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Oscar-winning animator and filmmaker Gene Deitch dies at 95

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Gene Deitch, an Oscar-winning illustrator, animator, film director and producer has died. He was 95.

His Czech publisher, Petr Himmel, told the Associated Press that Deitch died unexpectedly Thursday night in his apartment in Prague’s Little Quarter neighborhood. No further details were given.

Deitch’s movie “Munro” won the Academy Award in the animated short film category in 1960. He was also nominated for the same award twice in 1964, for “Here’s Nudnik” and “How to Avoid Friendship.”

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Earlier, he had created the Tom Terrific series, featured on the U.S. children’s show “Captain Kangaroo,” while the “Sidney’s Family Tree,” which he co-produced, was nominated for an Academy Award in 1958.

Born Aug. 8, 1924, in Chicago, Deitch arrived in Prague in 1959 intending to stay for 10 days, but fell in love with his future wife, Zdenka, and stayed in the Czechoslovakian capital.

Prolific animation director Gene Deitch drops in from Prague to accept honors.

Feb. 5, 2004

Working from behind the Iron Curtain, he directed 13 episodes of “Tom and Jerry” and also some of the “Popeye the Sailor” series.

He captured life in communist Czechoslovakia and later in the Czech Republic after the 1989 anti-communist Velvet Revolution in his memoirs “For the Love of Prague.”

In 2004, he received the Winsor McCay Award for his lifelong contribution to animation.

Deitch is survived by his wife and by three sons from his first marriage, all of whom are cartoonists and illustrators.

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