Dean Yeagle: It’s hard to tell anybody exactly what to do - except you have to keep drawing, keep developing your skills. Of course Playboy helped a lot in getting my name out. In animation, very few people in the general public get to know your name. But try developing your own style, which is important. I notice people will go by my booth at the comic conventions and recognize my work. If your stuff looks like everybody else’s, nobody will know you, and nobody has to come to you to get that particular look. You develop your style by drawing and drawing and drawing, and you incorporate pieces of everybody’s work that you like. There are many very good artists out there, and you need to be able to stand out and be recognized. Good luck!"

(About Jake Friedman: Jake is an award-winning filmmaker and an experienced Character Animator whose work can be seen on Disney Channel, Nickelodeon, MTV, online and on DVD. He is also a published animation journalist, an animation tutor, an after-school cartooning teacher, and a guest lecturer. He lives in New York City.)



Dean Yeagle Animation Art is really Great!...Check out some more sexy drawings over HERE!...

CLICK HERE to go to the HOMEPAGE of my-pin-up-girl.com

CHECK OUT DEAN'S SITE HERE...






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