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to News for CMCD folks
John Callahan dies at 59; politically incorrect cartoonist was a
quadriplegic
By Dennis McLellan, Los Angeles Times
John Callahan, the quadriplegic cartoonist whose famously politically
incorrect humor generated both praise and criticism, has died. He was
59.
Callahan died Saturday at Good Samaritan Hospital in Portland, Ore.,
after undergoing surgery and treatment for a chronic bed sore, said
Kevin Mullane, a longtime friend.
Paralyzed from the chest down in a car accident in 1972 at age 21 and
a recovering alcoholic since he was 27, Callahan began selling
cartoons in the early 1980s and went on to be internationally
syndicated in newspapers and magazines.
Working on the premise that "anything in the world is fair game," he
was known as an equal opportunity offender whose diverse targets
included the disabled, the homeless, fat people, Alzheimer's patients,
feminists and the French.
"He had a big following," said Deborah Levin, Callahan's former
manager. "When he was published in the L.A. Times magazine, I received
calls and letters [for him] from everyone from celebrities to prison
inmates; It didn't matter. He spoke to all of us."
"I thought what was refreshing about him was, in an age of political
correctness, he was bucking the system," said Bill Plympton, a two-
time Oscar-nominated animator who first met Callahan in the late '70s
when he showed up in his wheelchair at a cartoon class Plympton was
teaching at Portland State University.
"He showed me his portfolio, and every cartoon was genius, a very
wacky, crazy humor," Plympton said.
Although he could extend his fingers, Callahan could not close them
around a pen. To draw his cartoons, he would wedge a pen between the
fingers of his right hand. Then, with control coming from his
shoulders, he would guide the pen with his left hand.
Among his better-known efforts:
Two Ku Klux Klansmen heading out at night in their white sheets. Says
one: "Don't you love it when they're still warm from the dryer?"
A beggar in the street wearing a sign that reads, "Please help me. I
am blind and black, but not musical."
A sign in the window of a small, street-side restaurant says: "The
Anorexic Cafe, Now Closed 24 Hours a Day!!!"
An imposing woman glares at a small man and says: "This is a feminist
bookstore! There is no humor section!"
A small boy and his father look at a dog lying on its back with a
large shard of glass embedded in its chest. "How much is that window
in the doggie?" asks the boy.
Callahan was not swayed by hate mail blasting him for being racist,
sexist, ageist, sick, depraved and disgusting.
"I have newspapers calling me and telling me to watch out," he told
the Tacoma News Tribune in 2004. But, he said, "If I put a governor on
my muse, nothing will come through."
Callahan's cartoons dealing with the disabled were among his most
controversial, including one in which the instructor at an aerobics
class for quadriplegics says: "O.K., let's get those eyeballs moving."
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"When you look at it, most people who object to my handicapped
cartoons are themselves not handicapped," Callahan told the Chicago
Tribune in 1994. "I get letters from other handicapped people who tell
me, 'Go for the gold.' The handicapped enjoy that kind of humor. It
breaks through the patronizing attitude the world has toward us.
Frankly, we're tired of people walking on eggshells around us."
Offsetting the hate mail were letters from fans, including comedian
Richard Pryor and Bill Clinton.
Humor columnist Dave Barry has called Callahan "living proof that a
person can go through great adversity and pain and still — through a
triumph of human spirit — be really weird."
Callahan's success as a cartoonist led to a string of books, including
his 1989 autobiography, "Don't Worry, He Won't Get Far on Foot: The
Autobiography of a Dangerous Man." He also created the animated TV
shows "Pelswick" and "Quads."
Given up for adoption after he was born in Portland on Feb. 5, 1951,
he was adopted as an infant by David and Rosemary Callahan and grew up
in the Dalles, a town on the Columbia River, where his father managed
a grain elevator.
Callahan began drawing caricatures while attending a Catholic school
run by strict nuns. "I made fun of the nuns, mostly as a defense," he
told the Chicago Tribune. He had his first drink when he was 12.
He was drinking heavily when he moved to the Los Angeles area in 1972.
That July, after a day of drinking, he and a man he met at a party
went bar-hopping. With his new drinking buddy behind the wheel of
Callahan's Volkswagen Beetle, it crashed into a utility pole while
traveling at 90 mph.
Callahan, who stopped drinking in 1978, curtailed his work as a
cartoonist in recent years. Turning his attention to music, he wrote
the songs and did the vocals on a 2006 CD called "Purple Winos in the
Rain."
Callahan received a bachelor's degree in English from Portland State
University after his accident and was enrolled in a master's degree
program in counseling at the university at the time of his death.
"When he burned out on cartoons, he had to have something else to kind
of get him excited," said his brother Tom. "He never sat still, no pun
intended."
In addition to his brother Tom, he is survived by his mother,
Rosemary; brothers Kip and Rich; and his sisters, Murph Callahan and
Teri Duffy.