Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Mad magazine artist and prolific illustrato­r

- By Frazier Moore

NEW YORK — Jack Davis, the prolific Mad magazine illustrato­r, cartoonist and movie poster artist, has died.

He died Wednesday morning, according to his son-in-law, Chris Lloyd. He passed away in St. Simons, Georgia, of natural causes. Hewas 91.

As a struggling young artist in New York, Davis was “about ready to give up, go home to Georgia and be either a forest ranger or a farmer,” he recalled in an interview a few years ago. Then, in1950, he scored the first of many sales of his artwork to EC Comics, which published a line of horror titles including “Tales from the Crypt.”

He stuck with its editors — William M. Gaines, Albert B. Feldstein and Harvey Kurtzman— when they launched the pioneering satire magazine Mad in 1952. He remained a member of “The Usual Gang of Idiots” (as the magazine billed them) for the next six decades. His far-flung illustrati­ons poked fun at politician­s and celebritie­s along with countless portraits of the magazine's perpetuall­y grinning mascot, Alfred E. Neuman.

Along theway, Davis also created numerous covers forTVGuide and Time, and provided artwork for books, record jackets, and posters for films including “It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World,” “American Graffiti” and Woody Allen's “Bananas.”

In 1961, he wrote, drew, and edited his own comic book, “Yak Yak,” for Dell Comics.

While Davis was masterful at caricature­s of recognizab­le figures, he took amusing liberties with all his subjects, endowing them with distinctly large heads, pipe-stem legs and snowshoe-size feet.

As a proud alumnus of the University of Georgia (which he attended on the G.I. Bill after three years in theU.S. Navy), he continued to produce innumerabl­e billboards and other artwork celebratin­g the “Dawgs” throughout his life.

“JackDavisw­as a seminal figure in illustrati­on of the last century,” said Chris Garvin, director of the UGA Lamar Dodd School of Art. “His work was both timely andtimeles­s. It perfectly expressed the era in which he worked.”

Davis is survived by his wife, Dena, of St. Simons, Georgia, as well as a daughter and a son.

 ?? STEPHEN MORTON/AP ?? Jack Davis created covers for TV Guide and Time.
STEPHEN MORTON/AP Jack Davis created covers for TV Guide and Time.

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