Henry Boltinoff:
1914-2001
His Signature
Was Everywhere—Magazines, Comic Books, Comic Strips
Henry Boltinoff died April
26, 2001. He had been a cartoonist all his life, since about 1933. That’s
68 of his 87 years. And his signature was one of the best-known in the
business.
I met Henry Boltinoff on
February 14, 1998. I was down in Boca Raton, visiting the International
Museum of Cartoon Art to assemble original art for an exhibit at the
Frye Art Museum in Seattle, Washington. And while I was in the neighborhood,
I thought I’d call on various cartoonists who lived in the vicinity.
I asked Jud Hurd, editor/publisher of Cartoonist PROfiles who
was around there, who he’d like a story on; and he suggested Henry.
So I went to his place at
Lake Worth, a snug little one-story townhouse in English Court. He lived
alone, his wife having died in about 1992. They’d been living
full-time in Florida only about four years at the time. At first, they’d
go to Florida for several months of the year, then return to the New
York area. But, Henry said, his wife put her foot down at last. Tired
of packing and unpacking, she said, Let’s move to Florida. So
they did.
Sitting outside on a tiny
patio, we talked for an hour or so and then went to lunch. Driving
with Henry was somewhat harrowing: he didn’t steer so much as
he lunged, veering sharply—suddenly—off in whichever direction
he chose. But we didn’t run into anything. Here’s the article
I produced for PROfiles (as yet, unpublished):
Hedidn’t
sign his name big, but it was still a very visible signature. Clearly
printed. You saw it everywhere. The daily newspaper, comic books, and
in magazines.
For about a decade, Henry
Boltinoff was producing Stoker the Broker, a newspaper panel
syndicated by Washington Star Syndicate (and then McNaught); full-page
and half-page comic strip fillers for National Periodicals comic books
(now DC Comics); and panel cartoons for magazines like Saturday Evening
Post, Look, Collier’s, Ladies Home Journal, and the like.
You saw his signature in
all those places. Henry stacked on Boltinoff. With a neatly
placed underscoring just under the middle of the last name. And the
drawings were just as meticulously rendered—tight drawings, judiciously
placed black solids.
click image above to enlarge
You saw the signature even
in the comic books, which at the time didn’t usually print the
names of the cartoonists or writers who produced their content. But
Boltinoff signed his work. "If I do a drawing and it appears in print,"
he said, "I want my name on it."
Now, in February 1998 when
I visited Boltinoff in his Florida hideaway, the signature is still
as tidy as ever. And so are the drawings. He sits at an antique pedestal
drawing table in one of the two bedrooms of his apartment with the windows
on his right, drawing Hocus Focus, a daily panel for King Features.
"It’s a little puzzle,"
he explained. "Two pictures. The second picture has six different details
from the first. You’re supposed to find them. Not a big thing.
I send it up every two weeks; every two weeks, they send me a check.
If I sat down from nine to five to do a whole week’s work, I’d
do it all in a day and a half. So I work at my own pace. I usually work
two hours here, two hours there. I take a break. I take it easy." He
grinned. "I play tennis."
Boltinoff has been doing
Hocus Focus since about 1986; he started drawing for newspaper
reproduction in 1933. He was nineteen and attending classes at the Art
Students League. His brother Murray was assistant drama editor at the
New York America, and Henry did theatrical portraits for the
paper. He was paid by the column, $25 for a two-column picture, two
a week. When the paper suddenly started asking for four-column pictures,
Boltinoff’s salary doubled.
When the American
folded in 1937, Boltinoff was out of work. He turned to two highschool
classmates, George Wolfe and Ben Roth, both cartoonists, who were sharing
a studio. They advised him to start doing cartoons for magazines.
"They said, Do a batch of
roughs, about 10-15 a week," Boltinoff recalled. "We’ll meet you
on Wednesday and take you around. In those days, you could make a living
doing magazine cartooning. Today, I don’t know what you could
do. But Wednesday was Look Day then: cartoon editors looked at your
submissions if you brought them in personally. You could spend the whole
day Wednesday, going from one magazine to another. There were that many
magazines. The Saturday Evening Post was printed in Philadelphia,
but the cartoon editor came in every Tuesday night to see the cartoonists
on Wednesday morning."
Cartoonists went from office
to office, sitting in waiting rooms, waiting; then showing their wares
to stone-faced cartoon editors.
"One time, I was going around
with George Wolfe," Boltinoff said, "and we went in to see Gurney Williams
at Collier’s. I’d just become a father. My first
child. A few days before. So I said to Gurney Williams, I just became
a father—congratulate me. And he said, Congratulations. And I
handed over my roughs. He looked through them. Handed them back and
said, Better luck next time. George couldn’t believe it. And he
went in and said to Williams, Just to show you’re a nice guy,
hold out one or two—you don’t have to take them. The next
week they can be rejected. But you don’t slap a guy in the face
like that when he just became a father."
Most cartoonists submitted
roughs on Look Day. If an editor liked one or more, he’d ask for
a finished drawing. Or he might "hold" a rough until the next week.
When the cartoonist returned the next Wednesday, the editor either returned
the rough, rejected, or asked for finished artwork.
For lunch, all the cartoonists
would gather at the Pen and Pencil, a former speak-easy on 45th Street
near Third Avenue. John Bruno had started the bistro during Prohibition,
and when adult beverages became legal again in 1933, he applied for
a restaurant license. For the application form, he needed a name for
the place. He asked his patrons for advice. Most of them were newspaper
men and cartoonists. Cartoonist Gil Fox told me that he suggested the
name Pen and Pencil because that described the tools of the trade of
those who frequented Bruno’s.
Every Wednesday the magazine
cartoonists took a mid-day breather and a beaker or two over lunch at
the Pen and Pencil. Despite their being competitors—each one visiting
and trying to sell cartoons at the same magazines (so if one cartoonist
sold a cartoon at one place, the chances of another cartoonist selling
there were reduced accordingly)—they didn’t feel cut-throat
about it, Boltinoff said. In fact, one time when he had to be out of
town on a Wednesday, he gave his batch to his friend George Wolfe, who
took them around. He’d show his batch first; then Boltinoff’s
batch.
I reminded Boltinoff that
Charles Schulz had started by doing magazine cartoons. Schulz always
thought kindly of John Bailey, the cartoon editor at The Saturday
Evening Post, for giving him advice about his work.
Boltinoff remembered Schulz
coming to the Pen and Pencil one Wednesday. "He didn’t remember
this when I mentioned it some years ago," Boltinoff said, "but he came
in, and he wasn’t wearing a tie; he had an open sport shirt on.
And the head waiter told him, You need a tie; I’ll get one in
the office. In those days, for people who didn’t come properly
dressed, the head waiters kept a cotton jacket and an old tie in the
office that they’d let you wear. But George Wolfe said, Don’t
bother. And he took out a dollar bill, twisted it like a bow tie, and
he put it on Schulz with a paper clip. Schulz gave it back to him later.
Nowadays, ties aren’t that important."
Once, Boltinoff told me,
McGowan Miller, an habitué of another New York cartoonists hangout called
the Palm, came over to the Pen and Pencil during one of the Wednesday
gatherings and asked all the magazine cartoonists if they would meet
the next Wednesday at the Palm over on Second Avenue, a block or so
away.
The Palm’s walls had
been decorated over the years by syndicated newspaper cartoonists (Milton
Caniff, George McManus, Jimmy Hatlo, Billy DeBeck, Fred Lasswell, and
so on); they drew their characters on the walls, and the restaurant
made quite a production out of its merry murals.
The Palm had just opened
a new upstairs room, and the walls were bare. Mac Miller invited the
magazine cartoonists to decorate the walls. Just put up pencil sketches,
he said; he, Miller, would paint them afterwards. And the Palm would
stand them all to drinks that day and their lunches.
So the next week, they all
went to the Palm. They drank and ate. They drank and ate well. And they
put pencil sketches on the walls.
The following week, they
were all back in the Pen and Pencil. Then Mac Miller came in. Very shame-faced.
"I’m embarrassed," he said. And he explained that the Palm had
a new busboy, a kid who didn’t speak English well. And when he
came into the upstairs room that the cartoonists had lunched in, he
saw the mess on the walls. And he cleaned it all off.
So they all went back over
the following Wednesday for another free lunch and drinks.
The Palm with its decorated
walls is still there; and, until a year or so ago, so was the Pen and
Pencil. But now it’s gone. And so’s Costello’s, a
favorite of Walt Kelly’s and James Thurber’s.
In making the rounds, the
cartoonists started at the offices of the highest paying magazines and
worked down the pay scale.
"Look paid a lot,"
Boltinoff remembered. "I never went to The New Yorker. It was
never my cup of tea. I never liked it. I remember years ago in The
New Yorker, there were great cartoonists. Each one was a great artist
himself. Robert Day, Richard Decker, Richard Taylor, Peter Arno, George
Price—everybody had a different style. Good artwork. And now the
stuff—well, I don’t like it much now."
Selling cartoons to magazines
is a highly speculative undertaking, and when Boltinoff got married
in 1940, he felt he needed a more regular source of income, so he turned
to comic books. He went to National Periodical Publications because
he knew the editor, Whitney Ellsworth.
"Whit said, Do a couple filler
pages—whatever you want," Boltinoff said. "In those days, comic
books were 64 pages with no advertising. So there was plenty of room
for a filler. Now the books are 32 pages and they take advertising.
I started doing some work for him. I did it for almost thirty years."
The fillers were half-page,
full-page and occasionally 2-3 page comic strips. Boltinoff wrote them,
drew them, and lettered them. The strips were named after a host of
protagonists: Jerry the Jitterbug, Varsity Vic, Cora the Car Hop, Peg,
Ollie, Moolah the Mystic, Private Pete, Shorty, Tricksy, Dover and Clover,
Homer, Casey the Cop, Bebe, and so on. In the 1960s, he was also doing
Cap’s Hobby Hints, which was aimed at model builders and
the like.
Boltinoff did several filler
page strips a week, submitting roughs for approval first. And he was
able to pay his brother back for getting him the assignments at the
American.
One day Ellsworth was grousing
about his job, saying the work was getting too much; he needed an assistant.
Boltinoff told him about his brother, who had been working for a public
relations firm since the American folded.
"I said, My brother’s
a writer; I’ll send him up. And he went up there, and he got a
job, and he stayed there over 50 years."
But having a brother as an
editor didn’t give Boltinoff any advantage when it came to getting
his filler page submissions approved.
"It was tougher with him
there," Boltinoff said. "They had other editors. I got work from this
editor, and from that editor. The toughest guy was my brother: I always
had to submit a rough for approval. When he put something into a comic
book with my name on it, he wanted to make sure it was a really good
gag. He didn’t want people to say, Ahh, you print this crap because
your brother did it. So he was in a spot. And, of course, so was I,"
he finished with a laugh.
One of Boltinoff’s
filler pages reappeared in a 1990 book of reprints from DC called The
Greatest 1950s Stories Ever Told. Casey the Cop. "I got paid for
this reprint," he told me. "I got more for the reprint than I did for
the original artwork!"
He sometimes did whole stories
for comic books. "They asked me if I’d like to write for some
of the teenage titles—like A Date with Judy," he said.
"I would figure out a theme, write a whole bunch of gags about it, and
then piece them all together into a story. I found one advantage in
writing your own stuff is that you never write scenes calling for very
complicated drawings," he laughed.
While doing filler pages
for National, Boltinoff continued doing gag cartoons for the magazines.
But both magazines and comic books began cutting back in the late 1950s.
In 1960, Boltinoff was glad to undertake a project suggested to him
by a small syndicate, Columbia Features. This was Stoker the Broker,
a daily gag panel about the business world, which would be marketed
as a feature for newspapers’ financial section or stock report
page. Boltinoff had attempted a couple of short-lived syndicated features
before, but this one, as it turned out, lasted.
"Once an editor told me he
couldn’t see a cartoon in the financial section," Boltinoff said.
"Business was too serious. I told him the first editorial cartoon probably
got the same reaction. And now if you don’t see a cartoon, it’s
not an editorial page."
Stoker the Broker
lasted thirty years. It’s longevity is even more remarkable considering
that Boltinoff never liked doing it much.
"What’s funny about
the stock market?" he said. "I knew nothing about the stock market when
I started it. I learned, though. But writing the gags was a pain."
Then in 1970, he was invited
to replace George Crenshaw as the artist on Nubbin, a comic strip
about a farm kid written by Jim Burnett. By this time, the teenage comic
books were gone, so Boltinoff welcomed the opportunity and continued
producing the strip for almost twenty years. (For more about his career,
see CARTOONIST PROfiles No. 48, December 1980. Back issues are $10;
P.O. Box 325, Fairfield, CT 06430.)
With a track record on individual
features that runs for decades, Boltinoff can’t understand Bill
Watterson and Gary Larson, who quit their features after relatively
short runs.
"Temperamental guys," he
said. "I don’t know what they were doing before they did strips,
but a guy like me in the magazine business, for years, you go along,
week to week, you don’t know whether you’ll get a rejection
slip or an okay. And here’s somebody has a syndicated feature—you
do what you want, and you get paid regularly every week, and they give
it up. It came too easy. They don’t appreciate it.
"They said they burned out,"
Boltinoff continued. "But if you’re overworked, you do what most
cartoonists do—you hire somebody to help. No one does it all by
himself. Milton Caniff had guys helping. Frank Engli did the lettering.
The only guy who’s done his own by himself is Charlie Schulz.
No assistants, he says; I do it myself. But his strip is easier to do
than Milton Caniff’s. That’s something to draw! All those
backgrounds. But Charlie Schulz said, When I die, that’s the end
of the strip. But I say, if you die, why should you deprive your family
of a nice income? United Feature can hire a guy to write it and someone
else to draw it.
"When Chic Young who did
Blondie died, his son, Dean, took over and writes it," he said.
"Dean Young lives down here, around Tampa. And they got Stan Drake to
draw it. Wonderful artist. Used to do The Heart of Juliet Jones.
Wonderful. And he started to do Blondie. I spoke to Bill Yates,
who was cartoon editor then up at King, and I said, How the hell does
Stan Drake sit and draw like Chic Young after doing all that realistic
stuff he did? So Bill says, I guess he likes to eat."
Playing tennis three times
a week, Boltinoff is six months ahead on Hocus Focus.
"I showed my daughter where
the finished drawings are," he said, smiling, "—up there, on that
shelf in the closet. If something happens to me, she can send the stuff
in, and she’ll have six months of money coming in. It’s
like an extra life insurance policy."
Now, regretfully, she’ll
be cashing in on that insurance policy.
The Syndicated Boltinoff
: 1946, This and That; 1960, Woody Forest; 1960-1988, Stoker the Broker;
1970-1988, Nubbin; 1986- To date, Hocus Focus.
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