Leo Aloysius Cullum (January 11, 1942 – October 23, 2010) was an American
cartoonist who was one of the most frequent contributors on the pages of
The New Yorker with more than 800 of his
gag cartoons published. He started his drawing career after having served as a pilot in the
United States Marine Corps during the
Vietnam War and flying planes commercially for
Trans World Airlines and
American Airlines.
Early life and career
Cullum was born on January 11, 1942, in
Newark, New Jersey. He was raised in
North Bergen, New Jersey and earned his undergraduate degree in 1963 from the
College of the Holy Cross, where he majored in English. He joined the United States Marine Corps after graduating from college, earning a commission as a second Lieutenant. Upon completion of his flight training in
Pensacola, Florida Cullum deployed to
Vietnam, where he flew more than 200 missions, mostly ground attacks in support of the infantry in addition to attacks on the
Viet Cong supply lines on the
Ho Chi Minh trail in
Laos. Though the missions over Laos were not officially acknowledged, Cullum was baffled by the need for secrecy, saying "the
North Vietnamese certainly knew it wasn't the Swiss bombing them".
The New Yorker
Over his career with
The New Yorker the magazine published 819 of his cartoons, many of which involved animals. His first successful entry was published on January 3, 1977, and featured a man wearing a robe at an office desk in a room filled with chickens. A cartoon with the caption "This island isn't big enough for two cliches" showed a school of fish attempting to crawl onto the shore of a desert island populated by a man and a lone palm tree.
A resident of Malibu, California, Cullum died of cancer at the age of 68 on October 23, 2010, at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.
References
External links
The Cartoon Bank, The New Yorker
Vietnam Veterans of America's Arts of War on the Web appreciation
Category:1942 births
Category:2010 deaths
Category:American military personnel of the Vietnam War
Category:College of the Holy Cross alumni
Category:People from Los Angeles, California
Category:People from Newark, New Jersey
Category:People from North Bergen, New Jersey
Category:The New Yorker people
Category:United States Marine Corps officers
Category:United States naval aviators
Category:Deaths from cancer
Category:Cancer deaths in California
Category:Artists from California
Category:Artists from New Jersey