Walter Berndt | |
---|---|
Born | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. | November 22, 1899
Died | August 15, 1979 Port Jefferson, New York, U.S. | (aged 79)
Area(s) | Cartoonist |
Notable works | Smitty Herby |
Awards | Reuben Award (1969) |
Walter Berndt (November 22, 1899,[1] – August 15, 1979) was an American cartoonist known for his comic strip Smitty, which he drew for 50 years.
Bernt's job as an office boy at the New York Journal , which he took on after dropping out of high school in Brooklyn,[2] put him in contact with leading cartoonists, as he recalled,
When I was 16, I worked as office boy for Tad, Herriman, Hershfield, Tom McNamara, also Hoban, McCay, Gross, T. E. Powers, C. D. Batchelor, Sterrett and Segar. Not much money but a million dollars worth of experience! Stayed with the New York Journal for five years, sweeping floors, running errands, drawing strips, sport cartoons and what have you. Then one year with World Telegram. From there to the Daily News in 1922 where Smitty and Herby work for me![3]
Ed Black wrote about the method E. C. Segar and Berndt used to generate cartoon ideas:
Then the Fun Began was appearing as early as March 3, 1919. When Berndt left that strip on October 13, 1921, it was taken over by Fred Faber, who continued it until 1928.
Berndt's first strip, That's Different, drawn for the Bell Syndicate, lasted less than a year. In 1922, he created Smitty, which he continued until 1973, working with his assistant Charles Mueller. Yet it did not begin without a struggle, as cartoonist Mike Lynch described in a 2005 lecture:
He also produced the comic strip Herby, a topper strip of Smitty, from 1938 through 1960.
In 1937, Berndt moved to Port Jefferson, Long Island, where he lived until his death at age 79. He died on Monday, August 15, 1979, at Mather Memorial Hospital in Port Jefferson,
Berndt won the Reuben Award for 1969 for Smitty.[6]
The Berndt Toast Gang, named in honor of Walter Berndt,[7] is a group of Long Island cartoonists who meet on the last Thursday of each month, as explained by cartoonist Lee Ames:
When the Long Island group, Creig Flessel, Bill Lignante, Frank Springer, Al Micale and I got together to work for Hanna Barbera in the 1960s, we decided to have a Finnegan's Bar lunch every last Thursday of the month. During that period, Creig brought Walter Berndt to join us. We fell in love with the cigar-smoking old-timer (look who's talking!), as he did with us. After a couple of years he passed away and left us grieving. Thereafter, whenever we convened on Thursdays, we'd raise a toast to Walter's memory. On one such, my big mouth opened and uttered, "Fellas, it's time for the Berndt toast!" I wasn't trying to be cute at the time, but I'm not displeased that it stuck and we became the Berndt Toast Gang, one of the largest branches of the National Cartoonists Society.[8][not specific enough to verify]