- Percy Crosby
Percy Leo Crosby (
December 8 ,1891 –December 8 ,1964 ) [ [http://ssdi.rootsweb.com/ Social Security Death Index] for Percy Crosby, SSN 229-07-1487, gives December 8, 1891 - December 1964, with no specific date.] Robinson, Jerry. "Skippy and Percy Crosby", Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, 1978. ISBN 0-03-018491-6. Gives specific death date of December 8.] was a U.S.author ,illustrator , andcartoonist . He is best known for his 1923 to 1945comic strip "Skippy", a popular and acclaimed feature adapted intomovies , anovel , and aradio show , and commemorated on a 1997U.S. Postal Service stamp . The strip, an inspiration forCharles Schulz 's "Peanuts ", [ [http://www.zompist.com/bob45.html "Bob's Comics Reviews: Percy Crosby - "Skippy"] ] Horn, Maurice, editor. "100 Years of American Newspaper Comics" (Gramercy Books, New York, 1996) "Skippy" entry, pp. 34-3498. ISBN0517124475] is considered by comics historians a "classic ... which innovated a number of sophisticated and refined touches used later by Charles Schulz andBill Watterson ...." Critic and authorCorey Ford in "Vanity Fair" magazine contemporaneously called the strip "America's most important contribution to humor of the century". [Quoted in "Skippy: A Complete Compilation 1925-1926", forward byBill Blackbeard ,Hyperion Press ,Westport, Connecticut , 1977. ISBN 0883556294 (hardcover), ISBN 0883556284 (trade paperback )]Biography
(1891–1923) Early life and career
Percy Crosby was born in
Brooklyn ,New York , prior to the 1898 incorporation of the fiveboroughs ofNew York City , and raised in Richmond Hill, in what would be borough of Queens but at the time was considered part ofLong Island . [Robinson, p. 5] His father, Thomas Francis Crosby, the son ofCatholic immigrants fromCounty Louth, Ireland , was an amateur painter who ran an art-supply business. His mother Fanny, was of English and Scottish descent. Percy had two younger sisters, Ethel and Gladys. [Robinson, p. 5-6]Crosby quit
high school during his sophomore year to take a job as an art-department office boy at editorTheodore Dreiser 's magazine "The Delineator ". He was quickly promoted to artist, but the job ended after one issue. After selling magazines and delivering sandwiches, he eventually found a position as aneditorial cartoonist for theSocialist newspaper the "New York Daily Call ". There he published his first two comic strips, "Biff" and "The Extreme Brothers — Laff and Sy", but readers became outraged at frivolity in the paper and the strips were pulled.Crosby next became a
sports columnist and illustrator at the "The New York Globe ". On the side, he produced comics used as occasional filler for the paper. Eventually fired, he entered, in desperation, an Edison Company contest for the best cartoon on the use of electric light. He won the $75 prize and saw his cartoon appear in every newspaper inNew York City . The exposure led to a job at the "New York World ", "at the time the promised land for aspiring cartoonists". [Robinson, p. 11](1923–1945) "Skippy"
"Skippy" started in 1923 as a cartoon in "Life" magazine, and became a syndicated
comic strip two years later, throughKing Features Syndicate . Crosby retained thecopyright , a rarity for comic-strip artists of the time.The strip focused on Skippy Skinner, a young boy living in the city. He's drawn with a sketchy line suggesting restlessness, usually wearing an enormous collar and tie, and a floppy checked hat. The other characters are only vaguely defined. Skippy's parents seem kind but do not pay him much attention; he has a few friends (notably Sooky) without much personality, except for Butch O'Leary, the neighborhood bully. Skippy himself is an odd mix of mischief and melancholy; he may equally be found stealing from the corner fruit stand, or failing to master skates or baseball, or complaining about the adult world, or staring sadly at an old relative's grave ("And only last year she gave me a tie".)
The strip was enormously popular, at one point guaranteeing Crosby $2,350 a week, [http://web.archive.org/web/20040213231226/http://skippy.com/newsday.html Nash, Collin, "The 'Skippy' Mystery"] . "Newsday",
November 10 ,2002 . Site last updated 2004-02-13] an enormous sum at the time. Crosby published a "Skippy" novel and other books; there were Skippy dolls, toys, and comic books; and the comic was adapted as a movie by Paramount. A hit, it won directorNorman Taurog theAcademy Award for Best Director, and boosted the career of young starJackie Cooper .From 1928 to 1937, Crosby produced 3,650 "Skippy" strips, ten books of fiction, political and philosophical essays, drawings, and cartoons, as well as numerous pamphlets, while also mounting a dozen exhibitions in New York City,
Washington, D.C. ,London ,Paris , andRome of his oils, watercolors, and other paintings and drawings.(1945–1964) Later years
During the
World War II years, Crosby's politics increasingly intruded on the strip, and it began to lose readers. Negotiations on a new contract failed, and Crosby ended "Skippy" onDecember 8 ,1945 , the cartoonist's 54th birthday.His final years were tragic; unable to find steady work, he drifted into
alcoholism . In December 1948, after the death of his mother, he was committed to the psychiatric ward ofBellevue Hospital for asuicide attempt. In January 1949, he was transferred to the mental ward at Kings Park Veterans' Hospital, inKings Park, New York , where he was declared a paranoid schizophrenic and spent the last 16 years of his life.In 1964, after a heart attack that had left him in a
coma for months, Crosby died in the asylum on his 73rd birthday, having been unable to secure release.Footnotes
References
* [http://www.skippy.com Official "Skippy" site]
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