I have noticed a disturbing trend in voice characterizations in animated motion pictures: some of the actors often immediately die afterward.
Orson Welles died after voicing Unicron in The Transformers movie a while back.
TV Chef Julia Child lent her voice to a character in We’re Back: A Dinosaurs Tale… and died.
Recently, Paul Newman passed away after lending his voice talent to the Pixar film CARS.
Is there some kind of curse in hollywood involving voicing animation?
Well, on the face of it, I can point you to the many hundreds if not thousands of voice actors and stars who lend their voices who have not died. Aladdin came around when Robin Williams’ career was going strong, and he’s still making movies.
But to go with the flow, Phil Harris died in 1995, with his last acting job as the voice of the bloodhound in Rock-A-Doodle in 1991.
Let us not forget Tom Hanks and that other guy whose name escapes me right now in Toy Story. They are alive and well. Tom Hanks’ career is definately doing well also. No curse for them.
Maybe it’s more likely that actors who are aging and sickly find that voice work for animated movies is an easier way for them to make some money. Of course, this logic makes no sense in the case of someone like Steve Irwin…
Paul Newman died 2 years and 4 months after Cars came out (and probably close to 3.5 years since he actually did the work. Not bad considering he was already 80 when he did that movie.
Julia Child died 10 years and 9 months after the release of We’re Back: A Dinosaur’s Story. Not bad considering she was already 80 when she did that movie.
I wouldn’t be surprised if there is a correlation between really old people doing voice work in a movie and then dying not too long afterward.
But I guess if 83 year old Don Rickles dies in the next decade you’ll be able to blame it on Toy Story 3.
Walter Cronkite was also in that movie, and died a scant 15 years and 7 months after its release.
Plenty of Simpsons guest stars have died because there have been so many freaking guest stars. As far as I know, Phil Hartman and Doris Grau are the only ones who made “posthumous” appearances.