- Messmer, Otto
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▪ American animatorborn August 16, 1892, Union City, New Jersey, U.S.died October 28, 1983, Teaneck, New JerseyAmerican animator who created the character Felix the Cat, the world's most popular cartoon star before Mickey Mouse.As a youth, Messmer was fascinated with drawing and the cinema. He learned the craft of animation from Hy Mayer, with whom he produced advertising films in 1914. His talents were noted by Pat Sullivan, who hired Messmer in 1915 for his new animation studio in New York City. Together Sullivan and Messmer produced more advertising films, but their partnership was interrupted for three years while Messmer served in the army and Sullivan was imprisoned for statutory rape. When they resumed their collaboration in 1919, Messmer created the character of Felix the Cat for a Paramount Pictures newsreel. The character was an international sensation, and the Sullivan studio continued to produce Felix cartoons until 1931. Felix in Hollywood (1923), Felix Switches Witches (1927), and Comicalamities (1928) rank among the best in the series.Felix is regarded as the first cartoon star, and both his design and his unique character were highly influential. With regard to design, the ease of animating his simple black-and-white form was not lost on animators in other studios; most subsequent cartoon characters exhibit this simplicity. But his wholly original and complex personality was what audiences loved: he was joyous, shrewd, mischievous, and prone to his trademark behaviour of walking around in circles when perplexed. Felix's popularity during the 1920s led to his being the first such character merchandised via popular products such as stuffed dolls, key chains, and comic books. The character was also featured in a long-running syndicated newspaper comic strip that Messmer created in 1923—the same year that the musical homage "Felix Kept on Walking" was the most popular song in Great Britain. The character may well have continued to be successful for many decades had not Sullivan resisted the advent of sound cinema and discontinued the series in 1931. Beset by alcohol-related problems, Sullivan died in 1933; the disposition of his estate required court proceedings to determine who had the rights to the Felix character—he did not leave the rights to Messmer in his will, as he had promised. Always a modest man who shunned publicity, Messmer did not pursue the matter and, save for occasional minor contributions, retired from filmmaking.For more than 40 years, it was believed that Pat Sullivan was the creator, director, and head animator for Felix cartoons. His was the only name to appear on the films, comic strips, and merchandised products, and Sullivan himself helped perpetuate the myth in interviews and publicity releases. Not until the late 1960s did Messmer receive overdue credit for his creation, and he was hailed as a master and pioneer of early animation. After the end of the Felix series in 1931, Messmer continued to draw Felix comic books, supervised a brief resurgence of Felix for three films in 1936, designed animated billboards for New York's Times Square, and directed animated commercials for television. Felix was revived for a series of cartoons in the 1950s and '60s by Messmer protégé Joe Oriolo and again in the 1990s for a short-lived series on CBS television.Additional ReadingJohn Canemaker, Felix: The Twisted Tale of the World's Most Famous Cat (1991, reissued 1996).
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Universalium. 2010.