Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Pinups: Jack O'Brien and Milo Kinn's Girlie Cartoons
This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see reason number 9 on our The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for links to more great pinup art.

Sometimes I think I must have the best job in the world...
Today some nice folks who had Googled up this website stopped by to offer us some material to digitize that they had rescued from a relative's garage. They had a laundry basket full of 1940s magazines and a big stack of original inks from a 1947 girlie cartoon magazine, colorfully titled Booby Traps and Nuggets. My jaw hit the floor when I started going through the artwork. Here is a part of cartooning history that has been largely overlooked- especially by me. But not any more!
The artwork is quickly executed and sometimes a bit funky... and for good reason. On the back of each ink is the amount the cartoonist was paid for his work. The prices range from $3 to $5. You would have to work pretty doggone fast to make a living at that rate! I have to admit, I don't know much about these artists. So I'm going to present them a couple at a time with the little I do know and see if any of you readers out there can help fill in the blanks about their careers.

Jack O'Brien lived in Los Angeles, and if this photograph is any indication, he was an alumni of UCLA and had a cute little daughter. In the 1960s, O'Brien drew the Sad Sack comic books, he came up with a beatnik character named "Cool Cat", and he created the G.I. Juniors line of comics for Harvey. If you know anything else about O'Brien, please post to the comments below.










All I know about Milo Kinn is that he lived in Seattle, Washington. I'm guessing he was married, (based on the pretty dingle ball curtains!) and it's clear that he didn't mind drawing the exact same pretty girl profile over and over. In fact, he seems to have a lot more fun with the "broads" than he does with the "babes". Anyone have any more details on him?




Let me know in the comments if you would like to see more of these.
If you enjoyed this post, see... Eldon Dedini Part One, Part Two (video interview!) and Part Three, Jack Cole And Other Great 50s Playboy Cartoonists, Jack Cole Valentine, Little Annie Fanny Takes A Trip, Kurtzman & Elder's Little Annie Fanny, More Little Annie Fannie, Biography: Jack Davis, Early Erich Sokol Cartoons, A Passel Of Sokol, and More Sokol, Doug Sneyd and Phil Interlandi, Early Interlandi Playboy Cartoons and Meet Doug Sneyd.
Thanks
Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
.
Labels: cartoonist, comics, girlie, jack obrien, magazine, milo kinn, pinups





























3 Comments:
I really like the snake charmer one. I love old lusty comics.
Of course we wanna see more!
Would love to see more. Doing a search in google books, Milo Kinn was listed most recently in the 1987 Writer's Market.
http://books.google.com/books?tab=sp&sa=N&q=%22Milo+Kinn%22&sourceid=navclient-ff&ie=UTF-8&rlz=1B3GGGL_enUS176US231&um=1&sa=N
"MILO KINN... Holds approximately 200
gags/year, sells 100-200 cartoons/year."
Jack O'Brien turns up in all the cheaper magazines all through the fifties in a style that's slightly different from his earlier one. In the late fifties he packaged some of the later issues of Charlton's Mad magazine imitation Crazy. He often drew half of the issue on those. The other half was just as often drawn by a young artist called Tony Couch Jr. who is still alive and working. As I am preparing a huge book/article on the Mad magazine imitations, I contacted him and he told me a bit about their working situation. Couch was new off school and o'Brien worked from his studio in New York. If you want, I can scan a couple of his later gags, but all you need do is pick up a few issues of the Humorama series and you'll find him.
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