Irving Phillips
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Irving Walter Phillips (November 29, 1904 – October 28, 2000) was a noted American cartoonist, playwright, television scriptwriter, author, illustrator and educator. He is best remembered for his daily newspaper comic panel '' The Strange World of Mr. Mum''. Born in Wilton, Wisconsin, Phillips began his career in show business as a violinist at the age of 17. He also played the saxophone and led his own orchestras. Phillips studied at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts and freelanced cartoons to 36 different magazines during the
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. He eventually became head of the humor staff for ''
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'' in the late 1930s. Phillips scripted for motion pictures, including '' Song of the Open Road'' (1944), which featured the film debut of Jane Powell. Phillips also penned the Powell vehicle '' Delightfully Dangerous'' in 1945. For television, Phillips wrote or co-wrote more than 250 scripts, including a first-season episode of '' The Ruggles'' (1949), one of the earliest family sitcoms on American television. He scripted plays for '' Matinee Theater'', the afternoon
anthology series An anthology series is a radio, television, video game or film series that spans different genres and presents a different story and a different set of characters in each different episode, season, segment, or short. These usually have a dif ...
telecast daily on NBC. Phillips provided scripts and animation art for the
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children's program ''
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'' (1971).


Cartoonist

As a cartoonist, he created the comics series ''Scuffy'', which ran from 1945 to 1951. From 1958 to 1974, Phillips produced his best-known work, ''The Strange World of Mr. Mum,'' a pantomime panel which ran in 180 newspapers in 22 countries. It was initially distributed by the
Hall Syndicate Publishers-Hall Syndicate was a newspaper syndicate founded by Robert M. Hall in 1944. Hall served as the company's president and general manager. Over the course of its operations, the company was known as, sequentially, the Hall Syndicate (1944 ...
and later by the Field Newspaper Syndicate. There was no Sunday edition until 1961. Mr. Mum was a portly, bald and bespectacled character, who—as his name suggests—silently observed various odd, surprising or even surreal scenes. He was sometimes accompanied by his similarly silent dog. Mum was described as a "bystander on life's outer limits," and the feature's anything-can-happen humor is cited as paving the way for such later strips as '' Herman'', ''
The Far Side ''The Far Side'' is a single-panel comic created by Gary Larson and syndicated by Chronicle Features and then Universal Press Syndicate, which ran from December 31, 1979, to January 1, 1995 (when Larson retired as a cartoonist). Its surrealist ...
'', '' Rhymes With Orange'' and '' Bizarro''. With never a word of dialog, the humor of the strip translated well internationally; this was an interesting stylistic choice given Phillips' résumé as a professional screenwriter. After ''The Strange World of Mr. Mum'' ended, Phillips created a few dozen large, full-color paintings based on ideas from the strip. In 1979, he worked briefly on another strip, ''Barnaby Bungle''.


Playwright

Scripting and cartooning experiences intersected in Phillips's 1955 play called ''The Funnyman''. The play features a cartoonist who decides to discontinue a feature called ''Mr. Rumple'', but the Rumple character objects to being canceled. Rumple must persuade his creator to continue his existence. He wrote the book for the Broadway musical, '' Rumple'', concerning a newspaper cartoon character whose creator loses the power to portray him.


Author

Phillips assembled several book collections of his comic panel. Herblock did the introduction for ''The Best of Mr. Mum: from The Strange World of Mr. Mum'' (Putnam, 1965). That book was followed by ''The Strange World of Mr. Mum'' (1967) and the 92-page ''No Comment by Mr. Mum'' (Popular Library, 1971). He also wrote and illustrated a children's book, ''Twin Witches of Fingle Fu'' (1969).


Awards and exhibitions

His cartoons and other artwork were shown at the New York World's Fair in 1964–1965 and at the
National Cartoonist Society The National Cartoonists Society (NCS) is an organization of professional cartoonists in the United States. It presents the National Cartoonists Society Awards. The Society was born in 1946 when groups of cartoonists got together to entertain the ...
. His work was exhibited in solo shows at “Comedy in Art” at
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and at the El Prado Gallery in
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. In 1969, Phillips won the International First Prize and Cup of the Salone dell'Umorismo of Bordighera, Italy. In 2010, a decade after Phillips' death, his paintings and original panels were exhibited at That's Entertainment in
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in a show called ''Mr. Mum's the Word: An Exhibit of Comic Art and Haikus''. Worcester-area poets presented works based on many of Phillips' paintings. He taught cartooning and humor writing at Maricopa Tech and
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in
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. '' Zits'' creators Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman studied under Phillips. Irving Phillips died in
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at age 95.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Phillips, Irving 1904 births 2000 deaths American comic strip cartoonists American male screenwriters American illustrators American comics artists American surrealist artists 20th-century American dramatists and playwrights American male dramatists and playwrights 20th-century American male writers 20th-century American screenwriters