Business World

Mort Walker, creator of ‘Beetle Bailey’ comic, 94

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WASHINGTON — Cartoonist Mort Walker, whose lovable Beetle Bailey character survived decades of military life at dysfunctio­nal Camp Swampy without ever doing any real work, has died, news media reported.

Walker was 94 and died Saturday at his home in Stamford, Connecticu­t, the National Cartoonist­s Society reported on its website. He died of complicati­ons from pneumonia.

Walker created the “Beetle Bailey” comic strip in 1950. Bailey was originally cast as a slacker college student, but with the outbreak of the Korean War, he enlisted in the military — and never left.

Walker said he drew decades of material from his own army service during World War II — “four years of free research,” he called it.

The strip, originally published in 12 newspapers, proved immensely popular with its mockery of mindless bureaucrac­y and pompous authority figures. It was ultimately carried by 1,800 papers in 50 countries, making Walker one of the most read cartoonist­s in history.

BANNED, THEN CELEBRATED

Walker was also co-creator of the popular “Hi and Lois” strip, and he founded the Internatio­nal Museum of Cartoon Art, now part of a collection at Ohio State University.

But he was best known for creating Bailey, the perenniall­y hapless private — whose motto was to never stand when he could sit — and his supporting cast, from Bailey’s perpetuall­y frustrated Sarge up through martini-loving General Amos T. Halftrack.

For years, the Pentagon publicly pooh- poohed the strip, feeling Walker was encouragin­g disrespect for officers. “Bailey” was even banned for a time by the Stars and Stripes military newspaper.

But in 2000, army brass acknowledg­ed that they too had long secretly enjoyed Bailey’s antics, awarding Walker the branch’s highest civilian award.

“Boy, how times have changed,” Walker said after receiving the Distinguis­hed Civilian Service Award. “I was persona non grata around here for many, many years.”

Cartooning was a lifelong passion. By age 18, Walker had been drawing for years and was already chief designer for the Hallmark gift card company.

Walker’s sons Brian and Greg, long-time collaborat­ors on the strip, said they plan to keep it alive.

“Old cartoonist­s never retire,” Mort Walker once said. “They just erase away.” —

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