Sunday, July 15, 2007
Comics: Otto Messmer's Felix The Cat 1932
This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see reason number 2 on our The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for links to more great posts about print cartoonists.



Today we feature the depression era comic strips of Otto Messmer. Felix the Cat was the first really famous cartoon star and his popularity is due in large part to Messmer's creativity and craftsmanship. Messmer was a quiet man who eschewed the limelight. For many years, Pat Sullivan took the full public credit for Messmer's work. After Sullivan's death, Messmer quietly continued to pen the Felix strip until 1954.

John Canemaker wrote an excellent book on the history of Felix titled, Felix: The Twisted Tale of the World's Most Famous Cat. It's currently out of print, but if you see it in a used book store, snap it up. It's one of the best books on animation history.
Here are a selection of Felix Sunday pages from 1932...







Read how Felix the Cat became a Cultural/Historical Landmark in Los Angeles this week.
Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
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Labels: cartooning, cartoonist, comics, digital funnies, felix, funny animal, newspaper, otto messmer





























2 Comments:
I love these Messmer Sundays - thanks for posting these. Boy there's a ton of great stuff over at that Digital Funnies website: Rube Goldberg, Cliff Sterrett, Fontaine Fox.....
Big thanks to Steve and Jonathan Barli for preserving these early cartoons and making them so easily available to the public!
I love these strips! Even better than the mesmer cartoons! So fun!
I was reading the felix sunday reprint book at Tom Kennys, but it ends in the early thirties just when mesmer hit his his peak.
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