The Phnom Penh Post

Creator of Moscow Olympics mascot dies

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VIKTOR Chizhikov, the Russian illustrato­r behind the memorable Mishka bear mascot of the 1980 Moscow Olympics, died on Monday aged 84, his publisher said.

The children’s book illustrato­r came up with the cuddly bear to represent the controvers­ial Games, boycotted by countries including the US.

The publisher AST Deti announced his death on Facebook, calling him the “brightest representa­tive of the post-war generation of book illustrato­rs”.

Chizhikov won a contest among Soviet artists to draw the mascot.

The bear Mishka wore a belt featuring the Olympic rings. He was reproduced in merchandis­e from badges to china figurines that have now become highly collectabl­e.

At the closing ceremony, a giant balloon figure of the bear was carried into the centre of a Moscow stadium.

At the same time, people sitting in the stands held up flash cards to create a composite image of the bear shedding a tear.

Finally, the helium-filled figure flew off as Soviet stars performed a song with the lyrics: “Goodbye, our affectiona­te Mishka, go back to your fairytale forest.”

“When the bear flew off, half the stadium was crying,” then-chief coach of the USSR ski team Leonid Tyagachev told RT television on Monday.

“Everyone remembered that, not just the USSR team members but the whole world and the viewers were blown away.”

“Usually I don’t like my drawings,” Chizhikov said at a talk at Moscow Internatio­nal Book Fair last year, adding he usually spotted things he wished he could change.

“I’ve been looking at the Olympic Mishka for 40 years. I can’t see any flaws.”

The USSR had scant regard for copyright and Chizhikov did not own the rights to the image, losing a court case against NTV television channel in 2010, Sports.ru website reported.

He commented at the time that he was not surprised since he had seen T-shirts with the image on sale at souvenir stands for 30 years and

“they haven’t paid me a ruble”.

Born in Moscow to architect parents, Chizhikov started out as a cartoonist whose work appeared in the satirical magazine Krokodil, aimed at adults, as well as in numerous children’s publicatio­ns with print-runs of millions.

“My debut in print was on February 23, 1952,” he recalled, saying he used the fee for a cartoon in a newspaper for municipal workers to buy his mother a bottle of perfume and go to the cinema.

“No one could have been happier,” he said.

At the time, drawing for magazines was the route to becoming a book illustrato­r, he said.

He went on to illustrate popular children’s books including Soviet reworkings of Western classics.

He illustrate­d a Soviet version of Hugh Lofting’s Doctor Dolittle as well as the Soviet versions of AA Milne’s Winnie the Pooh books.

He also worked with Sergei Mikhalkov, the author of the Soviet anthem praising Joseph Stalin.

 ?? AFP ?? Viktor Chizhikov’s iconic bear ‘Mishka’ captured the attention of the entire world, including people in the US, which boycotted the Games.
AFP Viktor Chizhikov’s iconic bear ‘Mishka’ captured the attention of the entire world, including people in the US, which boycotted the Games.

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