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MIKE TOTH LOSES BATTLE WITH ALCOHOLISM

Written by on February 3, 2025

The man who brought our childhood to life through animations lost his battle with alcoholism in late 2024.

Mike Toth, a character and effects animator whose career spanned many iconic television and film productions including classics of the Disney Renaissance such as He-Man and She-RaFat Albert, Tarzan, BraveStarr, Ghostbusters and New Adventures of Tom & Jerry. He also freelanced for Bill Melendez on the Peanuts projects Snoopy’s Reunion; This Is America, Charlie Brown and It’s Spring Training, Charlie Brown.

The news of his passing was announced by his daughter, Christine Vergara on Facebook.

“My dad was the most generous, loving, kind hearted person I knew. He loved everyone he met, treating them as though he had known them his whole life. He loved God, and kindly spread the word when given a chance,” Vergara wrote in the post, where she shared pieces of his artwork as well as family photos.

“… I just wanted to share my dad’s story, and awareness to those struggling with alcohol or substance abuse. My dad was a wonderful man, and alcohol cut his time short.”

Toth had such a blossoming career that when Filmation shuttered in 1988, Toth moved on to Baer Animation Studios, working on commercials for brands like Green Giant and Chevy. The end of the ’80s brought him into the Disney fold, working on the theatrical Roger Rabbit short, Tummy Trouble, and the Mickey Mouse take on The Prince and the Pauper.

Toth began working at the Walt Disney Feature Animation studios in Burbank in the mid-1990s, where he helped bring to life many beloved movies, from The Hunchback of Notre DameHercules, Mulan and Tarzan to Atlantis: The Lost Empire and Home on the Range — one of the last handful of hand-drawn movies released as the studio phased out 2D productions. Toth also worked on Disney’s Oscar-nominated short film, The Little Matchgirl. The studio laid off the majority of its 2D animators in 2013.

In his latter years, Toth continued to share his love for animation, appearing at local comic-cons across the country.

Credit: animation magazine


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