Monday, December 02, 2024

Peter Maddocks 1928 - 2024

 

British cartoonist Peter Maddocks, whose career spanned 65 years, passed away on November 20th. He was 96 years old.


Via Paul Gravett:


"Born April Fool's Day 1928, Peter Maddocks has just passed away November 20th after a 65-year career in British cartooning.

"In 1955 he joined the Daily Express, who reported on November 23rd that it was here '...he created the popular cartoon 'Four D. Jones'. The antics of the time-travelling cowboy gained cult status and ran in print for 10 years.' Despite the success of his daily newspaper strip, I've not found any book compilations - a fate sadly not uncommon among British strips."
 
 
In 2010, I examined Maddocks' style and why he was so good. Unfortunately his site has since come down, as has Crikey Magazine:
 
 

Some people say that cartooning is a calling. The people who do it just do it because they want to -- more than anything else.


 

The cover to SO YOU WANT TO BE A CARTOONIST by Peter Maddocks, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1982.

British cartoonist Peter Maddocks is of the most prolific cartoonists of the 20th century. He was a very busy man, whose cartoons graced all of the major publications.

By his own admission, he took cartoons seriously. Yes, one can take those funny little pictures very seriously. Maybe too seriously!


"I took my life as a cartoonist very seriously – to me it was everything, holidays were a bore, my poor wife would watch me mooch about walking up and down anywhere but the beach, passing away time until I could return to my drawing board in Fleet Street." - Peter Maddocks, from his interview in Crikey! magazine #12 Nov/Dec 2009


There is a special place in heaven for those patient souls who choose to love and live with cartoonists!


Here is a small collection of some of Mr. Maddocks' incredible output, with emphasis on his gag cartooning.

The thing about Peter Maddocks is that he makes it look easy. Above are 2 bums, in an alley. There's a night sky, so we know when it is. Peter has drawn an alley, so we know where it is. But that's not all. Look at the little touches: the clutter that he lovingly draws, the choice of having the second hobo cross his legs as he is settling down to the paper, the last remaining bottle of cheap hooch by his elbow. This all looks effortless - but those little touches are by choice and add to the value and character of the drawing. They are extra work. Those little touches take thought and consideration and that's what places Peter above the run-of-the-mill cartoonist.


If you are of a certain age, you grew up with Peter Maddocks' cartoons in the Daily Sketch or the Daily Express.








Peter obviously loves to draw, which is one of the reasons I wanted to highlight him. Here, in the classroom scene, where he could have gotten away with drawing just a few students, he's committed a good half dozen to the picture, plus their desks.






A former Merchant Navy man, the list of Maddocks cartoons and publications is large. Here are but a few:

FOUR D JONES newspaper comic strip (10 years)
NO. 10 newspaper comic strip (21 years)
Features Editor, King Magazine
Creator: Family Ness, Jimbo and the Jet Set, and Penny Crayon
Peter ran the London School of Cartooning Correspondence School (1977-90)
Animated films for the BBC since 1984
Co-founder and current Joint President of the British Cartoonists’ Association

And I am leaving out a lot of other good things (like that fact he started up his own successful agency at the age of 21 fresh out of the Merchant Navy, his long association with Mayfair Magazine, his taking over Useless Eustace from Jack Greenall, and more).




Above: one of my personal favorites. I remember laughing out loud (I really mean it -- not just "LOL," but really laughing out loud at this one). I love new takes on classic gag cartoon situations and Peter delivers here.




Maddocks is a cartoonist with a pen line that is fun to look at.



The Crikey! Magazine interview covers Peter's career, including a fascinating look at a what-might-have-been collaboration:

"I was a huge fan of the Goons on the radio and I suggested it would make a great cartoon for the [Daily] Sketch–Julian Phipps became very interested and contacted Spike Milligan about giving permission and writing a script. I went to The Goon Show rehearsals and met Harry Secombe and Peter Sellers. Sellers was very enthusiastic and we sat together drawing some of the characters, like Bludnock and Morriarty. I drew up some strips to show the famous three, all was going well until the Daily Star and Spike couldn’t agree on a contract, I never did find out what happened but the idea fell through."

So far as I can tell, this interview is not online.


Another good Native American gag, and an example of bringing in an incongruous modern take on an old tradition.



Mr. Maddocks has retired to Spain, where he now paints in acrylics.

My thanks to Leif Peng and Bryn Havord for their invaluable assistance.

Lots more at the Peter Maddocks Web site (Not working at this time)

Images © 2010 by Peter Maddocks. All rights reserved.

Friday, November 29, 2024

Calvin and Hobbes 1985 Syndicate Promotional Packet

  

As D.D. Degg writes over at the Daily Cartoonist:


"Back before Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson became the mega comic strip hit it was to become the first appearance was seen in the Universal Press Syndicate press kit sent to newspaper editors. Connor Ratliff presents the entire Calvin and Hobbes press kit from the mid-1980s on his Bluesky page." 


Here are a few of those pages from the Universal Press pitch way back in 1985.

 

 






Tuesday, November 26, 2024

When Bill Watterson Wrote Me a Letter

 

Six months into Bill Watterson's comic strip launch, I wrote him a letter. I asked probably what many people were asking: How do I do what you do? What's the path? And then I suggested we meet. (I had learned he lived nearby. How I got THAT information I don't know.) Anyway, it was 1986 and I was a kid and Calvin and Hobbes was the best new strip out there. I had no idea if he would write back, but in June 1986, he did. Declining my lunch offer, he then went into what he felt the key was in developing a good comic strip: character development. "Just practice, and have a lot of patience, " he wrote. 

I am very fortunate to have become a professional cartoonist. By the next decade, I had done some professional cartooning including a magazine cover and a book. By the 2000s, I was off and running, with lots of clients and I was on the board of the National Cartoonists Society, as well as teaching and lecturing. A big change. Mr. Watterson was right. Patience and persistence were key.

This letter is currently up for auction at ComicLink.


Monday, November 25, 2024

Creative Playthings Reading Lotto: House (1968)

 


 From 1968, here are all of the graphic cards from Creative Playthings' Reading Lotto.

"A game that helps the pre-school child to name familiar objects and the early-reading child to associate the picture with the written word."

This is copyright 1968 by Creative Playthings in Princeton, NJ.

The drawings are all full color, bold, stylized pictures of what would be, over fifty years ago, the everyday objects found in the home. This is part of a series of Reading Lottos which include:

Things That Go

Zoo

House

Farm

City

As the child "learns to name each object, he will develop an interest in the printed label which accompanies it." 

I believe we had a set of these when I was a kid, but it was the Zoo version. There is no credit for who drew and/or designed the Reading Lotto, which was the norm. Enjoy the graphics. I sure did.

 





































- Edited from an original blog entry of August 28, 2023.