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Signed by Garrett Price

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This should be an easy question. What's the chief selling point of a signed book?  Presumably it's the signature, yes? So if you're selling a rare signed book on, say, eBay, wouldn't it be smart to include a photograph of the signature with your listing?

A signed copy Garrett Price's cartoon collection Drawing Room Only (1946) is being offered for sale on eBay for $58 with the Make Offer option. You can look at the cover all you like, but the signature's appearance is apparently a closely-guarded secret.

Garrett Price,Drawing Room Only, 1946

http://www.ebay.com/itm/150-Cartoons-by-Garrett-Price-1946-Vintage-New-Yorker-style-SIGNED-hHB-w-DJ-46-/170892686737?pt=US_Nonfiction_Book&hash=item27c9ff7591




Garrett Price, Drawing Room Only, 1946



Note: There are quite a few examples of signed books on this blog and most of them even include signatures. You can see a few of them here.

0841

Signed by Five New Yorker Cartoonists

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The New Yorker Album of Drawings 1925-1975 was the first New Yorker collection I ever purchased. The hardcover volume sold for about $15 and I had to make a very deliberate decision to commit that amount of money to a mammoth book of cartoons. As it turns out, it had a profound an long-lasting effect on me. Can you tell?

A copy is currently available on eBay with the original signatures of five New Yorker cartoonists. I got to know the work of these cartoonists primarily through the magazine and collections such as this one. Indeed, I started collecting older out-of-print New Yorker albums fairly passionately and by this means I became familiar with the work of the pantheon of cartoonists who contributed to the magazine over the years.

The eBay seller has included a generous selection of images from the book and the cartoons are, of course, brilliant. Interestingly, though, the seller hasn't included any cartoons by the five signing cartoonists, which I would have thought good salesmanship. Still, there is an awful lot of Peter Arno instead and who can argue with that?

The New Yorker Album of Drawings 1925-1975

The New Yorker Album of Drawings 1925-1975 signed by Herbert Goldberg, Edward Frascino, William Hamilton, Warren Miller, and Everett Opie. In the eBay listing, the seller has mistaken Edward Frascino's signature for Joseph Farris's.

Peter Arno

Ralph Barton, Alice Harvey, Helen E. Hokinson, Garrett Price

John Held, Jr., Rea Irvin, Alfred Frueh

Rea Irvin, Constantin Alajalov, Barbara Shermund, Peter Arno

Ralph Barton, James Thurber, William Steig, John Held, Jr.

Perry Barlow, George Price, Peter Arno

Mary Petty, Garrett Price, Richard Decker

Peter Arno, Garrett Price, Chon Day, Helen E. Hokinson

Robert Kraus, Richard Taylor, Peter Arno

Leslie Starke, Richard Taylor, Peter Arno

Garrett Price, Joseph Mirachi, Gardner Rea

Peter Arno, Garner Rea, Charles E. Martin

Richard Taylor, Saul Steinberg, Barney Tobey, George Price

Peter Arno, Frank Modell, Robert Day

Charles Saxon

Alan Dunn, Carl Rose, Peter Arno

Mischa Richter, James Stevenson, Lee Lorenz, Richard McCallister, Ed Fisher
Donald Reilly, Leslie Starke, John Corcoran

Donald Reilly, J. B. Handelsman, Niculae Asciu, Mischa Richter

The artists represented in The New Yorker Album of Drawings 1925-1975

The image-hosting service Auctiva allows up to twenty-four photos per eBay auction listing, and this seller is determined to use them all. This is number 23. Instead of this close-up of the back cover, I think it would have been more helpful to photograph pages that include some of the cartoonists who signed this book.
Again, this is really an unnecessary photograph.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/The-New-Yorker-Album-Of-Drawings-SIGNED-MILLER-GOLDBERG-HAMILTON-OPIE-FARRIS-/390614415738?pt=Antiquarian_Collectible&hash=item5af26ef97a


As stated above, the eBay seller has mistaken Edward Frascino's signature for Joseph Farris's. Tsk tsk.

Say, did I mention that the eBay seller has mistaken Edward Frascino's signature for Joseph Farris's?



Note:  Yesterday, I was thrilled to see that my recent post about Rea Irvin in the Virgin Islands was mentioned on Ink Spillhere.If you're interested in the very latest about New Yorker cartoonists--and why on earth would you be reading this post if you weren't?--then you should be following Ink Spill. 

As if that weren't enough, today I'm quoted on Perpetua, the Ronald Searle tribute blog! The topic is Ronald Searle and the Berlin Wall. The post would be outstanding even if I weren't mentioned. See it here.

I have a daily newspaper panel drawing by William Hamilton on the blog here.

An Edward Frascino sandbox drawing is part of a larger post about New Yorker cartoons at auction. I still don't know whether Mr. Frascino's drawing was ever published. You can see it all here.

Then if you still have the energy, some of the other signed books featured on this blog can be found here. Happy reading!

0842

Signed and Inscribed by Ronald Searle

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An author's signature in a book is desirable, but by itself it tells little of the circumstances under which it was obtained. An inscription can add a bit of color to the story behind the signing, particularly when the signer writes well.

Ronald Searle was as gifted with the written word as any cartoonist I can think of, although that may not be apparent solely from the relatively brief inscription in this copy of Ronald Searle in Perspective (1984). Just as his drawing style was unique, his left-handed script is rather singular. His signature especially is like no one else's.

The eBay seller casuarius2006 has been selling off of late a rather extraordinary collection of Searle books. Perhaps it all once belonged to someone named "Tiger."

Ronald Searle,Ronald Searle in Perspective (1984), the cover

Ronald Searle, Ronald Searle in Perspective (1984), the printed front free endpaper with dated signature and inscription

Ronald Searle, Ronald Searle in Perspective (1984) inscribed "'Tiger' Coltart / with every good wish for your / first 80th! --from the perpetrator of this tome. / Ronald Searle / 14th May 1986." Searle himself was a spritely 66 years old at the time.

Ronald Searle, Ronald Searle in Perspective (1984),open to two color illustratons:  "Baseball, Phoenix, Arizona" (1963) and "Hudson's Bay Post, Maliotenam, Canada" (1963), pages 72 and 73. Searle's work took him all over North America as well as Europe and other parts of the globe.

The Sunday Telegraph Review, "The Art of Survival," October 28, 1990 some four years after the book was signed

http://www.ebay.com/itm/1st-Edition-1984-Ronald-Searle-in-Perspective-Signed-dated-dedicated-/290958170921?ssPageName=ADME:B:SS:US:3160





Note: I write more about signed books here and more about Ronald Searle here.

0843

Bookplate Signed by Roz Chast

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Authors can't always make it to far-flung bookshops for signings. To help meet demand in this situation, many popular writers resort to the bookplate. The author signs a number of bookplates and has them sent off to wherever the books are to be sold. The idea is that a bookstore employee affixes a bookplate with an original autograph to each book.

There's something impersonal about this practice. The author's signature ends up in the book without the author ever actually handling the book. Books are objects of beauty and weight, a pleasure to hold. Slips of paper are not really an equivalent. Still, for a book lover, it's better to have a treasured book with a signature in it than to have one without.

Roz Chast, Theories of Everything

Roz Chast signed Bloomsbury bookplate

Add cahttp://www.ebay.com/itm/THEORIES-OF-EVERYTHING-BY-ROZ-CHAST-2006-SIGNED-1ST-EDI-/200399701842?pt=US_Nonfiction_Book&hash=item2ea8c0c752ption





Note: A variety of signed books can be seen here. More of my posts about Roz. Chast are available here.

0844

Bookplate Signed and Numbered by R. Crumb

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Using a signed and numbered bookplate as a substitute for a printed limitation page strikes one as an intentionally unimpressive way to create a limited edition book. Many limited editions use expensive and exquisite materials to create fine examples of the bookmaker's art. The limited edition of Volume 5 of R. Crumb's Sketchbook, on the other hand, differs from the standard trade edition only by the presence of a bookplate, and not an especially appealing one at that.

Crumb, as a counterculture icon, faces a dilemma. He might not be comfortable being associated with a lavish, limited-edition book which some might consider elitist. He does wants to be commercial, but he deliberately wants his commercialism to feel a bit crass and perhaps self-mocking. Hence we find the relatively cheap bookplate adorning the limited edition book.

R. Crumb, Sketchbook, Volume 5: Late 1967 & Early 1968, Front Cover.
The R. Crumb Sketchbook, Volume 5
Limitation bookplate No. 245 of 400 signed by R. Crumb.

Mr. Natural, Fatback & Thin Gruel, Little Girl

Crumb deliberately may choose sketchbook cover images for their inappropriateness or offensiveness.

Boing:  The Magazine that Flips You Out! and Gingerbread Princess

Mickey Mouse, Abie the Agent

True Congestions, "If Ya Wanna Be a Top Banana, Ya Gotta Start At the Bottom of the Bunch!"

"I'm a physical being!"

R. Crumb's Funny Book, One Way

Street Corner Comics, The Grabbies are Coming!

Holy Toledo Comics

Fun Fact:  R. Crumb is never mistaken for David Mamet

True Romances

Back Cover

R. Crumb, The R. Crumb Sketchbook, Volume 5: Late 1967 & Early 1968, Front Cover




http://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-SIGNED-R-CRUMB-Sketch-Book-Vol-5-Limited-Edition-245-of-400-/390572055319?pt=Antiquarian_Collectible&hash=item5aefe89b17






Note: See my previous posts on R. Crumbhere if you dare.

0845

Bookplate Signed and Sketched Upon by David Levine

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David Levine has not only signed a bookplate, he's drawn a caricature of a pen as well. This bookplate has never found its way into a book, but presumably that is what it was intended for. It is an orphan now available on eBay.

David Levine bookplate

David Levine bookplate



Here's a similar but more detailed and more caustic caricature of a pen in a copy of Levine's book Pens and Needles, published in1969. It is currently offered for sale on eBay.
David Levine, Pens and Needles, 1969, title page inscribed "To Charles + Pat Searle," signed with a caricature of a pen by David Levine and dated 2/6/78.

David Levine, Pens and Needles, 1969, Book Cover

http://www.ebay.com/itm/DAVID-LEVINE-ANNOTATED-BOOK-SIGNED-02-06-1978-/300257347291?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item45e8bb86db


From historydirect, the same eBay seller offering Pens and Needles, here is another caricature drawing of a pen by David Levine being offered on eBay:
David Levine, caricature of a pen signed D. Levine drawn on a printed postcard of a caricature of Chekhov from The New York Review of Books.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/DAVID-LEVINE-SKETCH-SIGNED-CIRCA-1976-/370211587170?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item5632548462




Now, did you read what I read? This last admittedly wordy eBay listing offers the tantalizing biographical detail that Levine once illustrated the magazine covers for both Time and Newsweek during the same week, a fact of which the editors of both were unaware prior to publication. What an incredible coup! I did not know of this. 

Is such a thing even possible? Tune in tomorrow.


Note: For more on the topic of caricature, see my earlier blog posts here.

0846

David Levine's Concurrent Time and Newsweek Covers

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In yesterday's post, a biographical tidbit found on eBay stated that David Levine once produced caricatures for the covers of both Time and Newsweek during the same week, and that neither magazine knew this was going on beforehand. This was news to me, although apparently it is well known to Mr. Levine's devotees.

For me, seeing is believing. I did a little research and this is what I found:


David Levine, "Man of the Year: L.B.J. as Lear," Time, January 5, 1968
President Lyndon B. Johnson, Democratic Senator Robert F. Kennedy, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, and Democratic Representative Wilbur Mills
http://www.ebay.com/itm/TIME-Magazine-January-5-1968-LBJ-as-Lear-Man-of-the-Year-/330964912940?pt=Magazines&hash=item4d0f0bcb2c&nma=true&si=UB68sj2DvLx%252F9kdb54zXrlCgzYs%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557



David Levine, Original Artwork for "Man of the Year:  L.B.J. as Lear," Time, January 5, 1968
President Lyndon B. Johnson, Democratic Senator Robert F. Kennedy, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, and Democratic Representative Wilbur Mills
David Levine, "Politics '68," Newsweek, January 8, 1968

The 1968 contenders for the Republican Presidential nomination: frontrunner Richard M. Nixon followed by Michigan Governor George Romney, New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller, California Governor Ronald Reagan, and Illinois Senator Chuck Percy.


Note:  Yesterday's post on a David Levine bookplate is here. To see all my posts on caricature, click here.

0847

Jack Davis and the Circle of Blame

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Jack Davissupplied the artwork for numerous Time magazine covers. Here is one with a lot of finger-pointing. The April 30, 1973 cover refers to the great Watergate scandal in the Nixon White House. At the time, I thought it was a fantastic magazine cover. It has held up remarkably well.

President Nixon is surrounded by his aides, who are entangled in wiretapping material used during the break-in at the Democratic headquarters in the Watergate Hotel. (These are not the infamous Nixon White House tapes, the existence of which had not yet been disclosed.) Clockwise from top right: Jeb Magruder, Deputy Director of the Committee to Re-Elect the President; White House Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman; White House Counsel John Dean; former Attorney General John Mitchell; former Secretary of Commerce Maurice Stans, subsequently the finance chair of the Committee to Re-Elect the President; and James McCord, a security coordinator for the Committee to Re-Elect the President who was arrested during the second break-in at the Watergate Hotel. Those were the days, my friend!

Jack Davis, "Watergate Breaks Wide Open," Time, April 30, 1973


Jack Davis, Original Artwork for "Watergate Breaks Wide Open," Time, April 30, 1973


Note:  Say, does anyone remember a similar illustration published after the Space Shuttle Challenger Disaster? It depicts a circle of finger-pointers, one of them labelled Thiokol, and was entitled "The O-Ring." It may or may not be by Jack Davis. If you have a scan of it, I'd love to see it for purposes of comparison and to refresh my memory. If it is indeed by Jack Davis, I might even like to include it in this post.

You're in luck! I have another post on Jack Davishere.

Or there's another post on the Watergate Affair here.

0848

My Entry in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #391

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Here is my entry in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #391 for August 12, 2013. The cartoon is by Frank Cotham. The caption is mine.

"You're late."





A few other ideas of mine that I did not submit, although I like them all:
"So, Dear, was Casual Friday what I said or what you said?"
"I told you to carry the keys in your briefcase."
"Brooks Brothers says your new wardrobe will be in next week."
"Not so fast. The dog needs walking."
"Oh, nothing special. And how was your day?"



Note:  So what did the tuba player say to the couple in the restaurant? You can see my previous entry in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest here. In fact four months' worth of my unsuccessful entries have been scrupulously documented herein if you'd care to keep clicking back. You get to see the winners too!

0849

Pogo: Lessons in Being a Dog

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Original artwork for Walt Kelly'sPogo comic strip generally demonstrates superb pen and ink technique. Here Beauregard Bugleboy asks Albert Alligator, "How would you like to take lessons in being a dog?" How indeed?






Walt Kelly, Original Artwork for Pogo, July 1, 1955

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Pogo-Daily-Original-by-Walt-Kelly-Albert-and-Beauregard-/111076793945?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item19dcb15e59&nma=true&si=UB68sj2DvLx%252F9kdb54zXrlCgzYs%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557





Note: You can see more original comic strip art on this blog here.

0850

Walt Kelly's Pogo: "If I Go to Mars"

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In the original artwork for this Pogo strip from 1966 by Walt Kelly, Peanie Brickle explains to Howland Owl that if he goes to Mars, he'll have to take flying lessons. Putting an owl and an elephant together in a daily comic strip naturally creates problems of scale, but the great pachyderm is certainly wonderfully drawn.




Walt Kelly,Pogo, June 14, 1966

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Pogo-Daily-Original-by-Walt-Kelly-Pandemonia-Period-/111092082470?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item19dd9aa726&nma=true&si=UB68sj2DvLx%252F9kdb54zXrlCgzYs%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557 





Note: To see more by Walt Kelly on this blog, click here.

0851

Walt Kelly's Pogo: Silent Partner

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Albert Alligator comes down with laryngitis in these two daily Pogo strips by Walt Kelly. Howland Owl, who has scripted Albert's entire day, is just fine with this.





Walt Kelly, Original Artwork for Pogo, July 20, 1959





Walt Kelly, Original Artwork for Pogo, July 21, 1959

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Pogo-Daily-Original-PAIR-by-Walt-Kelly-Two-Consecutive-Strips-/111092177437?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item19dd9c1a1d&nma=true&si=UB68sj2DvLx%252F9kdb54zXrlCgzYs%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557




Note: I have more Pogo strips on view here.

Don't miss Thomas Haller Buchanan's outstanding Whirled of Kelly blog here. Very big things are planned for Walt Kelly's centennial tomorrow.

0852

Walt Kelly's Pogo: Taking Over the White House

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In a 1960 Pogo comic strip by Walt Kelly, Fremount's mother explains to Pogo some ambitious plans for taking over the White House and then actually moving the executive mansion. The 1960 Presidential election was Nixon vs. Kennedy, but as far as I'm aware neither of them proposed moving the White House to the Riviera.





Walt Kelly, Original Artwork for Pogo, November 9, 1960

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Pogo-Daily-Original-by-Walt-Kelly-Classic-Pogo-Possum-/111092191324?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item19dd9c505c&nma=true&si=UB68sj2DvLx%252F9kdb54zXrlCgzYs%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557


Note: See more original comic strip art here.

Thomas Haller Buchanan is one of several bloggers who inspired me to start my own blog in 2011. His Whirled of Kelly blog here is publishing a special 'zine called Delineated Life tomorrow as a tribute to the great Walt Kelly on what would have been his 100th birthday.


0853

Walt Kelly's Pogo: "Boom is How it Goes"

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Like many of Walt Kelly's Pogo comic strips, the subject matter of this 1956 Sunday strip seems directly related to the militarism of the Cold War. Pogo strips are always well-drawn but looking at this original artwork panel by panel reminds us just how well-inked this strip is as well. Brush pen is expertly applied over blue pencil by the great Walt Kelly.














http://www.ebay.com/itm/Pogo-Sunday-Original-by-Walt-Kelly-Boom-1956-/111095036514?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item19ddc7ba62&nma=true&si=UB68sj2DvLx%252F9kdb54zXrlCgzYs%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557




Note: For more strips by Walt Kelly, click here.

Walt Kelly's centennial is Sunday, August 25, 2013. While you're celebrating, don't miss Thomas Haller Buchanan's Whirled of Kelly blog here.

0854

Walt Kelly's Pogo: Climbing the Wrong Mountain

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In this original comic strip art for Walt Kelly'sPogo, Pogo Possum and Porky Pine are seen climbing a mountain, only it's the wrong one. It's a good thing they begin their descent right away.




Walt Kelly, Original Artwork for Pogo, July 10, 1970
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Pogo-Daily-Original-by-Walt-Kelly-Published-7-10-70-/111106612871?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item19de785e87&nma=true&si=UB68sj2DvLx%252F9kdb54zXrlCgzYs%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557




Note: See more on Walt Kellyhere.

Don't miss Thomas Haller Buchanan's Whirled of Kelly blog here.

0855

Walt Kelly 1966 Press File Photo

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Walt Kelly (1913-1973) is the creator of the Pogo comic strip. This Associated Press file photo of Kelly was taken in 1966 and run on the occasion of his death at the age of 60 in 1973. Today is one-hundred years since the date of his birth.

Walt Kelly 1966 file photo from the 1973 AP wire story announcing his death

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Walt-Kelly-Cartoonist-6x8-original-wire-photo-F16415-/400496071055?pt=Art_Photo_Images&hash=item5d3f6d118f&nma=true&si=UB68sj2DvLx%252F9kdb54zXrlCgzYs%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557 



Note: More of my blog posts about Walt Kelly can be seen here.

Thomas Haller Buchanan's Whirled of Kelly blog can be found here.

0856

Pogo: "How Does One Git Down Off'n this Planet?"

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Walt Kelly'sPogo comic strip never fails to surprise. Just when you think the conversation is turning serious, an old joke rears its head. This original artwork is from 1967, but I'm fairly certain the joke was ancient even then.




Walt Kelly, Original Artwork for Pogo, January 16, 1967





http://www.ebay.com/itm/Original-Pogo-Daily-by-Walt-Kelly-1-16-1967-Churchy-in-Pandemonia-/111147430595?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item19e0e732c3


August 26, 2013 Update:  Sold!


Note: I have more original art from Pogo comic strips here.

Today is Walt Kelly's centennial. Check out the Whirled of Kelly blog here.

0857

Pogo: Welcome to the Beginning by Walt Kelly

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Today, August 25, is the centennial of Walt Kelly, the creator of the celebrated Pogo comic strip. His book Pogo: Welcome to the Beginning was published in 1965 for the Neighborhood Youth Corps, a government program for urban youth that was a part of President Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society. Kelly's star character Pogo Possum appears in some of the cartoon illustrations. The book attempts to instill a work ethic and make it appear cool.

These scans are graciously provided by Mark Fuller Dillon.

Walt Kelly, Pogo:  Welcome to the Beginning, 1965, Front Cover

























Walt Kelly, Pogo:  Welcome to the Beginning, 1965, Back Cover




Note:  As mentioned above, today is Walt Kelly's hundredth birthday! You can see more of his work up close and personal on this very blog here.

Mark Fuller Dillon, who made all these beautiful scans, has his own blog here and there's even a bit about his discovery of Pogo today. His scans of Pogo: Welcome to the Beginning are also included on Thomas Haller Buchanan's Whirled of Kelly blog here,where they appear condensed in an online "'zine" format. This is where I learned of them. You can see other wonders on the Whirled of Kelly blog here. Today's post is especially noteworthy as it has a link to Delineated Life: Celebrating Walt Kelly and his Work, a 138 page tribute to the creator of Pogo on the occasion of his centennial. It's truly a labor of love.

As a boy in 1966, Mr. Buchanan actually met Walt Kelly and obtained a souvenir drawing of Pogo. He first wrote about his half hour with Walt Kelly here but now it also appears in the Delineated Life tribute.

Okay, that should keep you busy for a while. When you're done with that, hey, get a job!

0858

Walt Kelly's Pogo: "Last Name First"

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Yesterday was Pogo creator Walt Kelly's one-hundredth birthday. Or should I say Kelly, Walt? I'm afraid it's all rather perplexing.





Walt Kelly, Original Artwork for Pogo, June 4, 1962

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Pogo-Daily-Original-Classic-by-Walt-Kelly-Published-6-4-62-/111106655165?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item19de7903bd&nma=true&si=UB68sj2DvLx%252F9kdb54zXrlCgzYs%253D&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2557




Note: More posts about Pogo can be found here.

Don't miss the Whirled of Kelly blog here.

0859

Gaudeamus Igitur

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In an annual rite of passage, eager college freshmen are moving into dormitories on campuses all over the country. This raises a concern, namely, are they prepared musically for the oldest college student's song of them all? Probably not.

"Gaudeamus Igitur" is a traditional student song dating from the days when almost everyone studied Latin. It's been in its current form for well over two centuries. Christian Wilhelm Kindleben published his version of the verses in 1781 to be sung to a well-known melody of the time. The serious nature of some of the verses did not preclude its use as a drinking song. In fact, it is the first line that sets the devil-may-care tone of the piece, not the morbid musings on life's brevity.

http://www.users.on.net/~algernon/gaudeamus/translation.html



My introduction to the song was in the operetta "The Student Prince" (1924). The score is by Sigmund Romberg and the lyrics are by Dorothy Donnelly, but in addition there is that one traditional student's song. It's quite enjoyable. Mario Lanza, who does not himself appear in the 1954 MGM movie, reportedly performed each track of the recording in just one take:
"Gaudeamus Igitur"
Mario Lanza (Voice of Prince Karl Franz)
"The Student Prince" 1954 MGM Film Soundtrack

Mario Lanza, "The Student Prince"

Is this traditional song still performed? Yes, I'm sure it is, but probably not as much as in years gone by and probably not too often with all ten verses. Even "The Student Prince" doesn't get past the first verse, which it repeats twice.

Speaking from my own experience, I'm pleased to report that "Gaudeamus Igitur" was performed at the Vassar College Fall Convocation on August 31, 1983. Don't worry if you don't have a program; I saved mine. Note that in this arrangement four verses were performed in the order 1, 4, 3, 10.






 A lovely sound can be heard from the men of the Robert Shaw Chorale, who consider "Guadeamus Igitur" to be a "Glee Club Favorite." The verses sung are 1 and 10.
"Gaudeamus Igitur"
Men of the Robert Shaw Chorale
From "23 Glee Club Favorites" (1962)

Men of the Robert Shaw Chorale
"23 Glee Club Favorites" (1962)


The famous student's song is even quoted in an orchestral showpiece. Brahms's Academic Festival Overture, concludes with the triumphant theme "Gaudeamus Igitur," which begins at around 9:11 in the finale of this recording.
Johannes Brahms, Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80, 1880
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, 1983
Leonard Bernstein, Conductor

Johannes Brahms, Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80, 1880
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, 1983
Leonard Bernstein, Conductor


In 1953, the year prior to the release of the movie "The Student Prince" when the operetta was on no one in particular's mind, The New Yorker published this cartoon of a monk singing in the shower by Eldon Dedini. At this point, I bet you can guess what he's singing.
Eldon Dedini, "Gaudeamus igitur,
Juvenes dum sumus;
Post jucundam juvenutem,
Post molestam senectutem

Nos habebit humus."
The New Yorker, February 14, 1953, Page 40

Most recently, the traditional school song appeared in the soundtrack for "Monsters University." The melody of "Gaudeamus Igitur" is prominent at the beginning of this clip as Mike and Sulley chase Archie the Scare Pig, the stolen mascot of Fear Tech, Monsters University's rival college. Got that?
"Monsters University" (2013) Animation Progression
Disney/Pixar

Sulley and Mike chase Archie the Scare Pig to the tune of "Gaudeamus Igitur" in Disney/Pixar's "Monsters University" (2013). The traditional school music during the early part of the chase is a really nice touch, and it's too bad they didn't put the same care into crafting a satisfying ending for this movie.

OK, you now know what I know about this song, and if you're musically inclined, you can even sing it, which I can't do for love or money. All together, now!

Note: Here's another handy Latin phrase for college kids: "Dimidus Asinus Genius." Does it mean half-assed genius? Not exactly, but still that might have been the inside joke among Disney's top brass. I am the current owner of former Disney President Donn Tatum's Ludwig von Drake cufflinks bearing those inspiring Latin words and if you agree that that's certainly worth a blog post, check it out here.

My pleas to have Attempted Bloggery's contents inform our nation's college curricula have gone unheeded, perhaps because I chose to run my entire academic campaign on April Fools Day and I don't think it was taken seriously. Nevertheless, I would love to hear all about it if this blog should ever be referenced in any college syllabus or other academic course materials. Look, it could happen. There's got to be secondary source material for a senior Comics thesis in here somewhere. Yes, they teach courses in Comics now. I believe it has replaced Latin.

Vivat Academia!

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