George Herriman

George Herriman

  • Birthday: 1880-08-22
  • Deathday: 1944-04-26
  • Place of birth: New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
  • Also know as: Geo. Herriman

Biography

George Joseph Herriman III (August 22, 1880 – April 25, 1944) was an American cartoonist best known for the comic strip Krazy Kat (1913–1944). More influential than popular, Krazy Kat had an appreciative audience among those in the arts. Gilbert Seldes' article "The Krazy Kat Who Walks by Himself" was the earliest example of a critic from the high arts giving serious attention to a comic strip. The Comics Journal placed the strip first on its list of the greatest comics of the 20th century. Herriman's work has been a primary influence on cartoonists such as Elzie C. Segar, Will Eisner, Charles M. Schulz, Robert Crumb, Art Spiegelman, Bill Watterson, and Chris Ware. Herriman was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, to mixed-race Creole parents, and grew up in Los Angeles. After he graduated from high school in 1897, he worked in the newspaper industry as an illustrator and engraver. He moved on to cartooning and comic strips—a medium then in its infancy—and drew a variety of strips until he introduced his most famous character, Krazy Kat, in his strip The Dingbat Family in 1910. A Krazy Kat daily strip began in 1913, and from 1916 the strip also appeared on Sundays. It was noted for its poetic, dialect-heavy dialogue; its fantastic, shifting backgrounds; and its bold, experimental page layouts. In the strip's main motif and dynamic, Ignatz Mouse pelted Krazy with bricks, which the naïve, androgynous Kat interpreted as symbols of love. As the strip progressed, a love triangle developed between Krazy, Ignatz, and Offisa Pupp. Pupp made it his mission to prevent Ignatz from throwing bricks at Krazy, or to jail him for having done so, but his efforts were perpetually impeded because Krazy wished to be struck by Ignatz's bricks. Herriman lived most of his life in Los Angeles, but made frequent trips to the Navajo deserts in the Southwestern United States. He was drawn to the landscapes of Monument Valley and the Enchanted Mesa, and made Coconino County the location of his Krazy Kat strips. His artwork made much use of Navajo and Mexican themes and motifs against shifting desert backgrounds. He was a prolific cartoonist who produced a large number of strips and illustrated Don Marquis's books of poetry about Archy and Mehitabel, an alley cat and a cockroach. Newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst was a proponent of Herriman and gave him a lifetime contract with King Features Syndicate, which guaranteed Herriman a comfortable living and an outlet for his work despite its lack of popularity. Description above from the Wikipedia article George Herriman, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Filmography

How to Handle Women

1928

As Himself

Production

Krazy Kat Goes A-Wooing

1916

As Characters

Searching for Santa!

1925

As Story

Farm Relief

1929

As Creator

Kannibal Kapers

1935

As Creator

Svengarlic

1931

As Creator

Soda Poppa

1931

As Creator

The Medicine Show

1933

As Creator

The Restless Sax

1931

As Creator

Antique Antics

1933

As Creator

Jazz Rhythm

1930

As Creator

Slow Beau

1930

As Creator

A Duet

1916

As Writer

Krazy Kat, Bugologist

1916

As Graphic Novel Illustrator

A Duet

1916

As Director

Light House Keeping

1932

As Writer

A Grid-Iron Hero

1916

As Writer

Krazy Spooks

1933

As Comic Book

The Merry Cafe

1936

As Writer

Stage Krazy

1933

As Characters

House Cleaning

1933

As Characters

Bunnies And Bonnets

1933

As Characters

Wooden Shoes

1933

As Characters

Wedding Bells

1933

As Characters

Snow Time

1932

As Characters

Paper Hanger

1932

As Characters

Hic-Cups The Champ

1932

As Characters

Ritzy Hotel

1932

As Characters

Soldier Old Man

1932

As Characters

Cinder Alley

1934

As Characters

Tom Thumb

1934

As Characters

The Curio Shop

1933

As Characters

The King's Jester

1935

As Characters

Goofy Gondolas

1934

As Characters

The Trapeze Artist

1934

As Characters

Masquerade Party

1934

As Characters

Busy Bus

1934

As Characters

Golf Chumps

1939

As Characters

Hot Dogs On Ice

1938

As Characters

Gym Jams

1938

As Characters

Krazy's Travel Squawks

1938

As Characters

Krazy Magic

1938

As Characters

Little Buckaroo

1938

As Characters

Sad Little Guinea Pigs

1938

As Characters

The Masque Raid

1937

As Characters

Krazy's Race of Time

1937

As Characters

The Lyin' Hunter

1937

As Characters

Krazy's Newsreel

1936

As Characters

Highway Snobbery

1936

As Characters

The New Champ

1925

As Story

Rodeo Dough

1931

As Comic Book

An Old Flame

1930

As Writer

Desert Sunk

1930

As Writer

Spookeasy

1930

As Writer

The Mouse Exterminator

1940

As Characters

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