Advertisement
Richard Williams, the Oscar-winning animator who worked on the hit film “Who Framed Roger Rabbit“, is dead. He was 86.
Williams died at his home in Bristol on Friday, his family announced, reports bbc.com.
The award-winning animator, who was born in Toronto but moved to the UK in the 1950s, won awards for his work as animation director on the 1988 film, which starred Bob Hoskins.
Advertisement
The triple Oscar and triple Bafta winner also worked on two of the “Pink Panther” films and “Casino Royale“.
“Who Framed Roger Rabbit“, a live-action animated comedy set in Hollywood in 1947 in a world where humans and cartoon characters co-exist, was a critical and commercial success.
Williams, who was hired to supervise animation sequences, helped create the film versions of Roger Rabbit and his wife, Jessica, first depicted in the book, “Who Censored Roger Rabbit”.
He won two Oscars for the film, in the special academy award category and for special effects.
His daughter, Natasha Sutton Williams, said her father – who had six children – had been suffering from cancer, in what she said had been quite a swift illness.