October 18

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1973 Death of a comic geniusbild_006pogosunday19-10-1958

Walt Kelly was born in 1913 and began a career in journalism while still in his teens. He added cartooning to his list of talents, moving to California in 1936 to work at the Disney studio as a writer and animator, contributing to such masterpieces as Pinocchio, Dumbo, Fantasia, and The Reluctant Dragon. During World War II he worked for the American army as an illustrator of manuals. During this period he introduced the world to a cartoon possum who would later become famous as Pogo.

After the war Kelly entered the realm of comics and political cartooning. While employed at the New York Star, he started a daily strip involving animals of the Okefenokee Swamp in Georgia. Pogo was named after the lead character, an amiable, laid-back possum who occupied the swamp with a host of anthropomorphized creatures such as the blowhard Albert the Alligator, the self-worshipping Beauregard Hound, the poetic turtle Churchy Lafemme, the coquettish skunk Miz Ma’m’selle Hepzibah, and know-it-all Howland Owl. The level of humour and wit was high, ruminations on life were plentiful, and the political satire was biting. Pogo took stands against both communism and right-wing extremism, portraying Senator Joe McCarthy as a sinister wildcat and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev as a pig; Richard Nixon appeared as a spider.

Pogo was enormously popular in syndication and in collections of strips, with Kelly winning numerous prizes for his art and acknowledged as an influence on the genre. There were fitful attempts to continue the strip after Kelly’s death but none could successfully imitate the inimitable.pogo-cast

Startling trivia fact: Pogo’s full name was Ponce de Leon Montgomery County Alabama Georgia Beauregard Possum.

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