Full Name Robert Peterson Name Bob Peterson | Years active 1994-present Nationality American | |
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Alma mater Ohio Northern University Occupation Animation director, screenwriter, animator, voice actor, storyboard supervisor Education Ohio Northern University, Dover High School, Purdue University Awards Annie Award for Outstanding Writing in an Animated Feature Production Movies Up, The Good Dinosaur, Monsters - Inc, Finding Nemo, Toy Story 3 Similar People Pete Docter, Jordan Nagai, Peter Sohn, Andrew Stanton, Ed Asner |
Robert "Bob" Peterson (born January 18, 1961) is an American screenwriter, animator, storyboard supervisor and voice actor who works at Pixar. He was hired at Pixar by Roger Gould in 1994 as an animator for commercials, before subsequently becoming an animator on Toy Story (1995). He was the co-director for Up (2009), in which he also voiced the characters Dug and Alpha. He was a co-writer on Finding Nemo (2003) and Cars 3 (2017).
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Early life

Peterson was born in Wooster, Ohio on January 18, 1961. His family moved to Dover, Ohio, where he graduated from Dover High School. He received his undergraduate degree from Ohio Northern University, and a master's degree in mechanical engineering from Purdue University in 1986. While attending Purdue, he wrote and illustrated the comic strip Loco Motives for the Purdue Exponent. Prior to coming to Pixar, Peterson worked at Wavefront Technologies and Rezn8 Productions.
Career

Peterson has also voiced characters for Pixar films such as Geri in the short Geri's Game (1997), Roz in Monsters, Inc. (2001) and Monsters University (2013), Mr. Ray in Finding Nemo (2003) and Finding Dory (2016), and Dug and Alpha in Up. His most recent vocal work was Chick Hicks in Cars 3 (2017).
He conceived Pixar's The Good Dinosaur (2015) and directed the film until August 2013, when it was announced that he had been dismissed from the project due to story problems. Peterson remains at Pixar, where he is developing another project.
In August 2015, Peterson voiced a dog named Derby for an E:60 profile on ESPN that chronicled the Trenton Thunder's minor league baseball team's tradition of using bat dogs.