- Gene Byrnes
Eugene Francis Byrnes (1889, New York City – July 26, 1974) created the long running comic strip "
Reg'lar Fellers ". This humorous look at suburban children (who nevertheless spoke like New York street kids) was distributed by various syndicates from 1917 to 1949. A former bug spray salesman and shoemaker, Brynes broke his leg during a wrestling match and began copying the cartoons of Tad Dorgan while recuperating in the hospital. A graduate of Landon cartooning correspondence course, he overcame his limited drawing skills by hiring a phalanx of talented cartoonists to assist and ghost his strips.Byrnes began in 1915 with his cartoon series, "Things That Never Happen", drawn for a California newspaper. He met
Winsor McCay who got him a job as a sports cartoonist with the "New York Telegram" where he created his cartoon panel "It's a Great Life If You Don't Weaken", a phrase which became a rallying cry of the American Army duringWorld War I . In 1917 this cartoon feature introduced the "Reg'lar Fellers" characters. In 1919, he began "Wide Awake Willie" as a "New York Herald" Sunday page, and this too featured "Reg'lar Fellers" characters. With "Reg'lar Fellers" running as a daily strip in 1920, he changed the name of the Sunday strip to "Reg'lar Fellers" (which ran through 1948) and soon Byrnes was making $25,000 a year from the feature.With syndication in 800 newspapers, book reprints and comic books, Byrnes' cartoon kids made him a wealthy man. Between 1939 and 1952, he also wrote and edited several instructional books on cartooning and illustration.
Ralph Bakshi learned how to draw cartoons after finding a copy of Byrnes' "The Complete Guide to Cartooning" in the early 1950s.Byrnes died of a heart ailment in 1974.
References
*Strickler, Dave. "Syndicated Comic Strips and Artists, 1924-1995: The Complete Index." Cambria, CA: Comics Access, 1995. ISBN 0-9700077-0-1.
External links
* [http://www.genebyrnes.com/page/page/1594348.htm Gene Byrnes Cartoon World]
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