Monday, December 26, 2022

Creator: Keith Haring, Art, Illustration and Lettering



Brooklyn Academy of Music, November 15–18, 1984




The New YorkerSeptember 16, 1985



































1986



































Catalog design by the Pushpin Group





1987
National Geographic, September 1995

U.S. News & World Report, May 6, 1996

Newsweek, July 15, 1996










































(Updated September 24, 2023; Next post on Monday: Happy and Prosperous New Year)

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Creator: A Few Details About Artist, Animator and Director Bessie Mae Kelley


Bessie Mae Kelley was born Elizabeth Mae Kelley. The date of her birth is unclear: November 1889 in the 1900 United States Census; November 10, 1890, Minnesota Death Index;  November 10, 1897, Social Security Death Index. Kelley’s birthplace was Port Allegany, Pennsylvania on her marriage license (at Ancestry.com), and Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania in Descendants of Benjamin Fiddler and Maria Fosbrook Fiddler: Family History and Genealogy, 1838–1987 (1989). 

According to the 1900 United States Census, Kelley and her sister were born in Pennsylvania. Kelley’s father was Canadian and her mother English. They were residents of Caribou, Maine where her father was manager of the Caribou Town Farm.


In the 1910 census, Kelley and her parents continued to live in Caribou. She was a self-employed artist and her father a farmer. They lived on Riverside Street. 


Sometime after the census, Kelley studied at the Walker Institute of Art and Pratt Institute.

The New York Times, December 15, 2022, published an article about animation scholar Mindy Johnson and her research on Kelley. Johnson said Kelley’s career started in 1917. At the time New York was the center of American animation. Kelley worked for Bray Productions, Paul Terry (“Aesop’s Fables”) and Max Fleischer (“Out of the Inkwell”). 

Kelley has not yet been found in the 1920 census. 

In December 1920, production of the “Gasoline Alley” animated cartoons was reported in the Exhibitors Herald and Motion Picture News. Bray Pictures Corporation was hired to handle the animation and Kelley directed some of the cartoons. 

Around 1924, Kelley left the animation industry and toured as chalk talk artist. 

Patriot Ledger (Quincy, Massachusetts), October 31, 1925, page 1 column 5:
Ladies’ Night Is Observed by Mt. Wollaston Chapter
... Another entertainment was Miss Bessie May [sic] Kelley, crayon artist. She drew landscape scenes and gave an illustration of how animated pictures are drawn from which films are made. ...
Patriot Ledger, December 3, 1925

Patriot Ledger (Quincy, Massachusetts), December 5, 1925, page 5 column 3:
Secrets of Animated Movies Is Revealed in Talk
Despite the heavy downpour of rain last evening a good-sized audience attended the entertainment given under the auspices of the Wollaston Parent-Teacher Association in the Wollaston school hall, the proceeds of which are to be used as a fund for the school playground. The Quincy high school band rendered selections under the direction of Miss Maude Howes and Miss Bessie Mae Kelly [sic], animated cartoonist, revealed the secret of how animated cartoons for the movies, such as “Aesop’s Fables,” are made. She drew with colored chalk cartoons of a mother spanking a boy. Although she used only two movements in her drawings, she explained that it would be necessary to make about 16 cartoons for that part of a moving picture. Repeating Joyce Kilmer’s poem “The House with Nobody in It,” she next drew an expressive picture of an abandoned farm-house. Then with a few deft touches on a fresh sheet of paper she sketched a knocker and making a remark that this was an article one never has when one wants it, but that she was now going to draw one that was always around when it wasn’t wanted, she proceeded to change it into a woman whose very face spelt trouble. Much amusement was finished by the cartoons Miss Kelly depicted of the characters in an entertaining little poem, “Lost Lovers.” …

… Miss Kelly made her last appearance with a beautiful sketch, “Sunset,” while Mrs. Clark played “The End of a Perfect Day,” on her lyre, accompanied at the piano by Miss Soule. …

Boston Herald, November 28, 1926
Kelley was represented by the
H.B. Williams Musical Agency.

Evening Leader (Corning, New York), July 16, 1927: Kelley in column one under
Entertainment and column three under Outline Program Sixth Weekday

Evening Leader (Corning, New York), July 27, 1927, page 5 column 4:
N.Y. Comedy Success Chautauqua Feature
... Miss Bessie Mae Kelley, who will entertain the young folks of all ages at the Chautauqua tent Thursday afternoon possesses the unique distinction of being the only woman animated cartoonist in the motion picture profession, and has had thorough grounding and training in her art.

She has been associated for seven years with the Bray Productions of New York and Chicago; has also assisted Max Fliescher [sic] on his famous cartoon stories, “Out of the Inkwell,” and Paul Terry in animating “Aesop’s Fables.” She has, personally, directed the series of animated cartoons “Gasoline Alley.” ...
Patriot Ledger (Quincy, Massachusetts), December 17, 1927, page 7 column 5:
Tehye Hsieh Speaker at Wollaston
... Miss Bessie May Kelley, cartoonist of the Bray Animated Motion pictures, whose clever drawings and amusing recitations kept the audience highly entertained. The artist explained the process required in the making of such cartoons as the “Aesop Fables” which she “animated.” It takes the artists about 900 hours to perfect one of these films which we may see on any screen in less than eight minutes. One background is drawn and then each movement of each little character is drawn and placed over the background, many sheets of paper being used to make a character make one step. The slower they move in the movies the more pictures have to be drawn. When the artist has finished, they pictures are traced on celluloid 5-1000 of an inch thick and then handed to the color man who colors the figures on the back to blot out the background. 

Miss Kelley demonstrated her wonderful skill, in line and color, in her picture of “The House with Nobody in It,” accompanied by her recitation; caused a great deal of mirth with her “Moo, Cow, Moo,” and character sketches of suitors for her hand, and bought [sic] down the house with her life portraits of Dr. Sneath and Chester I. Campbell, who obligingly posed for her. Mr. Campbell then introduced Dr. Tehye Hsieh, director of the Chinese Trade Bureau, who spoke on the “Real Trouble in China.”
Boston Herald (Massachusetts), July 5, 1929, page 2 column 6:
20,000 Persons Enjoy Presentation of Holiday Pantomime on Common
The eighth annual community pageant “Beauty and the Beast,” a colorful pantomime, was presented yesterday on the Common before 20,000 persons.

Depending largely on colorful costumes and settings for the success of the pageant, Mrs. Aline Meginot, who designed the costumes Harold F. Lindergreen, designer, and Bessie May [sic] Kelley, painter of the settings, deserve praise. ...
The 1930 census recorded Kelley in Boston, Massachusetts at 35 Audubon Road. She shared an apartment with New Hampshire native Frances M. Pattee, a nurse, who, in the 1920 census, was involved with music.


The 1930 and 1931 Boston, Massachusetts city directories listed Kelley as an artist at 16 Blossom Court.


Greenfield Recorder (Massachusetts), October 29, 1930, page 5 column 3: 
Turners Falls Rotary Club Holds Annual Ladies’ Night
Turners Falls Inn Is Scene of Hallowe’en Event—Entertainment Is Pleasing
Turners Falls, Oct. 29.—The Turners Falls Rotary club held their annual ladles’ night last evening at the Turners Fall Inn. Being so close to Halloween, the event took the form of a Hallowe’en party. The rooms of the Inn were decorated, the orange and black color scheme being carried out A turkey supper was served the members and their guests, and between courses the popular songs of the day were sung by the entire gathering. ...

... Following the contests the entertainment committee presented Miss Adele Neff of Boston, and a Novelette Trio, who presented an interesting entertainment. The trio gave some very pleasing numbers of vocal solos and instrumental selections. Miss Bessie Mae Kelley, cartoonist, showed wonderful skill with her crayons, and the work of Charles Budden as pianist and William Blackley as a tenor soloist was enjoyed. Miss Neff presented a fine program of character sketches and readings. ...
In November 1930, Kelley spoke at the University of Pennsylvania

Winchester Star (Massachusetts), January 1, 1932, page 1 column 5:
Fortnightly Notes
The children’s party on Monday afternoon, Dec. 28, was a great success. The grace and beauty of the dance numbers presented by Grace De Carlton, director of the Dance Department of the National Associated Studios of Music, and her pupils delighted both children and adults. The program by Bessie Mae Kelley, the only woman in the United States who draws animated cartoons for the motion pictures, was clever and unusual, and provided excellent entertainment for the youngsters. Miss Kelley explained the process of making the cartoons and illustrated with sketches of the little animals who appear in Aesop’s Fables cartoons. While making her other sketches, she recited humorous stories and poems which pleased the children immensely. She made cartoons of two of the small boys in the audience to the great delight of the other children. ...
On July 15, 1932, “Elizabeth M. Kelley” and William A. Hirschy married in Nashua, New Hampshire, according to the New Hampshire Marriage Record Index at Ancestry.com. (Descendants of Benjamin Fiddler and Maria Fosbrook Fiddler misspelled Hirschy as Hirshy.) Her occupation was artist and his machinist.

Springfield Republican (Massachusetts), September 11, 1932, page 5 column 3:
Clambake to Be Held
... Following the clambake, there will be ... entertainment consisting of ... Bessie Mae Kelley of the Bray Productions of New York and Chicago, who has made several cartoons for moving pictures. ...
About a decade after Kelley’s withdrawal from animation, another woman advanced to the rank of animator. The Times-Herald (Olean, New York), November 7, 1934, published the following article by Leo Baron, a United Press staff correspondent. 
For twenty-five years the cartoon department of the film business, a veritable industry in itself, has hired only men animators. Women artists have been unable to crash the field. Of the hundreds who made the attempt none seemed able to stand the strain of drawing the same caricature over and over, thousands of times, in a room filled with men.

But now the old order has changed. A young woman, only twenty-two and it takes at least five years to make the average cartoon animator—has proven that she can draw Betty Boop and Popeye as well, and as consistently, as any of the better masculine ar­tists.

Max Fleischer, father of screen cartoons, who has given an army of women artists an opportunity to pull themselves up to $250 a week, which is the better animator’s salary, found it difficult to believe that this conservative girl, who had never joined even in of­fice conversation during the three years she has been on his lesser personnel payroll, had actually made the grade.

She is Miss Lillian Friedman of New York, and she now has a long term contract with full screen credit.
Ancestry.com has a number of Minneapolis, Minnesota city directories. The years for 1934 and 1935 are incomplete. The 1936 directory listed “Bessie M Hirschy” and her husband at 5510 27th Avenue South. She was “Elizabeth M Hirschy” in the 1937 directory.


Kelley and her husband were at the same address in the 1940 census. She had four years of college and no income in 1939.


Her husband signed his World War II draft card on October 16, 1940. 


The 1950 census recorded Kelley on Wilmatt Hill in Minnetonka, Minnesota. She was a housewife. 


A photograph of Kelley and her husband was published in the 1955 book, Twenty Five Years in the Wide, Wide World! Quarter Century Report of the Class of 1930 of Dartmouth College. The profile said
Bill married Elizabeth Mae Kelley (Walker Institute of Art and Pratt Institute) in 1931. 
They married in 1932. 

Kelley’s parents and sister were laid to rest at Evergreen Cemetery. Kelley’s husband passed away on March 17, 1980. Kelley passed away on October 21, 1981, in Wabasha, Minnesota. She was laid to rest at Lakewood Cemetery



SIDEBAR: Women in Animation, 1920
Searching the 1920 United States Census revealed six women in animation. They were found using the keyword cartoonist. Going through the list of cartoonists I looked at the column for industry and saw moving picture, motion picture and film company. It’s not clear if anyone was an animator. 

Josephine Kelly born around 1894 in Missouri; Manhattan resident

Helen Kroll born around 1900 in New York; Manhattan resident; in 1921 she married Walter Goldwyn a dentist

Eva Malloy born around 1903 in New York; Bronx resident

Alice Morgan born around 1895 in New Hampshire; Manhattan resident; in 1930 she was cartoon instructor at a studio; in 1940 she was a Fleischer Studios artist

Dorothy Morgan (Alice’s sister) born around 1901 in New Hampshire; Manhattan resident; in 1924 she married Milton Ulmer a cigar manufacturer

Helen Stehlik born around 1901 in Bohemia; Manhattan resident

It’s not clear if any of the following women worked in animation. They were artists in the moving/motion picture and film industry.

Dora M. Adams born around 1875 in New York; Brooklyn resident; in 1925 she was a  housewife

Augusta Anderson born around 1888 in the District of Columbia; Manhattan resident

Jennie Ball born around 1880 in New York; Brooklyn resident

Clara Coors born around 1889 in Minnesota; Brooklyn resident; in 1930 she was a hospital nurse

Marie Hennings born around 1903 in New York; Brooklyn resident; in 1930 she was an office clerk, photograph office

Lucille Klebold born around 1904 in Georgia; Manhattan resident

May Knauff born around 1897 in New York; Bronx resident

Etheyle Parry born around 1897 in New York; Manhattan resident

Josephine L. Scaiano born around 1904 in New York; Staten Island resident

Margaret Schecker born around 1903 in New York; West Hoboken, New Jersey resident; in 1930 she was a stenographer at a plumbing company

Anna Stanley born around 1892 in New York; Manhattan resident

Elizabeth K. Thomson born around 1884 in Scotland; Queens resident

Hazel Williams born around 1898 in New York; Bronx resident; in 1940 she was a telephone operator


Related Animation Post
Pauline Loth (Fleischer Studios)


Women in Comics Posts
Claire Szep (Updated April 17, 2023)


(Next post on Sunday: Christmas, 1902)

Monday, December 19, 2022

Comics: Claire S. Moe, Artist


Claire Stalder Moe was born in either 1892, 1893 or 1897, in Rüegsau, Bern, Switzerland. The birth years are based on passenger and census records. Her birthplace was noted on Swiss Overseas Emigration records at Ancestry.com. Moe’s maiden name was Stalder not Stander. (The error is at Women in Comics Wiki, Lambiek Comiclopedia and other websites.) Moe’s daughter, Claire Gurine Moe, said, on her Social Security application (transcribed at Ancestry.com), her parents were “Gunnar Moe” and “Claire Stalder”. 


Also, the name “Claire Stalder Moe” appeared twice in a 1947 New York Supreme Court record. 

As Clary Stalder, Moe’s first visit to the United States was around February 1915 when she arrived in New York City. The 1930 United States Census recorded her immigration year as 1914. Her birth year was 1892.


Moe’s second trip (this time as Claire Stalder) to the U.S. began in June 1920. Her birth year was 1893.


According to the 1925 New York state census, Moe and her Norwegian-born husband, a tile setter, resided at 33 Brown Place in Harrison, New York. Moe had been in the United States for five years. She immigrated in 1920, a date repeated on a 1928 passenger list. 


The New York, New York Marriage License Index, at Ancestry.com, said “Claire Stalder” and “Gunnar Moe” obtained a Manhattan marriage license, number 29086, on September 30, 1922. Apparently, one or both of them lived in Manhattan. 



Their daughter was born on October 26, 1925 in Port Chester, New York. 

In 1927 they sailed to Norway to visit Moe’s mother-in-law. On March 8, 1928, the trio departed aboard the steamship Stavangerfjord from Oslo, Norway. They arrived in New York City on March 18. The passenger list said Moe was French, five feet six inches, with blue eyes and brown hair. Column 22 said Moe had been in the United States from 1920 to 1927. 



The 1930 census had the same address for the Moe family. Moe was a French-speaking alien.


The 1940 census said Moe’s highest level of education was the eighth grade and she had no occupation. 


Moe’s daughter attended Harrison High School and graduated, in 1949, from Rider College in Trenton, New Jersey. 


According to the 1950 census, Moe was naturalized and keeping house in Harrison at the same address. The new member of the household was son-in-law, Robert Lamont, who married her daughter in 1949. 



The censuses made no mention of Moe as an artist. Women and the Comics (1985) said 
Lloyd and Grace Jacquet’s shop, known as Funnies Incorporated, was not as much a “factory” as Binder’s. Artists were allowed to sign their work if the publisher did not object, and the Jacquets encouraged individuals to produce complete strips — writing, lettering and drawing as a unit. The Jacquet shop also operated as a freelancer’s agenting service, accepting and placing work by a number of artists who had only a peripheral connection to the comic book industry. Features produced in the shop or sold through it were published by a wide selection of companies, among them Timely (Marvel), Centaur and Novelty. Aside from Grace Jacquet and Edith Ross, who functioned as editors, other women in the shop included Nina Albright, Dolores Carroll, Lucy Feller, Tarpe Mills, Claire Moe, and Ramona Patenaude. 
In A Century of Women Cartoonists (1993) Trina Robbins said 
As early as 1938, Claire S. Moe drew a series of children’s adventure strips with circus-related themes for Centaur’s Funny Pages. The Circus and Sue, Circus Days, and Little Mary of the Circus were all exciting serials reminiscent of films from the period featuring Shirley Temple. 
Many of Moe’s comics credits are at the Grand Comics Database and Who’s Who of American Comic Books 1928–1999. She used the pen names Orville Wells and Vic Todd. BDGest has a photograph of Moe from an unnamed source. Some of Moe’s paintings can be viewed at Morphy Auctions and Proxibid

Find a Grave said Moe passed away in 1976 and was laid to rest on August 5, 1976 at Ferncliff Cemetery and Mausoleum. Her husband passed away on August 29, 1960 (New York State Death Index) and daughter in February 1983. 

Selected Comics
Funny Picture Stories, Volume 1, Number 4, February 1937: Yellow Terror
Funny Pages, Volume 2, Number 1, September 1937: Circus Days
Comic Pages, Volume 3, Number 6, December 1939: His Highness
Wonderworld Comics, #23, March 1941: Patty O’Day
Wonderworld Comics, #26, June 1941: Patty O’Day
Wonderworld Comics, #32, December 1941: Patty O’Day


Women in Comics Posts
Claire Szep (Updated April 17, 2023)




Monday, December 12, 2022

Comics: A Few Details About Artist Vic Carrabotta and His Wife, Connie Zeagler


At Ancestry.com, there is no New York City birth record for Victor S. Carrabotta on June 24, 1929. There is a New York State birth record for Salvatore V. Carabatto on June 24, 1929 in Eastchester, [Westchester County], New York. 


Carrabotta and his family have not yet been found in the 1930 United States Census. 

The 1940 census said Carrabotta, his parents Alfred and Rose, and older sister Theresa, lived in the Bronx, New York at 1246 Beach Avenue. His father was an orchestra musician and his mother worked in a WPA program. 


On February 15, 1942, Carrabotta’s father signed his World War II draft card. His address was 1382 White Plains Road in the Bronx. 


Carrabotta joined the Marine Corps. At Ancestry.com, a muster roll dated October 1948 placed him with the 4th Recruit Training Battalion, Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, South Carolina.

According to the 1950 census, Carrabotta was counted with his widow mother in the Bronx at 1436 St. Lawrence Avenue. Carrabotta’s occupation was the armed forces. He was discharged in 1951.


Carrabotta talked about his comic book career, in an interview with Jim Amash, that appeared in Alter Ego, #58, May 2006. Carrabotta said his wife, Connie, was seven to eight months pregnant when, in 1952, he met Jack Kirby who sent him to Stan Lee. Lee gave Carrabotta his first comic book job, “The House on the Hill”, in Astonishing #13, May 1952. In 1952, Carrabotta married Constance Zeagler in the Bronx. 


Zeagler was born on June 18, 1935, in Lone Star, South Carolina. She was sixteen or seventeen years old at the time of her marriage. Census records said Zeagler lived with her parents, Corbett and Julia, and sister, Emily, in Pine Grove, South Carolina. Apparently she met Carrabotta when he was a Marine. Zeagler passed away on April 14, 2020. On April 25, 2020, her granddaughter, Layla Carrabotta, lit a candle and said “I love you, grandma.” at the South Carolina Cremation website



The Grand Comics Database has a checklist of Carrabotta’s work. His website has a Wikipedia link. 

Carrabotta worked in advertising and talked about it with Daniel Best. Here is an advertising example: Carrabotta co-art directed a 30-second TV commercial that was recognized in The 62nd Art Directors Annual (1983). 

Wikipedia said Carrabotta married twice. It’s not clear if the following grooms are him. The New Jersey Marriage Index, at Ancestry.com, said a Victor S. Carrabotta who married Alison P. Falby on February 11, 1986 in Cresskill, New Jersey. The New York, New York Marriage License Index recorded a Victor S. Carrabotta who married Shuying Fu on August 15, 2000 in Manhattan. 

Carrabotta passed away on November 22, 2022 in South Carolina. Obituaries are at Comic Book Resources and The Daily Cartoonist


(Next post on Monday: Claire S. Moe, Artist)