William Henry Mauldin, better known as Bill Mauldin, was born on this day in 1921. He would win two Pulitzers for his cartoons. The first award was at the age of 23, which was for his wartime body of work. (Six cartoons a week for Stars and Stripes.) The cartoon above, "'Fresh, spirited American troops, flushed with victory, are bringing in thousands of hungry, ragged, battle-weary prisoners ... ' (News Item)," is typical his sardonic take on American newspaper headlines with the reality of the life of a soldier.
From his Wikipedia page:
In 1959, Mauldin won a second Pulitzer Prize, while working at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, for a cartoon depicting Soviet author Boris Pasternak in a Gulag, asking another prisoner, "I won the Nobel Prize for literature. What was your crime?"[12] Pasternak had won the Nobel Prize for his novel Doctor Zhivago, but was not allowed to travel to Sweden to accept it. The following year Mauldin won the National Cartoonist Society Award for Editorial Cartooning. In 1961, he received their Reuben Award as well.
Here are a few photos and links celebrating the life and legacy of Bill Mauldin.
Below: 1958 cover story "Bill Mauldin Takes You on a Family Tour" from the Sports Illustrated Web site.
"LOS ANGELES, Oct. 23 1945 -- MAULDINS IN HAPPIER TIMES -- William H.
(Bill) Mauldin, 24-year-old cartoonist and Pulitzer Prize winner, greets
his wife Norma Jean, and their son, Bruce, 2, after his release from
the army. Yesterday, he charged his wife with adultery in a divorce suit
here, in which he asked for custody of his son. AP Wirephoto."
September 13, 1985 - Cartoonist Bill Mauldin thinks President Reagan is "wrong a lot."
Bill Mauldin in his studio, 1984:
Some related links:
Bill Mauldin gets his best ideas in the bath, according to this 1977 Bill Mauldin Profile
1990: Bill Mauldin in Saudi Arabia
Brian Hoag on Bill Mauldin and Charles Schulz
More rare photos of Mauldin here and here
More rare and unseen cartoonist photos in general (lots of 'em):
Part one
Part two
Part three
Part four
Part five
Part six
Part seven
Part eight
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