Monday, June 29, 2009

Annual Bunny Hoest Bash June 25, 2009

Above: a LOCKHORNS bisque at the home of Bunny Hoest.

I left my house on the New Hampshire ridge for a quick overnight trip to New York. Object: drive to Bunny Hoest's home on the Long Island North Shore, arriving by noon for the annual Bunny Bash. Thanks to a wee hours start and the Bridgeport/Port Jefferson ferry, I made it.

The Bunny Bash is held every June at the home of Bunny Hoest. The Bash began because almost three decades ago, Bill Hoest wanted to show some some of his cartoonist colleagues the house he was building. About a dozen cartoonists from the local Long Island chapter of the National Cartoonists Society (the "Berndt Toast Gang") were invited over for sandwiches and a tour of the then-unfinished home

Today, the house on the Long Island sound is finished, and the event has grown. About 150 cartoonists, spouses, kids and friends got together for what turned out to be a partly cloudy afternoon of shop talk.




Mike Lynch, Mad Magazine's Sam Viviano and THE LOCKHORNS Bunny Hoest




King Features' MARY WORTH creative team of Joe Giella and Karen Moy.



It's BEETLE BAILEY assistant and freelance illustrator Bill Janocha with Mad Magazine's Mort Drucker




ARCHIE's Stan Goldberg with KIM POSSIBLE's Stephen Silver.


Heidi Silver and THE LOCKHORN's John Reiner


New Yorker cartoonists Robert Leighton and Felipe "Feggo" Galindo, with illustrator Martin Kozlowski. Thanks to Felipe for this photo!


NCS Chapter Chair Adrian Sinnott and National Rep Mike Lynch surprised Bunny Hoest with a National Cartoonists Society Tim Rosenthal Award for Volunteerism. Above is the award, gorgeously drawn by Guy Gilchrist.

Tim Rosenthal was Head of Syndicate Services at American Color. American Color is the place where many newspaper comics are colored and then sent to papers around the world. His impact, developed with Wiley Miller, on the way color is used in newspaper comics, set a new industry standard. He was also a big NCS supporter, and a good friend to many cartoonists.

I gave a short announcement to the people about Bunny and why she deserves the Award:

Everyone knows that Bunny works for King Features. Everyone knows that Bunny works for Parade Magazine. What everyone may now know is that she also works very hard for the Long Island chapter of the National Cartoonists Society, helping with the award voting, as well as hosting the annual Bash. She is, as Creig Flessel described her, the "Den Mother" of the Berndt Toast Gang. This was a small token of appreciation from her NCS family.

If anyone has a photo of Bunny with her Award, please share it with me. Thanks.



Mike Lynch, with my friend, The New Yorker's Robert Leighton.



Gerry Mooney, Bill Crouch and Elena Steier

Bunny Hoest, Suzan Haeni of the Art League of Long Island and graphic artist Julie Haring


A framed gag cartoon of Bill Hoest's. One of many decorating the "Hoest Castle" interior.


Dotti Sinnott, daughter of Berndt Toast Gang Chairman Adrian Sinnott, and the one and only Sam Gross.

I wound up staying very late, as did a few others. Bunny ordered pizza. I shared long conversations under an orange sliver of a moon with Adrian Sinnott and his family, Bunny, John Reiner, Mort & Barbara Drucker and Stan & Pauline Goldberg.

I had a memorable time. Exhausting, but memorable.

4 comments:

  1. I did a series of interviews with cartoonists about six years ago, and Bunny was one of the most memorable -- not just insightful and quotable, but very, very funny. At the end, she invited me down to the bash, but I had some conflict and couldn't make it. That's the part of the interview I don't still laugh about. What a lady!

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  2. Oh I wish I could've gone! Dagnabbit! Looks like fun!

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  3. Welcome back.

    That always looks like a great party, Mike. Next year, I'm popping in, maybe, if they'll have me.

    I could turn up with Mark.

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  4. I woke up this morning thinking about Loretta Lockhorn. Because I don't get the Daily News anymore, I don't see her much. So my online search lead me here, and I'm happy to see that Loretta lives on! Back in the early 90s, before AOL and such, I found Mr. Hoest's email address and sent him a request. The request was, "Please, sir, could you do a Loretta Lockhorn cookbook??" He responded and said he didn't know if that was something he could do but it would be kept under consideration. I think all these years, I hoped that my email would have prompted such a major undertaking. Learning of Mr. Hoest's death saddens me, and I say, "Thank you," to him for all the wonderful years growing up with Loretta. I remember my Aunt Ethel saying once, "You shouldn't be reading that if you want to be a good wife!!" LOL. Long Live Loretta Lockhorn. Thank you Bunny, and may God bless and keep you!

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