B. ‘Hap’ Kliban
B. ‘Hap’ Kliban was born on January 1, 1935, in Norwalk, Connecticut. He began painting and drawing while he was in elementary school. As a teenager, he joked about wanting to join the Air Force to strafe civilians, something that epitomized the bizarre sense of humor that later characterized his cartoons and drawings. However, his military classification was 4F, and he set out to strafe the population through his cartoons. The Kliban wit and style attest to the success of this life long pursuit.
Kliban attended Pratt Institute in New York City for two years in the 1950’s, before dropping out to become a beatnik painter in Europe. He made Florence his home for a few years, while painting, drawing, and wandering through this rich art-filled European world. “He kept a daily journal of abstract heads rendered in watercolors; he drew incessantly and developed a masterful hand, especially in drawing” (Burke, 1997).
After returning from Europe, Kliban stayed briefly in Connecticut before setting off by motorcycle to cross the United States. His journey took him to San Francisco, where he plugged into the Beat Scene and North Beach. Realizing that there had to be something better than working at the San Francisco post office and “drawing live nude models at a place called Mr. Wonderful on Broadway” in San Francisco, Kliban began working seriously on his cartoons (Burke, 1997).
He had heard about a new publication that was interested in buying cartoons and sold the first of his cartoons in 1962 to Playboy Magazine. This connection established Hap as one of America’s top cartoonists. He also sold many cartoons to the New Yorker, National Lampoon, Esquire, and Punch, but Playboy remained his primary publisher for the cartoon market and they would continue to publish his work for the next 30 years.
In 1974, Kliban’s Playboy cartoon editor, Michelle Urry, visited his studio and saw some of the 5″x8″ drawings Hap had done to pass the time while thinking of Playboy ideas. She recognized that these drawings were extraordinary and would make a great foundation for a book. She later found Hap an agent who sold the idea to a somewhat reluctant publisher.
In 1975, Workman Publishing published Cat, with an initial run of 15,000 books. A chord was struck that went beyond mere cat lovers. “Kliban was now a famous cartoonist. His studio became the place to hang out; local artists and groupies would come by and talk, tell stories and jokes: artists like Victor Moscoso, painter Russell Chatham, cartoonist Dave Sheridan. It was a scene” (Burke, 1997).
As the New York Times called it, ‘Klibanophilia’ had taken over, making Cat and Kliban’s subsequent humor books bestsellers over many reprints, while Cat merchandise appeared everywhere, on everything. Shortly, product manufacturers of posters, t-shirts, stuffed toys, sheets, stationery, towels, mugs, sleepwear, pens & pencils, pins, key chains, greeting cards, baby clothing, glassware, ceramics, tote bags, clocks & watches, jewelry, etc. began licensing Cat, creating one of the largest merchandising efforts ever seen at the time. The Cat Craze was not limited to the United States. Cat was published in Britain, as well as in translations into Japanese, French, German, and Spanish. Always done in black and white, Cat eventually showed up in color Cat calendars, produced by Viking Press and Pomegranate Communications. “Color Cat became the ultimate image to collect, to love and adore. An iconic image, a trusted friend, a never-ending producer of, well, happiness” (Burke, 1997). The developing Cat craze even led people to steal bookstore displays of the character.
Cat was hailed by the publishing world: It began a new genre of humor, as well as a very new way of presenting cartoons. There had been other cats before: Felix, Krazy Kat, “but they were anthropomorphic – almost humans in cat suits. Cat was pure cat, based on Kliban’s own pets and exhibiting cat behavior in the extreme. It would be hard to argue against the notion that Kliban opened up doors for Gary Larsen as well as Jim Davis and others – doors that led to the universe of cats (and other animals) thinking cat thoughts out loud and offering another point of view on subjects previously reserved for Homo sapiens” (Burke, 1997).
Although much of Kliban’s success can be attributed to his Cat images, it would be a misrepresentation to overlook the impact and success that his non-Cat cartooning made on American humor. His subsequent humor books, such as Advanced Cartooning, Never Eat Anything Bigger Than Your Head, Whack Your Porcupine, Tiny Footprints, Two Guys Fooling Around with the Moon, Luminous Animals, and the Biggest Tongue in Tunisia, pioneered a new genre of adult humor that has been imitated by many cartoonists working today.
B. Kliban died in 1990. The breadth of his work, much of it yet un-published, will continue as a durable confirmation to his remarkable craft, creativity, and brilliance in molding an amazing segment of American humor. It’s a testament to his gifts that in such an over-stimulated world and public his work still draws fans 30 years later.