OBIT: George Woodbridge

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George Woodbridge, Mad magazine illustrator known for detail, dies at 73
NEW YORK (AP) — George Woodbridge, an illustrator for Mad magazine for nearly 50 years whose exquisitely detailed pen-and-ink drawings were featured in nearly every issue, has died. He was 73.
Woodbridge died of emphysema Tuesday, said his wife, Deborah Woodbridge.
“He had a tremendous eye for detail that showed up in his drawings,” Mad editor John Ficarra said Thursday. “We especially played to his history knowledge. When we gave him a piece on World War I, he would draw the exact gun and belt buckle they were using then.”
Woodbridge’s delicate cross-hatched illustrations were the result of careful research, particularly in rendering historical scenes. In fact, Woodbridge had a second career as an illustrator of military history books, including the three-volume American Military Equipage, 1851-1872.
A native of New York, Woodbridge began as a freelance artist for Mad in 1957, five years after the satirical magazine’s inception.
One of Woodbridge’s most memorable illustrations was for the 1965 sports satire “43-Man Squamish,” about a nonsensical game in which the equipment included shepherd’s crooks and diving flippers.
“It’s arguably our most requested piece to reprint,” Ficarra said. “It struck a chord. Colleges all over formed teams and played this crazy game, with these ridiculous-looking helmets. George captured that lunacy.”
He was a stickler for detail, authenticating even the drape of clothing through the study of historical documents.

Luigi Vampa (Horace Mann), Thursday, 22 January 2004 19:38 (twenty-two years ago)

From "Bobby Darin's Wallet" (1961):

http://www.bobbydarin.net/celebswallets2.jpg

Love those instructions on how to sing "Mack the Knife". Woodbridge was a great artist, as you can see. Good grief, Kevin Spacey looks so much like Darin.

Pleasant Plains (Pleasant Plains), Thursday, 22 January 2004 19:49 (twenty-two years ago)

One of Woodbridge’s most memorable illustrations was for the 1965 sports satire “43-Man Squamish,” about a nonsensical game in which the equipment included shepherd’s crooks and diving flippers.

Oh, beautiful. I recently reread this as well, it's still great. RIP indeed.

This also reminds me that I saw a collection of Prohias' Spy vs Spy strips recently. MUST GET. And I think I will start a thread at that...

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 22 January 2004 21:34 (twenty-two years ago)


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