Winsor McCay (–1934) produced prodigiously detailed and accurate drawings since early in life. He earned a living as a young man drawing portraits and posters in
dime museums, and attracted large crowds with his ability to draw quickly in public. He began working as a newspaper illustrator full-time in 1898, and in 1903 began drawing comic strips. His greatest comic strip success was the children's fantasy comic strip
Little Nemo in Slumberland, which he began in 1905. In 1906, McCay began performing on the vaudeville circuit, doing
chalk talks—performances during which he drew in front of a live audience.
torpedoed and sank the
RMS Lusitania in 1915; the incident
contributed to
the American entry into the war almost two years later. Inspired by the
flip books his son brought home, McCay said he "came to see the possibility of making moving pictures" of his cartoons. His first animated film,
Little Nemo (1911), was composed of four thousand drawings on
Washi paper. His next film,
How a Mosquito Operates (1912), naturalistically shows a giant mosquito draw blood from a sleeping man until it bursts. McCay followed this with a film that became an interactive part of his
vaudeville shows: in
Gertie the Dinosaur (1914), McCay commanded his animated dinosaur with a whip on stage. The British liner
RMS Lusitania briefly held the record for
largest passenger ship upon its completion in 1906. McCay displayed a fondness for it, and featured it in the episode for September 28, 1907, of his comic strip
Dream of the Rarebit Fiend, and again in the episode for November 10, 1908, of ''A Pilgrim's Progress by Mister Bunion'', where Bunion declares it "the monster boat that has smashed the record". The Germans
employed submarines in the North Atlantic during World War I, and in April 1915 the German government issued a warning that it would target British civilian ships. The
Lusitania was
torpedoed on May 7, 1915, during a voyage from New York; 128 Americans were among the 1,198 who lost their lives. Newspapers owned by McCay's employer
William Randolph Hearst downplayed the tragedy, as Hearst was opposed to the
U.S. entering the war. His own papers' readers were increasingly pro-war in the aftermath of the
Lusitania. McCay was as well, but was required to illustrate anti-war and anti-British editorials by editor
Arthur Brisbane. In 1916, McCay rebelled against his employer's stance and began to make the pro-war
Sinking of the Lusitania in his own time. The sinking itself was never photographed. McCay said that he gathered background details on the
Lusitania from Hearst's Berlin correspondent August F. Beach, who was in London at the time of the disaster and was the first reporter at the scene. The film was the first attempt at a serious, dramatic work of animation. ==Production history==