Dale Messick
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Dale Messick | |
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Messick, shown working on Brenda Starr in 1953.
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Born | Dalia Messick April 11, 1906 South Bend, Indiana |
Died | April 5, 2005 (aged 98) Sonoma County, California |
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Cartoonist, Writer, Artist |
Notable works
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Brenda Starr |
Awards | National Cartoonists Society's Story Comic Book Award, 1975 Milton Caniff Lifetime Achievement Award, 1997 |
She was born in South Bend, Indiana,[1] to a seamstress and commercial artist. She had an interest in writing and drawing since childhood. She attended Hobart High School in Hobart, Indiana[2] and studied briefly at the Ray Commercial Art School in Chicago but left to begin a career as a professional artist.
Contents
Greeting cards
She began working for a Chicago greeting card company[3] and was successful but quit when her boss lowered her pay during the Great Depression. In 1933, she moved to New York City where she found work with another greeting card company at a higher salary, $50 a week, sending nearly half of it back to her family in Indiana. She recalled, "I had $30 a week to live it up. You could walk down 42nd Street and have bacon and eggs and toast and coffee and hash brown potatoes and orange juice—the works—for 25 cents."[3][4]Comic strips
She began assembling a portfolio of comic strip samples. Messick was not the first female comic strip creator; Nell Brinkley, Gladys Parker and Edwina Dumm had all achieved success in the field, but there was still a bias against women. Messick decided to change her first name to Dale so her work would be seen by editors.[3] She created a variety of comic strips (Weegee, Mimi the Mermaid, Peg and Pudy, the Struglettes, Streamline Babies), but none were selected for publication.[citation needed]Brenda Starr
Messick created the character of Brenda Starr in 1940, naming it after a debutante from the 1930s and basing her appearance on Rita Hayworth.[1] Messick wanted to produce a strip with a female protagonist; she decided a career as a reporter would allow her character to travel and have adventures, adventures more glamorous than those actually experienced by most reporters. She later commented on this in a 1986 article in the San Francisco Chronicle:“ | I used to get letters from girl reporters saying that their lives were nowhere near as exciting as Brenda's. I told them that if I made Brenda's life like theirs, nobody would read it.[5] | ” |
Messick stopped drawing the strip in 1980 and ended her role writing the script two years later, her roles assumed by a number of other women writers and cartoonists. The final strip was published on January 2, 2011.[6]
Other strips
Messick went on to create a number of other comic strips, but none achieved the success of Brenda Starr. The only other strip which she worked on which is generally remembered was Perry Mason, which she illustrated.On April 24, 1955, she appeared on What's My Line? After the panel correctly identified her as a comic strip artist, they were given a full description of her real name, professional name and job as "illustrator" of Brenda Starr.
Messick retired from producing Brenda Starr in 1980. Ramona Fradon (artist) and Linda Sutter (writer) took over the strip from 1980 to 1995. June Brigman (artist) and Mary Schmich (writer) have done the strip from 1995 to the present. Messick wasn't impressed with her successors' versions of Starr, according to a 1998 quote in the Sonoma County Independent: "Now it doesn't look like Brenda at all. She looks more like she works at a bank. No glamour, no curves, no fashion — but it's still going pretty good."[4]
Following her retirement from Brenda Starr, Messick moved to Oakmont, California, to be near her daughter and grandchildren.[1] She continued to work and created a new strip, Granny Glamour, which ran in Oakmont Gardens Magazine, a local weekly magazine.[4] It ended after she had a stroke in 1998 and couldn't draw any more.[citation needed]
Awards
In 1995, Brenda Starr was one of 20 comic strips honored by a series of United States postage stamps; Messick was the only living creator. She received the National Cartoonists Society's Story Comic Book Award for 1975 and their Milton Caniff Lifetime Achievement Award in 1997 for her work on Brenda Starr.[3]References
- Gaura, Maria Alicia. "Dale Messick—cartoonist who drew Brenda Starr," San Francisco Chronicle (April 8, 2005).
- LakeNet - Dale Messick Hobart Connection
- Sullivan, Patricia. "Cartoonist Dale Messick Dies; Creator of Brenda Starr Strip," Washington Post (April 8, 2005), p. B06.
- Howell, Daedalus. "Brenda Starr's Dale Messick is a firecracker," Sonoma County Independent (February 19, 1998).
- Obituary, Editor & Publisher
- Itzkoff, Dave (December 9, 2010). "Stop the Presses: ‘Brenda Starr, Reporter’ Comic Is Ending". The New York Times.. Retrieved 8 November 2011
External links
Library resources about Dale Messick |
By Dale Messick |
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