By Jennifer Asencio
| Published 28 seconds ago

Unless you’re a Hollywood insider, the name Barry Caldwell might not mean that much to you until now. He was a prolific animator who died on March 24, 2026. His work, however, is not only famous but extremely beloved. It is fair to say that he was a cornerstone to the childhood of a huge portion of the American population.
His career animating very recognizable cartoons started in 1980 with storyboard work on Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids, and it wasn’t long before he was drawing for episodes of the classic Tom and Jerry. In 1983, he was a storyboard artist for 49 episodes of the iconic after-school cartoon, He-Man and the Masters of the Universe. In 1986, less than a decade after starting his career, he was put in charge as director of My Little Pony: The Movie, an ambitious project that featured numerous celebrity voice actors and elevated the Hasbro characters from cartoon shorts to the big screen. He also spent most of the late 80s working on Alvin and the Chipmunks for 65 episodes and The Smurfs for 16 episodes.

The 1990s added even more iconic cartoons to his resume, cartoons watched back then by adults and kids alike and still enjoyed to this day by the adults who grew up watching them as kids. His work for the beloved Warner Brothers cartoons started with Tiny Toon Adventures, but went on through the whole decade with pivotal work on Animaniacs that led to the spin-off, Pinky and the Brain.
For Y2K, he pivoted to more feature films, starting with The Tigger Movie. He then directed Osmosis Jones, the germy story about a white blood cell who teams up with a cold pill to fight a virus. He didn’t stop making TV episodes, though, and was eventually tapped by Disney once again to contribute to the production of Kim Possible. This ushered in a new era of memorable work from Caldwell, including Mulan II. He would continue making and revisiting all his titles throughout the rest of his career: cartoons from Tom and Jerry, from Looney Tunes, from Scooby Doo, and from various Disney properties.

It is also notable that Caldwell was a Black artist during a time when organic diversity in entertainment was only beginning to emerge. The 1970s featured the Blaxploitation genre of movies and important comic voices like Richard Pryor and Bill Cosby; Cosby created Fat Albert, where Caldwell got his start.
Throughout the 1980s, the role of Black people in entertainment expanded to a point of organic diversity, with names like Michael Jackson, Eddie Murphy, and Oprah Winfrey paving the way for other public-facing Black entertainers. Meanwhile, behind the scenes, Barry Caldwell was joining these names with cartoons that carry as massive cultural significance as any of them.
Whether we knew it or not, Barry Caldwell influenced four generations of children through his cartoons, with his latest artwork drawn for Disney in 2024. His death leaves behind a legacy of classic animation enjoyed by both its target youth audience and their adult counterparts, allowing everyone to laugh and have fun together. What a beautiful legacy for an artist to leave behind. RIP.


