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Mort Walker: Conversations (Conversations With Comic Artists Series)
 
 
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Mort Walker: Conversations (Conversations With Comic Artists Series) [Paperback]

Jason Whiton (Editor)
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Book Description

Conversations With Comic Artists Series January 11, 2005

When Mort Walker (b. 1923) was ten years old, he received an inscribed Moon Mullins cartoon from its creator Frank Willard that read, "Say Morton, those drawings you sent me were swell-I'll bet you'll be a big shot cartoonist some day." By the time he was fifteen, Walker was a comic strip artist for a daily metropolitan newspaper. By the time he was eighteen, he was chief editor of Hallmark Cards.

In 1950, King Features picked up his strip Beetle Bailey for syndication. Four years later, Walker created a spin-off of Beetle Bailey called Hi and Lois. Both strips continue to run daily, drawn and/or supervised by Walker, and Beetle Bailey is distributed to roughly 1,800 newspapers. Walker is one of the most widely read cartoonists in American history, and a legend in his own time.

Mort Walker: Conversations collects interviews and articles that span from 1938 to 2004. His engagement with the Museum of Cartoon Art--which he founded--is discussed in these pieces, along with the politics involved in working with cartoonists' unions, artistic communities, and syndications. In these conversations Walker shows how he has managed to keep his art and stories fresh for over seventy years of production.

Jason Whiton is an award-winning screenwriter, artist, and teacher based in Vermont. His work has been published in Rolling Stone, USA Weekend, Woman's World, Japan Times, and Photographer's Forum Annual.


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Collected interviews with the gifted creator of "Beetle Bailey," "Hi and Lois," and other comics-page standbys

Features a new interview conducted by the volume's editor specifically for this book

Spans Walker's long career from his start in 1938 to the present

Reveals the many firsts Walker achieved --- "Beetle Bailey" was the first strip to integrate a black character into a white cast, for example

Discusses the politics and mechanics of the business --- his leadership of the National Cartoonists Society and founding of the Museum of Cartoon Art --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From the Inside Flap

A collection of interviews and articles from 1938-2004 that shows how the cartoonist managed to keep his art and stories fresh for over seventy years of production

Product Details

  • Paperback: 267 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of Mississippi (January 11, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1578067006
  • ISBN-13: 978-1578067008
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #437,082 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Mort Walker has been an integral part of the cartooning world for over half a century through his comic strips Hi and Lois and Beetle Bailey. He is heavily involved in the workings of the National Cartoonists Society and the Newspaper Features Council. He has also left his mark as the founder of the International Museum of Cartoon Art and Hall of Fame in Boca Raton, Florida. He lives in Stamford, Connecticut.

 

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fun and Informative!, March 1, 2005
This review is from: Mort Walker: Conversations (Conversations With Comic Artists Series) (Paperback)
A sweet note to me from Mort Walker: "Dear Jason, I got the book today and it's beautiful! I read some of it this morning and had a great time remembering a lot of stuff I'd forgotten. Thanks for all your hard work and devotion. Sincerely, Mort."

Mort Walker has said that a successful comic strip character should be instantly recognizable. We should immediately understand who he is and what he's about. Walker calls this "see-ability" and "readability." Publishing professionally as a child prodigy at the age of eleven, and going on to hold numerous positions as an editor, designer, and creator of nine syndicated strips, it is ironic that Walker's most recognized character is known as the laziest fellow in the funny pages.

This volume begins with a syndicated article from 1938, which ran with the photograph of Walker at his drawing table, a sailor's cap perched back on his head. Walker's young face beams with joy and ambition. He seems to embody the Joseph Campbell catch phrase, "Find your bliss." In 1989, Bill Watterson addressed a festival at Ohio State University, expressing that the comic pages were full of doddering, dinosaur strips. A similar plea by Berkley Breathed came in 2003, asking the old guard to step aside in order to make room for younger creators. In both cases, Walker responded in Cartoonist Profiles (#89, #139), re-stating his devotion to his work. To Breathed he wrote, "I love what I'm doing. It would kill me to be told to quit." Walker's continued enthusiasm reveals that the boy with the sailor cap continues to beam from the drawing board, and that to "follow one's bliss" remains as valid and vital at age fourteen as it does at age eighty. Indeed, as this collection illustrates, that is Mort Walker's "see-ability" and "readability" as a character.


Mort Walker Conversations collects interviews and articles that span from 1938 to 2004. His engagement with the Museum of Cartoon Art- which he founded- is discussed in these pieces, along with the politics involved in working with cartoonists' unions, artistic communities, and syndicates. In these conversations Walker shows how he has managed to keep his art and stories fresh for over seventy years of production.

I had a blast reviewing interviews and articles from Mort's long career, and an even bigger blast spending time with Mort and his assistant, Bill Janocha, while I prepared this book. So many great comic strips have sprung from this self-proclaimed "human inventing machine." And for a year before launching Beetle, he was even the top-selling magazine cartoonist in the country. Mort's done it all, and it's really interesting to read through his colorful history of conversations about writing, drawing, and about working with many of the greats on strips and in the NCS, like Dik Browne, Rube Goldberg, Charles Schulz, Al Capp, Milt Caniff, and Walt Kelly.

Most of the pieces in this volume are quite rare, including a number of interviews Mort gave on television with Mike Peters and Bruce Blitz, and special interviews with me, Lee Nordling, and Bill Janocha. Mort Walker Conversations is an excellent resource for those interested in Walker's career and about the world of comic strips. Fans should also seek out these books by Walker: Backstage at the Strips and Mort Walker's Private Scrapbook.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
It looks like Morton Walker's all set. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
King Features, Mort Walker, New York, Dik Browne, Kansas City, Boner's Ark, Jerry Dumas, National Cartoonists Society, Sam's Strip, Sylvan Byck, University of Missouri, Brian Walker, Miss Buxley, Saturday Evening Post, Camp Swampy, Korean War, World War, Betty Boop, Hagar the Horrible, John Bailey, Sad Sack, Bill Janocha, Bob Gustafson, Boca Raton, Frank Johnson
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