On
Sunday, June 25, 1944 the full page
color comic Krazy Kat made its last appearance in American Newspapers ending a thirty-one year run as a stand-alone strip. That was exactly two months since the death of the odd, surrealistic strip’s creator, George
Herriman on April 24 at
the age of only 63.
Krazy Kat had amused and
mystified the public for generations.
Many simply did not know what to make of it, or Herman’s regular
defiance of conventions of both
comic form and substance. In fact it regularly polled among the least popular Sunday strips with the public and more than one local editor fervently wished that it would
be canceled and replaced with
something more to the popular. But it had what we now call a strong cult following including intellectuals, artists, writers, political dissidents,
and Bohemians. Most important, Krazy Kat had the enthusiastic backing of publishing Tycoon William Randolph Hearst, who loved the
strip. It was a strange relationship—Hearst,
a tyrannical autocrat with a knack for using cheap populism to cover reactionary
politics, and Herriman, a mulatto
journeyman cartoonist with anarchic
tendencies. But Hearst so adored the
strip that he ran it in all of his newspapers
and signed Herriman to a life-time
contract guaranteeing complete creative
control with his King Features
Syndicate.
Herriman
was born in New Orleans, Louisiana on
August 20, 1880 to a mulatto Creole family. He came from a long line of free people of color in the city and
was raised with Creole French as his first language even at that late
date. Some of his ancestors were said to
be active abolitionists and his father, a tailor, was a community leader.
For
some reason when George was 10 years old the family moved to Los Angeles where he was educated at and
graduated from the Catholic boys’ school
St. Vincent’s Academy. While
attending school he worked with his father in a tailor shop and as a baker’s helper. But his passion was art. Largely untaught, the
boy spent his free time sketching.
He
was light skinned enough to pass for
white, which he did after leaving home and starting working. His somewhat kinky hair was generally hidden by the hats he almost perpetually
wore. His racial identity was not an
absolute secret—close friends knew and associates sometimes guessed. But after he married a white woman, his home
town sweetheart Mable Lillian Bridge,
in 1902 it became necessary to keep the secret guarded more closely. He was listed as Caucasian on his death
certificate.
Herriman
got his break before he knew it. Fresh
out of high school in 1897 he sold a drawing of the Hotel Petrolia in Santa
Paula to the Los Angeles Herald. That
led to a $2 a week job as an engraver in
the art department. He filled out this meager salary by
getting spot assignments from the
paper for occasional advertising art
and even for political cartoons. He also began to freelance work to other publications.
But
Herriman smelled better opportunities in New
York City, the epicenter of the
American publishing industry. In
1900 he hopped a freight and headed
east. What Herriman found at first was hard times.
He found work as a Coney
Island carnival barker, but no sales for his drawings. Then one of the country’s premier humor magazines, Judge began picking up his
stuff. He published 11 pieces there in
1901 and began experimenting with the then new
multi-panel format of the comic strip.
By
the end of the year Herriman was having success placing strips with newspaper
syndicates, including Pulitzer’s, the
Philadelphia North American Syndicate’s first comic supplement, and his first Sunday color comics with the T. C. McClure Syndicate. With
this early success, he abandoned Judge and
submissions to other magazines to concentrate in the rapidly expanding
opportunities in newspaper comics.
In 1902 he launched Musical Mose, his first strip with
continuing characters for Pulitzer’s.
The strips main character was a Black musician who often tried to pass
for other ethnicities to get ahead, inevitably leading to discovery and
humiliation. His characterizations of
Mose and other black characters used the common
stereotypes of the time—Black faces with big pop eyes and thick white
lips. It was the caricature drawn from minstrel show black face. But his story line, which mirrored his own experience, was warm and
sympathetic and the dialect dialogue often was near poetry. The same year he began two more
successful strips, Proffesor Otto and his Auto, and the kid hero strip Archy Acrobat.
By the end of the year Herriman was famous and financially secure enough to marry and bring Mable to
New York. He also became one of the
first cartoonists to garner serious critical
attention from the high brow set
when poet La
Touche Hancock penned an article in The
Bookman called The American Comic and Caricature Art
wrote, “Art and poetry is the characteristic of George Herriman. Were his
drawings not so well known one would think he had mistaken his vocation.”
Comic strips and Sunday features came and went
in those early years. They were never
meant to be eternal. If they ran their
course of popularity or if Herriman simply became board with them they were
canceled and a new strip would replace them the next day. Working for various syndicates he produced
strips in all kinds of genres—strips
about sailors, cowboys, a domestic, and Major Ozone’s Fresh Air Crusade for
the World Color Printing Company.
He also got work as an illustrator at the New York World where his work
accompanied local news commentary, then at New York Daily News where he did an
even greater variety of work, including for the first time sports illustration. Then he
moved for the first time to a Hearst paper, the New York American where
he was paid “commiserate to his noted abilities,” which meant very well
indeed. The paper then had no daily
comic section so he was assigned as a sports cartoonist. Soon he was considered among the best in that
highly specialized business. But a
change of editors at the American reduced
the use of cartoons in the sports section in favor of more photographs so in 1906 Herriman left the paper and returned to Los
Angeles with his wife.
Back home he was able to continue to send his
work to World Color. He added two more
Sunday strips to Major Ozone and began to contribute to the Los Angeles Times as a
free lancer. But he was soon back in the
Hearst fold as the Los Angeles Examiner’s principle cartoonist. His work regularly appeared on the front page and throughout the
paper. Circulation soared. Herriman was so busy, and well paid, that he
let his World Color contract go and stepped away from comic strip work for
nearly three years except for a very short lived sports themed strip in
1907. In 1909 he was back with the free
loader strip Barron Mooch for Hearst and came back to World Color with two
Sunday strips Alexander the Cat and Daniel and Pansy the latter was his first all-animal
strip. For the Examiner he
experimented with teen girl strip
and then came out with a cigar chomping
duck, a margin figure in some of
his earlier sports cartoons. Gooseberry Sprig featured an all
avian cast and some of the
characters would be incorporated into the Krazy Kat universe.
In 1910 Herriman was
recalled to New York to work on Heart’s other paper there, New York Evening Journal once again as a sports
cartoonist. Within week of arrival he
launched a new domestic strip, The
Dingbat Family featuring the frazzled father E. Pluribus Dingbat. After a few months Herriman tweaked the strip
and renamed it The Family Upstairs focusing
on Dingbat’s constant frustration with his noisy
and annoying upstairs neighbors
who were never seen.
For the full page
Sunday strip, Hearst wanted to save the bottom row of panels so that local
papers could sell advertising there if they could. To fill that space for the papers that did
not run the ad, Herriman created a mini-strip
in which the upstairs neighbor’s pet,
called simply Kat is tormented
by a nameless mouse. In a few short weeks the mouse first bonks Kat in the head with a brick.
Sometime later Kat kisses the sleeping mouse revealing for the first
time an unrequited love for the
tormentor. The bare bones of greatness
were now in place.
The basement strip soon became so popular
that it began to take up all of the panels on the bottom half of the Sunday
page. In the summer of 1912 Herriman
sent the Dingbats on an extended summer vacation and the sub-strip took over
the entire page as Krazy Kat and I.
Mouse. The Dingbats returned by
the summer replacement was so popular that Krazy Kat became an independent
daily strip in October of 1913. Herriman
had finally found enduring characters and an enduring strip.
George Herriman self-portrait with his characters. |
It took some time
for Krazy Kat to evolve into
its most familiar form. But from the
beginning the basic elements were there.
Krazy Kat was from the beginning oddly either gender neutral or able to freely switch from male to female. Herriman used pronouns for both sexes interchangeably. Sometime Krazy Kat acted in ways that seemed
feminine, other times not. In any case
he/she was love sick over Ignatz a
mouse that hated him/her and not only spurned the affection but sought every
opportunity to knock Krazy Kat out with a brick. Offissa Pupp, a police dog rounded
out the main character triumvirate. He sought to protect Krazy Kat from Ignatz, sometimes
preventing assaults, other times hauling the offender to his jail.
As the strip progress Offissa Pupp falls in love with Krazy Kat who
remains oblivious of the obvious crush.
From
this simple, repeated situation a world slowly developed. Dialogue was written phonetically in a peculiar accent that was never quite identifiable
but sounded to some as close to Yiddish
accented New York English. Others
thought it mimicked his New Orleans Creole accent called Yat. Here are some examples:
A fowl konspirissy – is it pussible?
Can you unda-stend a Finn, or a Leplender, or a Oshkosher,
huh?
there is a heppy land, fur, fur a-wa-ay
The characters, especially Krazy Kat, often launched on long soliloquies that had to be squeezed
into cramped dialogue balloons or
exchanged philosophic observations and
whimsy.
It was the poetic content of the dialogue that struck and attracted
many sophisticated admirers.
The southwestern landscape of Coconino County. |
Visually from the beginning Herriman had his cast, filled out
with walk-on by a variety of supporting characters, many of them borrowed from
earlier strips, performed against
changing backgrounds of potted trees, odd building, pyramids,
and temple like structures. At first the setting seemed vaguely urban, as befitted the strip’s New York roots. But in 1913 after visiting and becoming enthralled with the landscapes of New Mexico including the Enchanted
Mesa, the Monument Valley, and high dessert Coconino County he
explicitly set the story in his own fictional Coconino County and the
background reflected the mesas, and cliffs, adobe buildings with roof
tiles, cactus, Navaho pots and blankets, and Mexican
motifs.
After relocating back to Los Angeles with his wife and family
in 1922, Herriman would make annual trips to the desert country and decorated
is mission style home with Southwestern art and artifacts.
Starting in 1916 Krazy
Kat added a full black and white Sunday page. Herriman was able to break away from rigid
rows of cells. He employed mixed sizes of blocks, unusual shapes, canted sometimes a different angles. Some people found it chaotic, but art experts
recognized meticulous composition
and dynamic balance.
Those same critics recognized Krazy Kat’s kinship to the evolving European Surrealist movement even before Andre Breton articulated in
his 1925 manifesto. In the May, 1922 issue of Vanity
Fair, literary critic Gilbert Seldes identified Herriman’s work with the films of Charley Chaplin in the widely read and cited article Golla, Golla the Comic Strip’s
Art and expanded on it in his 1924 book The Seven Lively Arts in which he attacked conservative
tendencies that excluded artists in the popular arts, such as Herriman and
Chaplin, from being considered alongside traditional artists. Krazy Kat got a whole o a chapter entitled The Krazy
Kat That Walks by Himself, which became famous critical writing on the
strip. It was not only the earliest case
of giving legitimacy to the comic strip medium as art, but it was a pioneering
statement on popular art which now receives full serious attention. Vanity Fair backed up their critic by inducting
Herriman into its Hall of Fame in
the April 1923 issue.
Another sign of High brow acceptance was Adolph Bolm’s jazz-pantomime ballet written by composed
by John Alden
Carpenter and performed in New York in by the Ballet Intime and
Herriman himself illustrated the libretto
and designed the costumes and scenario.
Back in California, Herriman made friends with his fellow
popular artists, Chaplain. It was a
mutual admiration society. Herriman
presented Chaplain with a color drawing of him in his Little Tramp persona. He
also had launched a new strip, Baron Bean, in 1916 after the Dingbats
ran its course featuring a down-at-the-heels English aristocrat and his even scruffier valet as they wandered around America, an obvious salute to
Chaplain.
An ad for Mintz's Krazy Kat cartoon which bore little resemblence to Herriman's conception. |
Several different studios launched Krazy Kat animated short
series beginning with Hearst’s film company in 1916. Herriman was not involved in any of the
projects and apparently had no interest in them, despite his personal close
association with several film figures
after his return to Los Angeles. After
the John R. Bray Studio films of the
early ‘20’ which hewed closely to Herriman’s style and characterizations, other
studios took wide liberties with the material.
In 1925 animator Bill Nolan who
had worked on the early Felix the Cat shorts, brought out a
series in which Krazy Kat was transformed into a Felix rip-off. After the enormous success of Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse new Winkler studios head Charles B. Mintz, who had previously
stolen Oswald the Rabbit from
Disney, transformed the series again into a cute clone of Mickey complete with
a pet dog and look-alike girl
friend. Herriman’s original version seemed totally lost. Mintz continued to produce these short until
he lost control of his studio to Harry
Cohn at Columbia.
It was not until decades after Herriman’s death in 1962 the King Features authorized a new cartoon
series for the syndicated TV market
bundled incongruously with Beetle Baily and Snuffy
Smith for a Saturday morning
local TV block, that Krazy Kat was finally brought to
sound film looking and sounding like what Herriman had created. 50 shorts were made at Czechoslovakian and Australian
studios. Penny Philips voiced a
feminine Krazy Kat and veteran voice actor Paul
Frees was Ignatz. The animation was
not high quality, but the cartoons introduced Krazy Kat to the baby boom
generation.
Back in ‘20’s, Herriman continue to produce new comic strips
including Us Husbands and Bernie Burns. After the latter strip ended in 1932, he
concentrated solely on Krazy Kat for
the newspapers. He did get one on-going
commission for which he did the second most famous work of his
career—illustrating Don Marquis’s popular Archy
and Mehitabel books.
Also in 1932 the full page Sunday strips went color in the
Hearst supplements after a short time of being dropped altogether as an economy move during the Great Depression. That brought the feature to full maturity. Herriman reduced the dense cross hatching that distinguished the
black and white strips and took full advantage of a brilliant color palate reflective of the sky
colors, red earth, and Navaho designs of his beloved Southwest.
Otherwise the ‘30’s were a rough decade for Herriman. His beloved wife was killed in an auto accident in
1931. He mourned deeply and never remarried.
Then two years later his 30 year old daughter
died suddenly. His own health was not good, perhaps aggravated unscientifically balanced vegetarian diet the often left him week. In 1939 he had have kidney surgery in 1938 requiring a ten week post-op recovery during which time King Features ran old
strips. It was one of the rare interruptions
in his grueling production schedule.
On the business side the number of papers carrying Krazy Kat dwindled to just 30, almost
all of them Hearst owned. By contrast a popular
contemporary strip with which it had one successful competed, Bringing
Up Father, ran in over 3,000 papers.
Herriman realized the syndicate could not be recouping the $750 a week guaranteed in his contract with Hearst so
he voluntarily offered to take a pay cut.
Hearst, still a fan, turned him down.
The problem was that the lowly educated readership that Hearst papers
appealed to did not understand the sophisticated strips and Sunday pages. And many of Herriman’s devoted fans could no
longer stomach the reactionary Hearst papers and refused to support them with their
nickels.
But he soldiered on into the 40’s although his health was delicate. He was taken to the hospital in much weakened
condition where he was diagnosed with non-alcoholic
cirrhosis of the liver. He died
leaving a few weeks of un-inked pencil
drafts of the strip and Sunday feature which were finished by other
artists. After they ran out, Hearst declined
to keep the strip alive under another artist, as he usually did. No one could have match Herriman’s creative
genius.
In 1946 admirer e. e.
cummings wrote the introduction to the first book collection of Krazy Kat Sunday pages. His original color rendering were soon
selling in New York art galleries for
hundreds of dollars each.
Herriman was cited as a major influence by generations of
cartoonists, even those whose style and content seemed to have little to do
with him like Charles Schulz. Walt Kelly’s Pogo, Berkeley Breathed’s
Outland and Opus, and Stephan Pastis’s
Pearls
Before Swine where the character Rat
resembles Ignatz, including a tendency to bop other characters in the head
were all directly indebted to Herriman. Patrick McDonald of Mutts
clearly is inspired by Herriman’s drawing style and is the co-author of Krazy Kat: The Comic Art of George Herriman.
But Herriman’s most enduring disciples were the graphic novelist
Art Spiegelman of Maus
and the underground cartoonists of
the ‘60’s and ‘70’s especially R. Crumb who
has been described as a spiritual
descendent.
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