Harold Gray

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Harold Gray
Harold Gray

Harold Gray (January 20, 1894 - May 9, 1968) was an American newspaper artist and cartoonist.

Born in Kankakee, Illinois, Gray grew up on a farm near the small town of Chebanse, Illinois. He graduated from Purdue University with a degree in engineering, but as an artist, he was largely self-taught. A former letterer for Sidney Smith on The Gumps, he came up with a strip idea in 1924 for Little Orphan Otto. The title was quickly altered by the Chicago Tribune editor to Little Orphan Annie.

By the 1930s this strip had evolved from a crudely-drawn melodrama to a crisply rendered atmospheric story with novelistic plot threads. The dialogue consisted mainly of meditations on Gray's own deeply conservative philosophy.

Gray sometimes ghosted Little Joe, the strip by his assistant (and cousin) Ed Leffingwell which was continued by Ed's brother Robert. Maw Green, a spin-off of Annie was published as a "top strip" to Little Orphan Annie, something newspapers used to commission so they could devote entire pages to single cartoonists in the old days. It mixed vaudeville timing with the same deeply conservative attitudes as Annie.

Harold Gray was a charter member of Lombard Masonic Lodge #1098, A.F. & A.M. in 1923.

[edit] References

  • Becker, Stephen H. Comic Art in America Simon and Schuster (New York, 1959)
  • Couperie, Pierre, Horn, Maurice et al. A History of the Comic Strip Crown Publishers, Inc. (New York, 1968) (Translation of a 1967 book published in conjunction with an exhibit of comic strip art at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs / Palais du Louvre

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