Saturday, July 19, 2008

Speak Chinese - Cartoonist Doug Marlette killed in crash








ENTERTAINMENT / Movies






Cartoonist Doug Marlette killed in crash

(AP)
Updated: 2007-07-11 08:49





This undated photo provided by North Carolina Festival of the Book shows
Doug Marlette.[AP]

Doug Marlette, the North Carolina-born cartoonist who won a Pulitzer
Prize and created the popular strip "Kudzu," was killed in a car accident
Tuesday morning in Mississippi, authorities said. He was 57.

Marlette, who joined the Tulsa (Okla.) World last year, was the passenger
in the car, which struck a tree after skidding on a rain-slicked road,
said John Garrison, the coroner in Mississippi's Marshall County.


"Evidently, it hydroplaned, left the highway and struck the tree,"
Garrison said.

Marlette's editorial cartoons and his strip, "Kudzu," are syndicated
worldwide. The "Kudzu" strip deals humorously with rural Southern life,
featuring characters such as the Rev. Will B. Dunn.

Born in Greensboro, Marlette began drawing political cartoons for The
Charlotte Observer in 1972.

He won the Pulitzer in 1988 for his editorial cartooning in both
Charlotte and at the Atlanta Constitution, which he had joined the year
before.

He said at the time that his biting approach could be traced in part to
"a grandmother bayoneted by a guardsman during a mill strike in the
Carolinas. There are some rebellious genes floating around in me."

He also had worked at New York Newsday and the Tallahassee (Fla.)
Democrat.

"Cartoons are windows into the human condition," he said when he joined
the Tulsa World last year. "It's about life."

Robert E. Lorton III, the World's publisher and president, said on the
newspaper's Web site that Marlette's death was "a great tragedy, not only
for the Tulsa World family, but for all who knew Doug."

"He was more than a great cartoonist and author, he was a tremendous
human being," Lorton said.

Katharine Walton, his North Carolina-based publicist, said Marlette was
working in Oxford, Miss., with a high school group that was doing a
musical version of "Kudzu."

She recalled how he "would just give me really good advice all the time.
He had a huge capacity for information, an enormous capacity for
information, and everything was relevant."

Among his books were "Shred This Book: The Scandalous Cartoons of Doug
Marlette," "In Your Face: A Cartoonist at Work" and "The Bridge," his
first novel, published in 2001.

The World said Marlette is survived by his wife, Melinda, and an adult
son, Jackson. He divided his time between homes in Tulsa and in
Hillsborough, N.C.
























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