A death in the family

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loCAtek
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A death in the family

Post by loCAtek »

'Family Circus' creator Bil Keane dies at 89
Nov. 9, 2011, 5:05 PM EST

PHOENIX (AP) -- Bil Keane's "Family Circus" comics entertained readers with a simple but sublime mix of humor and traditional family values for more than a half century. The appeal endured, the author thought, because the American public needed the consistency.

Keane, who started drawing the one-panel cartoon featuring Billy, Jeffy, Dolly, P.J. and their parents in February 1960, died Tuesday at age 89 at his longtime home in Paradise Valley, near Phoenix. His comic strip is featured in nearly 1,500 newspapers across the country.

Find: More on Bil Keane

Jeff Keane, Keane's son who lives in Laguna Hills, Calif., said that his father died of congestive heart failure with one of his other sons by his side after his conditioned worsened during the last month. All of Keane's five children, his nine grandchildren and his great-granddaughter were able to visit him last week, Jeff Keane said.

"He said, 'I love you,' and that's what I said to him, which is a great way to go out," Jeff Keane said of the last conversation he had with his father. "The great thing is Dad loved the family so much, so the fact that we all saw him, I think that gave him great comfort and made his passing easy. Luckily, he didn't suffer through a lot of things."

Jeff Keane has been drawing "Family Circus" in the last few years as his father enjoyed retirement.

Keane said in a 1995 interview with The Associated Press that the cartoon had staying power because of its consistency and simplicity.
:cry: Such simple and elegant funnies. I remember they were the favorite ones my dad liked to read to us, because the even little kids could understand the jokes. Later in life, I learned to appreciate the fine illustration.


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RIP Bill

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dales
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Re: A death in the family

Post by dales »

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Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.


yrs,
rubato

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BoSoxGal
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Re: A death in the family

Post by BoSoxGal »

I don't read the funnies much anymore, but when I do I still love Family Circus as much as I did as a kid.

In those days it was a window into a very different kind of family than the one in which I was raised. I'm glad to know Mr. Keane's was much the same.

R.I.P.
For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.
~ Carl Sagan

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Lord Jim
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Re: A death in the family

Post by Lord Jim »

Oh no...

Not Billy, Jeffy, Dolly and PJ....

:cry:
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Lord Jim
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Re: A death in the family

Post by Lord Jim »

Interesting story about Bill Keane...

A few years ago, a couple of nimrods were using his characters for a satire on child molestation...

He could have sued the begeezus out of them...

But all he did was contact the Bevus And Butt Heads who were running the site, and asked them to stop...

And they did...
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Sue U
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Re: A death in the family

Post by Sue U »

Me, I'll always remember Pearls Before Swine v. Family Circus.
GAH!

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Lord Jim
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Re: A death in the family

Post by Lord Jim »

As unlikely as it might seem, Bill Keane and Stephan Pastis (Pearls Before Swine) became very good friends...

A few years ago, they collaborated on what was probably the funniest cartoon series of recent times....

"Osama Bin Ladin Meets Family Circus":

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Lord Jim
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Re: A death in the family

Post by Lord Jim »

Stephan Pastis on Bil Keane:
Bil Keane was funny.

Maybe that comes as a surprise to those who see the Family Circus as primarily sweet, but it was true.

For years, he hosted cartooning’s annual Reubens banquet, which he would open by saying, “It’s more than a pleasure to be here tonight. In fact, it’s a damn inconvenience.”

At times during the event, he would purposely lapse into this odd gibberish in which he might say every other word in a sentence, causing you to either check your hearing or wonder if the PA system had broken down. It was awesome because he never gave any hint that it was a joke. You either got it or you didn’t.

And his work in the Family Circus could be edgy. That’s right. Edgy.

Consider this early strip from the 1960′s where two of the kids are arriving back home after attending a football game with their Dad. One of the kids says to their mother: “And we each had a bottle of soda. Daddy brought his own in his pocket.”

I was lucky enough to spend time with him on a couple of occasions, even interview him at his house for the Charles Schulz Museum. When I was there, we talked about the parodies I did of the Family Circus. He told me he didn’t mind them at all. “As long as they’re funny,” he added. “Just be funny.”

It was during that visit that he told me about his USO-sponsored tour of Vietnam, and I remember thinking to myself how much I would like to do something like that. And sure enough (with the help of his son Jeff), I was able to go on such a tour a few years later in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Bil was my inspiration for that.

Sometimes I would call him at his house. I thought at first he enjoyed the calls, but at the end of one conversation, he said, “Well, great talking to you. Now my dinner is cold.” I would have been offended, but I was laughing too hard.

I parodied his comic because it was an icon. A status those in my generation can only dream of. And in parodying it, I saw what amazing care Bil took in drawing his strips.

But most of all, he was a kind person. Every year he sent me (and surely dozens of other people) a signed Christmas calendar. It was a small thing, but it made me feel like a big shot to get a signed calendar from Bil Keane.

Through his own conduct, he showed each of us in the profession how we should act toward each other, and how we should act toward those just starting out.

And his low-key, friendly reaction to my parodies taught me more about class than any lecture ever could have.

I’ll miss him.

http://stephanpastis.wordpress.com/2011 ... 1922-2011/
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rubato
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Re: A death in the family

Post by rubato »

One part of the paper that could be replaced with empty space with no loss of information.

Treacle.

yrs,
rubato

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