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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Len_JansonLen Janson - Wikipedia

    Len Janson is an American writer and director whose career in animated cartoons and live-action motion pictures spanned several decades beginning in the 1960s. He began work as an in-betweener at the Walt Disney cartoon studio.

  2. May 3, 2007 · Chuck Menville passed away from lymphoma June 15, 1992 at age 51. Len Janson is today retired from animation and now writing novels. He and Chuck had long stints as a writing team at Filmation, Hanna-Barbera, and other studios. Len also wrote live-action.

  3. Len Janson is an American animator, writer and director who created the Sonic the Hedgehog television series and wrote for the Sonic Underground television series. Janson was the series creator of Sonic the Hedgehog television series, having written the series' Bible (not to be confused with the...

  4. LEN JANSON. (Unknown) Notable Roles: Animator, writer, story editor, producer, director. Janson began working at Walt Disney Productions as an in-betweener. In 1965, he became a story man and received his first screen credit in Warner Bros. ’ Boulder Wham! Roadrunner short.

  5. www.imdb.com › name › nm0418116Len Janson - IMDb

    Len Janson is known for The Real Ghostbusters (1986), Land of the Lost (1991) and Vicious Cycles (1967). Add photos, demo reels. Add to list. More at IMDbPro. Contact info. Agent info. Nominated for 1 Oscar. 3 nominations total. Known for. The Real Ghostbusters. 7.6. TV Series. Writer. 1986–1991 • 29 eps. Land of the Lost. 6.9. TV Series. Writer.

  6. Len Janson is known as an Writer, Director, Actor, Creator, Story, Teleplay, Editor, Screenplay, Original Story, and Producer. Some of their work includes Sonic the Hedgehog, Sonic Underground, The Smurfs Christmas Special, My Smurfy Valentine, The Secrets of Isis, The Flintstones: Wind-Up Wilma, Dumb and Dumber, and Stop Look and Listen.

  7. Len Janson is an American writer and director whose career in animated cartoons and live-action motion pictures spanned several decades beginning in the 1960s. He began work as an in-betweener at the Walt Disney cartoon studio. By 1965 he had become a story man with his first screen credit in Rudy Larriva's Boulder Wham!.

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