Alex Hirsch

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Alex Hirsch
Hirsch in 2018
Born
Alexander Robert Hirsch

(1985-06-18) June 18, 1985 (age 38)
EducationCalifornia Institute of the Arts (BFA)
Occupations
  • Storyboard artist
  • writer
  • producer
  • voice actor
Years active2002–present
Known forGravity Falls

Alexander Robert Hirsch[1] (born June 18, 1985) is an American storyboard artist, writer, producer, and voice actor. He is the creator of the Disney Channel series Gravity Falls, for which he provided the voices of Grunkle Stan, Soos, and Bill Cipher, among others. He also earned BAFTA and Annie Awards for the series. In 2016, Hirsch co-authored Gravity Falls: Journal 3 which debuted as a No. 1 New York Times Best Seller[2] and remained on The New York Times Best Seller list for forty-seven weeks.[3] In 2018, Hirsch wrote Gravity Falls: Lost Legends which also appeared on The New York Times Best Seller list.[4]

Early life and education

Hirsch's father is Jewish, but he was raised agnostic, celebrating Christmas and Hanukkah.[5] Between the ages of 9 and 13, Hirsch and his twin sister would go stay with their great-aunt (or "graunty") Lois, at her cabin in the woods during the summer. These experiences later served as Hirsch's inspiration for Gravity Falls.[6] He graduated from Piedmont High School where, as a junior, he won the school's annual Bird Calling Contest in 2002[7][8] and appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman.[9]

Hirsch went on to attend the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts)[10] where he created a variety of projects and short films including his senior film, Off The Wall, which combined animation and live action and "Cuddle Bee Hugs N'Such" with Adrian Molina, which was chosen by Nicktoons Network for their original series Shorts in a Bunch. He also spent the summer of 2006 working in Portland, Oregon on a later-scrapped animated film for Laika.[11] He graduated in 2007 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.[12]

Career

Alex Hirsch with a Grunkle Stan puppet at San Diego Comic-Con International in 2013

Hirsch's first job after graduating from CalArts was as a writer and storyboard artist for The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack on Cartoon Network where he worked alongside fellow CalArts alumni, J. G. Quintel, Pendleton Ward (who was his writing partner on the show), and Patrick McHale.[13][14] He would go on to develop the pilot for the Disney Channel series Fish Hooks along with Maxwell Atoms and future Rick and Morty creator Justin Roiland.[11][12][15]

In 2012, Hirsch created the series Gravity Falls for the Disney Channel. The show, set in the fictional town of Gravity Falls, Oregon, premiered in June 2012[16] with a voice cast including Jason Ritter, Kristen Schaal, and Hirsch himself.[11] Over the course of the series, he provided the voices of Grunkle Stan, Soos,[12] Old Man McGucket, Bill Cipher, and many other minor characters.[17] The show was moved to Disney XD in 2014.[10] It would go on to win a BAFTA Children's Award[18] and an Annie Award in 2015[19] and was nominated for several other awards (including a Peabody Award in 2016).[20][21] Hirsch ended Gravity Falls in February 2016 to pursue other projects.[22]

In July 2016, Hirsch threw a global treasure hunt[23] (known as "Cipher Hunt") for Gravity Falls fans with clues hidden throughout the world including in the United States, Japan, and Russia. The goal of the hunt was to find a statue of the Gravity Falls character, Bill Cipher. After two weeks, fans of the show discovered the statue in Reedsport, Oregon.[24][25] The hunt coincided with the release of Hirsch's tie-in book, Gravity Falls: Journal 3, which was released on July 26, 2016[26] and eventually became a No. 1 New York Times Best Seller[2] and appeared on The New York Times Best Seller list for nearly a year.[3] A special edition of the book was released on June 13, 2017, and limited to 10,000 copies.[27] The Gravity Falls: Journal 3 Special Edition contains blacklight writing, parchment pages, a monocle, removable photos and notes, and other features that were not included in the regular edition of the book.[28]

In February 2018, Hirsch used his Twitter account to announce an official Gravity Falls graphic novel, through a series of puzzle pieces that he would release throughout the day.[29] Put together the puzzle pieces revealed the cover of Gravity Falls: Lost Legends; 4 All-New Adventures! which was written by Hirsch was released on July 24, 2018[30] and also became a New York Times Best Seller.[4]

Outside of Gravity Falls, Hirsch has done voice work for a number of projects including Phineas and Ferb,[31] Rick and Morty, and as the announcer for the Chelsea Peretti special, One of the Greats.[32] In August 2016, it was announced that Hirsch was in negotiations to co-write the live-action Pokémon film, Detective Pikachu, alongside Guardians of the Galaxy and Captain Marvel writer Nicole Perlman, however he later revealed on Twitter that he never wrote a page of script, and had no involvement with the film.[33][34] Hirsch was a story contributor to Sony's animated Spider-Man film,[35] Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018).[36]

On August 27, 2018, Hirsch signed a deal with American streaming company Netflix for a multi-year deal, according to Variety.[37] Alex is currently in development on an unknown adult animated series for the company that remains NDA protected as of 2022 with no known release or announcement date as of yet. As of 2022, the show remains stuck in development.[38]

Hirsch also co-executive produced the series Inside Job alongside creator and show-runner Shion Takeuchi.[39] The first half of the first season premiered on October 22, 2021, with the second half releasing on November 18, 2022, with a second season being order on June 8, 2022.[40] However, on January 8, 2023, Takeuchi announced that the series was cancelled, which a representative from Netflix confirmed.[41][42][43]

Hirsch is the voice of King, Hooty, and additional voices in the Disney Channel animated series The Owl House, created by Dana Terrace. The show premiered on January 10, 2020.[44]

Personal life

Gravity Falls was inspired by Hirsch's own childhood experiences and his relationship with his own twin sister, Ariel Hirsch, growing up during their summer vacations.[45] He placed many of his real-life experiences in the show, such as living in Piedmont and trick-or-treating with his sister as kids.[46] Dipper Pines, one of the lead characters of Gravity Falls, is based on Hirsch's memory of how it felt to be a kid. When Hirsch was around Dipper's age, he attempted to teach himself backward speech by reversing recordings of his own voice.[47] Hirsch described himself as "that neurotic kid who would carry 16 disposable cameras everywhere I went."[45] The character Mabel Pines was inspired by Ariel.[48] According to Hirsch, Ariel "really did wear wacky sweaters and have a different ridiculous crush, every week" in a similar fashion to Mabel.[45] In the series Mabel acquires a pet pig, just like Ariel had always wanted when she was a child.[49] The character of Grunkle Stan was inspired by Hirsch's grandfather Stan, who according to him "was a guy that told tall tales and would frequently mess with us to get a rise out of us."[45]

From 2015 to sometime before April 2022, Hirsch was in a relationship with The Owl House creator Dana Terrace.[50][51][52] Hirsch has praised The Owl House for its LGBTQ+ characters, stating that he had been prohibited from incorporating any expressly LGBTQ+ characters into Gravity Falls.[50][53][54]

Hirsch has been publicly critical of the Walt Disney Company, and has argued that, while Disney claims to support LGBTQ+ content, it does not live up to these claims. Hirsch has argued that Disney diminishes LGBTQ+ content by censoring or removing it to appeal to conservative viewers; by giving it less care, quality assurance, and merchandise; and limiting creative freedom in its television animation studios.[55]

In November 2020, Hirsch prank-called Rudy Giuliani's voter fraud hotline set up by the Donald Trump campaign, by using the voices of multiple Gravity Falls characters to report Hamburglar-esque ballot theft.[56][57][58]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Writer Actor Other Role Notes
2018 Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse[36] Uncredited No Yes Story Contributor
2019 The Angry Birds Movie 2 No Yes No Steve Eagle (voice)
2021 The Mitchells vs. the Machines No Yes Yes Dirk (voice) Story Consultant
2023 The Super Mario Bros Movie No No Yes Special Thanks
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem No Yes No Scumbug, Boss Goon (voices)
TBA I, Chihuahua Story No No

Television

Year Title Creator Executive Producer Writer Actor Other Role Notes
2002 Late Show with David Letterman[9] No No No No Yes Guest appearance as winner of
Piedmont High School's Birdcaller Competition
Episode aired on June 19, 2002
2008–2009 The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack No No Yes No Yes Also storyboard artist
2010–2014 Fish Hooks No No Yes Yes Yes Clamantha
Additional voices
Also creative consultant, storyboard artist and co-developer
2012–2016 Gravity Falls Yes Yes Yes Yes No Grunkle Stan
Soos Ramirez
Old Man McGucket
Bill Cipher
Additional voices
2013 Phineas and Ferb No No No Yes No Officer Concord the Juice Time Juice Box Flavor Cop Episode: "Terrifying Tri-State Trilogy of Terror"
2015 Rick and Morty No No No Yes No Toby Matthews Episode: "Big Trouble in Little Sanchez"
2016 Wander Over Yonder No No No Yes No Old Man
Soosy Du
Additional voices
Episode: "The Cartoon"
2018 Star vs. the Forces of Evil No No No Yes No Ben Fotino Episode: "Booth Buddies"
We Bare Bears No No No Yes No Internet Troll Episode: "Charlie's Halloween Thing 2"
2019 Big City Greens No No No Yes No Wyatt Episode: "Park Pandemonium"
2020–2023 The Owl House No No No Yes Yes King
Hooty
Additional voices
Also creative consultant
2020 Amphibia No No No Yes Yes The Curator
Frog Soos
Episode: "Wax Museum"
Special thanks, Episode: "The Hardest Thing"
2021 Kid Cosmic No No Story No No 2 episodes
The Simpsons No No No Yes No Bill Cipher Episode: "Bart's in Jail!"
2021–2022 Inside Job No Yes Yes Yes No Grassy Noel Atkinson
Additional voices
TBA Untitled Alex Hirsch Project Yes Confirmed series in development at Netflix[38]

Video games

Year Title Role
2014 Disney Infinity: Marvel Super Heroes Additional voices
2015 Disney Infinity 3.0 Additional voices[59]
2022 The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe New Content announcer

Web

Year Title Role Notes
2022 Homestar Runner: Strong Bad Emails Himself Episode: "Parenting"
2023 Bigtop Burger Munkustrap Episode: "Up"
TBA BoxTown Detective Tim Standing Adult animated indie web-series
Main Role

Bibliography

Year Title Original publisher ISBN Notes
2016 Gravity Falls: Journal 3 Disney Press ISBN 9781484746691 Co-written with Rob Renzetti
No. 1 New York Times Best Seller[2][3]
A special edition was released on June 13, 2017, and limited to 10,000 copies[27]
2018 Gravity Falls: Lost Legends ISBN 1368021425
ISBN 978-1368021425
New York Times Best Seller[4]
A Barnes and Noble exclusive edition with 16 additional pages of production art was also released.[60]
2024 The Book of Bill ISBN 1368092209
ISBN 978-1368092203
This will be the first Gravity Falls book written specifically for adults.[61]
A Barnes & Noble Exclusive Edition featuring 16 extra pages will be released.[62]

Nominations and awards

Year Award Category Nominee Result Ref.
2015 42nd Annie Awards Best Animated TV/Broadcast Production For Children's Audience Gravity Falls Won [19]
20th British Academy Children's Awards Best International Series [18]
2016 43rd Annie Awards Best Animated TV/Broadcast Production For Children's Audience Nominated [21]
Best Writing in an Animated TV/Broadcast Production Alex Hirsch [21]
75th Annual Peabody Awards Excellence in Children's/Youth Programming Gravity Falls [20]
2017 44th Annie Awards Best Writing in an Animated TV/Broadcast Production Alex Hirsch [63]

References

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External links