Gordon Bell (cartoonist)
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Gordon Bell (1934 – 13 February 2014)<ref name=stringer>Lew Stringer, Gordon Bell 1934 - 2014, Blimey! It's Another Blog About Comics!, 18 February 2014</ref> was a British cartoonist, best known for humorous strips for D. C. Thomson's weekly comics, including "Pup Parade" in The Beano and "Spoofer McGraw" in Sparky.
Biography
Bell grew up in Dundee, Scotland, where he was educated at Clepington Primary School and Morgan Academy, and studied art at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design. He and author Brian Callison ran CB Studios, an art and furniture business, for a time.<ref name=Obit>Template:Cite news</ref>
From the late 1950s he worked as a cartoonist, mainly for D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd, publishers of The Beano and The Dandy among others.<ref name=clark>Alan Clark, Dictionary of British Comic Artists, Writers and Editors, The British Library, 1998, pp. 14-15</ref> He contributed to most of the company's comics.<ref>Jeremy Briggs, Debriefing a Cold War Spy: Garry Fraser interview part 1 Template:Webarchive, Down the Tubes, 23 September 2010</ref> His longest running strip was "Pup Parade", a spin-off of "The Bash Street Kids" featuring the kids' dogs, which he drew regularly in The Beano from 1967 to 1988,<ref>"Pup Parade" at beano.com</ref> in The Topper from 1989 to 1990, and The Beezer from 1990 to 1992.<ref>George Shiers, D.C Thomson Origins: Pup Parade, Wacky Comics, 30 April 2012</ref> According to D. C. Thomson editor Iain McLaughlin, he was "professional, quick, and ready to try anything."<ref name=dtt>John Freeman, In Memoriam: Gordon Bell, Down the Tubes, 21 February 2014</ref> He did some work for IPC's comics, drawing "The Wolf Pack" in Whoopee! in 1974,<ref name=fs>"The Wolf Pack" at Fleetway Street</ref> and for the motoring magazine Autocar, and created the "9 Wellies", cartoon characters designed to cheer up children in hospital for NHS Tayside. His satirical cartoons headed the political diary every Saturday in The Courier, signed "Fax".<ref name=Obit />
His main interest outside work was motor sports. He was a member of 750 Motor Club, and an RAC steward at Knockhill Racing Circuit. He and his wife Isabel, with whom he had two sons and two stepsons, lived in the West End of Dundee.<ref name=Obit /> He died suddenly on 13 February 2014, at the age of 79.<ref name=stringer />
Comics work
- "Pom-Pom" (1958)
- "Dennis the Menace" (1966)
- "The Bash Street Kids" (1967)
- "Pup Parade" (1967–1988, continued in The Topper, 1989–90, and The Beezer, 1990–1992)
- "Roger the Dodger" (1968)<ref name=stringer /><ref name=clark /><ref name=gifford>Denis Gifford, Encyclopedia of Comic Characters, Longman, 1987, pp. 26, 38, 70, 77, 79, 97, 102, 172, 184, 188, 206</ref>
- "The Wabits"
- "Colonel Blink"
- "Harum-Scarem" (1973–74)
- "Sammy's Scribbles" (1973–1975, continued in The Topper, 1975–76)
- "The Buzzies and the Fuzzies" (1973–1975)<ref name=clark /><ref name=gifford />
- "Billy the Kid and Pongo" (1975–76)
- "Fiends Beans" (1975–76)<ref name=clark /><ref name=gifford />
- "Fibba" (1972)
- "The Dandy Editor's Little Helpers"
- "Joe Mince"
- "Scoopy" (1980–1985)
- "Doodlebug" (1980–1982)<ref name=clark /><ref name=gifford />
- "Snoozer"
- "Micro Dot"
- "Hugh's Zoo" (1977–1979, continued in The Beezer, 1979)
- "First Ada" (1977–1979, continued in The Beezer, 1979)<ref name=clark /><ref name=gifford />
- "Spoofer McGraw" (1968–1974)<ref name=clark /><ref name=gifford />
- "Dreamy Daniel"
- "Pearl" (1986)
- "The Neals on Wheels" (1986)
- "Kuckoo Komedy" (1986)<ref name=clark />
- "Jimmy Jinx"
- "The Wolf Pack" (1974, Annuals 1975 and 1976)<ref name=fs />
References
External links
- Gordon Bell's work at Peter Gray's Cartoons and Comics