Doug Sweetland made his directorial debut with
Presto. Sweetland provides the dialogue-free voice acting for both of the movie's characters. He pitched the film at the start of 2007 and began production late in the year, completing it in May 2008. The original scenario for the short involved a magician who incorporates an autograph seeking rabbit into his act after his previous rabbit leaves him. Complications arise as the new rabbit has stage fright. Sweetland compared it to the plot of
A Star Is Born. The idea was reworked due to being too long and complicated, taking an estimated three minutes longer to tell. To achieve the highly formal environment, the filmmakers looked at the
Royal Opera House in London, the
Paris Opera House and classic
vaudeville theaters like the Geary in
San Francisco—which the crew took a tour through—for set design ideas. Animating the theater's audience of 2,500 patrons proved an expensive proposition, even with the help of the crowd-generating
MASSIVE software. Early suggestions were to show cutaways of just a small portion of the audience, but the full effect was achieved by only showing the back of the audience. To save time, most of the audience models were borrowed from the previous Pixar film,
Ratatouille. Additionally, Presto's body (from the neck down) is
Skinner's lawyer, and the carrot was one of the many food props from that film.
Statler and Waldorf from
The Muppets also appear as audience members in one of the boxes. ==Reception==