Author Archive

Thursday, December 16th, 2010

Biography: Alex Toth

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Birth/Death

June 25, 1928, NYC; Died May 27, 2006, Burbank, California

Occupation/Title

American artist/comic book designer

Bio Summary

Alex Toth was an American cartoonist who not only worked in the comic book industry but also designs for many animated series. Initially aspiring to creatye newspaper strips but opted for comic books. Eventually he made the transitions to animated cartoon industry. He participated in production of Hanna-Barbera shows like Super Friends, Birdman, Space Ghost and The Herculoids.

Early Life/Family

Toth was recognized by one of his teachers in his junior high school poster class. Since then, he pursued illustration as a career. At the age of 15, he sold his first artwork. His first job was illustrating for Heroic magazine.

Education/Training

High School of Industrial Arts

Career Outline

1943: Illustrations for Heroic Magazines for Famous Funnies shop?1947-1952: National/ DC Comics?1952: Romance comics for Standard Comics?1954: Jon Fury for Depot Diary in Tokyo, Japan?1956-1960: Dell Comics ?1960: Space Angel animated show?1960-1968: Storyboard/ design artist for Hanna-Barbera?1973: Production on Super friends in Australia

Comments On Style

Toth’s contributed to the comic book world by gving us the Golden Age design of DC Super Hero, The Flash. It is this style of drawing that had also proivided many audiendce with the ideal of a super hero physique, as seen with Space Ghost and Birdman.

Influences

Although known for his adaptability, Toth has been compared to Will Eisner and Jack Kirby

Personality

Toth was a very observant outspoken person whose passion made him very critical of the industries he worked in.

Anecdotes

”It could be comics if those who know how to paint also knew how to tell a story! Who knew what pacing was, and didn’t just jam a lot of pretty pictures together into a page, pages, and call it a story, continuity! It ain’t!”- Alex Toth Interview- Comic Book Artist#10- TwoMorows Publishing

Miscellaneous

Alex Toth’s original design for Birdman were later used in Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim’s Primetime show, Harvey Birdman Attorney at Law.

Filmography

“Jonny Quest” (layout artist) (1 episode, 1965)
“Space Ghost” (1966) TV series (character designer) (unknown episodes) (layout artist) (unknown episodes)
Jack and the Beanstalk (1967) (TV) (layout artist)
“Birdman and the Galaxy Trio” (1967) TV series (character designer) (unknown episodes)
“Shazzan” (1967) TV series (character designer) (unknown episodes)
“Fantastic 4” (character designer) (1 episode, 1967)
“The New Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” (character designer) (1 episode, 1968)?- The Eye of Doorgah (1968) TV episode (character designer)
“Skyhawks” (1969) TV series (layout artist) (unknown episodes, 1969)
“Josie and the Pussy Cats in Outer Space” (1972) TV series (special model designer) (unknown episodes, 1972)
“Sealab 2020” (1972) TV series (special model designer) (1972)
“Super Friends” (character designer) (16 episodes, 1973) (animation supervisor) (1 episode, 1973)
“Devlin” (1974) TV series (character designer) (unknown episodes, 1974)
“Clue Club” (1976) TV series (character designer) (unknown episodes)
“The Scooby-Doo/Dynomutt Hour” (character designer) (16 episodes, 1976)
“The All-New Super Friends Hour” (character designer) (15 episodes, 1977)”The All-New Super Friends Hour” (character designer) (15 episodes, 1977)
“Scooby’s All Star Laff-A-Lympics” (1977) TV series (character designer) (1977-1979)
“Challenge of the SuperFriends” (1978) TV series (character designer)
“Battle of the Planets” (1978) TV series (character designer: “7-Zark-7”)
“Dynomutt Dog Wonder” (1978) TV series (character designer) (1978)
“Space Ghost Coast to Coast” (1994) TV series (original character designer) ?”Thundarr the Barbarian” (character designer) (10 episodes, 1980)
“Cartoon Planet” (1995) TV series (original character designer) ?

Honors

1981: Inkpot Award from Comic Con, San Diego
1990: Jack kirby Hall of Fame inductee?#7 of “10 Most Influential Comic Book Artists of All Time” by Wizard Magazine

Related Links

www.tothfans.com

Bibliographic References

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Wikipedia; Comic Book Resources; Tom Spurgeon

Contributors To This Listing

Enoch Allen
Melvin Young

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Thursday, December 16th, 2010

Biography: N. C. Wyeth

This posting is a stub. You can contribute to this entry by providing information through the comments link at the bottom of this post. Please organize your information following the main category headers below….

Birth/Death

Occupation/Title

Bio Summary

Early Life/Family

Education/Training

Career Outline

Comments On Style

Influences

Personality

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Honors

Related Links

Bibliographic References

BIO-AAA-564

Contributors To This Listing

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Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Biography: Walt Kelly

This posting is a stub. You can contribute to this entry by providing information through the comments link at the bottom of this post. Please organize your information following the main category headers below….

Birth/Death

Birth: August 25, 1913 Philadelphia, PA?Death: October 18, 1973, Woodland Hills, CA (Diabetes complications)

Occupation/Title

Animator, Editorial Cartoonist, Comic Book Cartoonist, Comic Strip?Cartoonist?Creator of POGO for Dell Comics, later the Post-Hall Syndicate?President, National Cartoonists Society 1954-1956

Bio Summary

Parents: Walter Crawford Kelly and Genevieve [MacAnnula] Kelly?Married: Helen DeLacey (divorced)?Stephanie Waggony (widowed)?Margaret Selby Daley?Children: Peter, Carolyn, Stephen

Early Life/Family

Family moved to Bridgeport, CT during Kelly’s second year. Kelly’s?father?was a painter of theatrical scenery. Kelly began his career at age 13?as a?cartoonist and reporter for the local newspaper, the Bridgeport Pos

Education/Training

Warren G. Harding High School?During World War II, Kelly was at the Foreign Language Unit and?illustrated?manuals for the Army.

Career Outline

Walt Disney Studios – 1935 to 1941 (Kelly left the studio rather than?strike)?Western Publishing/Dell Comics ­ 1942 to 1953?New York Star ­ 1948 to 1949?Began POGO for the Post-Hall Syndicate in May, 1949. George Ward and?Henry?Shikuma were among Kelly’s assistants on the strip. After Kelly¹s?death, it?was continued by Selby and Stephen Kelly until 1975.

Comments On Style

Walt Disney Studios – 1935 to 1941 (Kelly left the studio rather than?strike)?Western Publishing/Dell Comics ­ 1942 to 1953?New York Star ­ 1948 to 1949?Began POGO for the Post-Hall Syndicate in May, 1949. George Ward and?Henry?Shikuma were among Kelly’s assistants on the strip. After Kelly¹s?death, it?was continued by Selby and Stephen Kelly until 1975.

Influences

T.S. Sullivant, George Herriman, Lewis Carroll, Joel Chandler Harris

Personality

Gruff on the exterior – although reportedly personable, highly?energetic and extroverted. Kelly was also extremely proud?of his journalism pedigree, and considered himself a newspaper man as well as?a cartoonist.

Anecdotes

Supposedly an L.A. production of SHOW BOAT nearly obsessed him, and led?directly to the Southern setting of POGO.

Milton Caniff’s favorite anecdote about Walt Kelly:?”The one I remember involved Walt and Al Capp?of LI’L ABNER. This was at the RCA?Theater and was a meeting of the Newspaper Comics?Council. At each of their meetings, after the?business session was over, they usually had something?that related to cartooning – visuals, or a panel.?This time it was just Al and Walt, two boys from?Bridgeport, Connecticut, nose to nose and no recording?was made, I’m sad to say…?Walt would say to Al, “Of course, Al, this is really?how you should draw Daisy Mae. I’m only showing you?for your own good.” Then Walt would do a sketch.?Capp, of course, got ticked off by this, as you could?imagine! So he retaliated by doing his version of?Pogo. Unfortunately, the drawings are long gone; no?recording was made. What a shame! Nobody anticipated?there’d be this dueling back and forth between the two?of them. Otherwise we would have set it up to be?recorded…”

Miscellaneous

Kelly was the first strip cartoonist to be invited to contribute?originals?to the Library of Congress.?Pogo’s famous phrase – “We have met the enemy, and he is us” – is a?take-off?on Commodore Perry’s “We have met the enemy, and he is ours.”?
Random fact: Kelly discontinued the POGO POSSUM comic book after 16?issues?and fell out with Dell in 1953 over publication of the POGO PARADE?anthology. He was angry over the reprinting of his early work, which?embarrassed him. His bogus “1943” drawing of Pogo from TEN?EVER-LOVIN’?BLUE-EYED YEARS was an (unnecessary) attempt to falsify the record and?cover?his tracks.

Politically, Kelly would be more accurately described as a “progressive”?rather than a leftist or a liberal – he was a great supporter of?Eisenhower?over Adlai Stevenson, for example. Conversely, he seemed to tilt to?Truman?over Dewey, and was (famously) an early critic of Senator Joe McCarthy.?He?seemed to skewer both Johnson and Nixon in later years, as well as J.?Edgar?Hoover, George Wallace and Spiro Agnew. Kelly was considered a?sufficient?enough threat that his phone was tapped, and the US Government?corresponded?with a newspaper reporter who claimed that the eccentric jargon Kelly?created was a secret Russian code!?Needless to add, Kelly was an unquestioned supporter of desegregation?and?free speech, and his name was recently discovered on a petition in?support?of Lenny Bruce.??Kelly’s singing voice, a boozy Irish baritone – can be heard on the?SONGS?OF THE POGO album, for which he also supplied the lyrics. Kelly was a?prolific poet, especially in the “Anguish Languish” form (of which?”Deck Us?All With Boston Charlie” is considered one of the prime examples).

Filmography

SNOW WHITE (1938)?PINOCCHIO (1939)?THE RELUCTANT DRAGON (1940)?FANTASIA (1940)?DUMBO (1941)?WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US (1970 – unfinished)?THE POGO SPECIAL BIRTHDAY SPECIAL (1969) NBC-TV (voices)?THIS IS AL CAPP (1970) NBC-TV (cameo)?POGO FOR PRESIDENT (1980)

Honors

NCS Reuben Award (Cartoonist Of The Year) – 1951?NCS Silver T-Square Award (Extraordinary Service) – 1972

Related Links

http://www.pogopossum.com/index.htm

Bibliographic References

(All Simon & Schuster unless otherwise noted)?POGO (1951)?I GO POGO (1953)?UNCLE POGO SO-SO STORIES (1953)?THE POGO PAPERS (1953)?THE POGO STEPMOTHER GOOSE (1954)?THE INCOMPLEAT POGO (1954)?THE POGO PEEK-A-BOOK (1955)?POTLUCK POGO (1955)?THE POGO SUNDAY BOOK (1956)?THE POGO PARTY (1956)?SONGS OF THE POGO (1956)?POGO’S SUNDAY PUNCH (1957)?POSITIVELY POGO (1957)?THE POGO SUNDAY PARADE (1958)?G.O. FIZZICKLE POGO (1958)?TEN EVER-LOVIN’ BLUE-EYED YEARS WITH POGO (1959)?THE POGO SUNDAY BRUNCH (1959)?POGO EXTRA, POGO ELECTION EXTRA (1960)?BEAU POGO (1960)?GONE POGO (1961)?POGO A LA SUNDAE (1961)?INSTANT POGO (1962)?THE JACK ACID SOCIETY BLACK BOOK (1962)?FIVE BOYHOODS ed. by Martin Levin (1962) Doubleday?POGO PUCE STAMP CATALOG (1963)?DECK US ALL WITH BOSTON CHARLIE (1963)?POGO FOR PRESIDENT (1964) Fawcett Crest Books?THE RETURN OF POGO (1965)?THE POGO POOP BOOK (1966)?PREHYSTERICAL POGO (IN PANDEMONIA) (1967)?EQUAL TIME FOR POGO (1968)?SONGS OF THE POGO (1968)?POGO: PRISONER OF LOVE (1969)?IMPOLLUTABLE POGO (1970)?POGO: WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY AND HE IS US (1972)?POGO REVISITED (1974) Previous titles reprinted in one volume?POGO RE-RUNS: SOME REFLECTIONS ON ELECTIONS (1974) Previous titles?reprinted?in one volume?POGO ROMANCES RECAPTURED (1975) Previous titles reprinted in one volume?IMPOLLUTABLE POGO (1976)?POGO’S BATS AND THE BELLES FREE (1976)?POGO’S BODY POLITIC (1976)?A POGO PANORAMA (1977) Previous titles reprinted in one volume?POGO¹S DOUBLE SUNDAE (1978) Previous titles reprinted in one volume?POGO’S WILL BE THAT WAS (1979) Previous titles reprinted in one volume?THE BEST OF POGO (1982)?POGO EVEN BETTER (1984)?OUTRAGEOUSLY POGO (1985)?PLUPERFECT POGO (1987)?THE WALT KELLY COLLECTOR’S GUIDE (1988) Spring Hollow Books?PHI BETA POGO (1989)?POGO AND ALBERT: THE COMPLETE POGO COMICS (1990) 4 Volumes ­ Eclipse?Books?POGO FILES FOR POGOPHILES (1992) Spring Hollow Books?POGO BY WALT KELLY (1992-2000) 11 Volumes ­ Fantagraphics?AMERICA’S GREAT COMIC STRIP ARTISTS by Richard Marschall (1997)?Abbeville?THE POGOPEDIA by Nik Lauer, et al. (2001) Spring Hollow Books?WALT KELLY’S OUR GANG (2006) 4 Volumes – Fantagraphics?POGO: THE COMPLETE DAILY & SUNDAY COMIC STRIPS (2009)

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Contributors To This Listing

Mike Fontanell
i?Joe Suggs

To make additions or corrections to this listing, please click on COMMENTS below…

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