Early life
Although Bud Neill was born in Glasgow, he grew up in on the Clyde coast. His interest in the was sparked by Saturdays spent in the Troon Playhouse watching cowboy films and journeys to America and Mexico with his father, who worked in the mining industry. Bud even mucked out at the local stables in order to have the chance to ride a horse.
After a short course at the , he took various jobs but was committed to drawing and submitting cartoons to publications with varying degrees of success.
Working as driver on the Glasgow buses provided much of the material that would later find its way into his work as a cartoonist on the .
He began by creating pocket cartoons for the Evening Times in 1944. They captured the down-to-earth humour of Glaswegians in an often surreal way.
Writing
His work was heavily influenced by American newspaper artists who created cartoons that would appeal to both children and adults. at that time in Britain were mainly political and aimed at an adult audience.
Bud's quirky cartoons proved popular and paved the way for the launch of Lobey Dosser, his first cartoon strip, in 1949.
A celebrity of his day, Bud was paid handsomely for his work and, recognised as a wit and raconteur, appeared on radio and TV programmes.
Having always held aspirations to be a writer, he was delighted when, after his move to the and in 1958, he was offered his own column.
He subsequently wrote for other publications including, for the , an article called 'Across the Sahara in a Cement Mixer'.
Bud's poem, 'Winter' was chosen by , as one of .
Winter, by Bud Neill
Winter's come, the snow has fell
Wee Josie's nose has froze as well
Wee Josie's frozen nose is skintit
...Winter's diabolical intit?
Music
Another famous Bud Neill fan, composer composed 'Resident Villain, or the Reform of Rank Bajin', in tribute to Lobey and Rank Bajin. The track features in the audio slideshow above, played by Mark O'Keeffe, principal trumpeter with the ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Scottish Symphony Orchestra.
Bud himself was a talented musician. In the 1930s, he won a competition in the playing 'Rhapsody in Blue' in its entirety on a mouth organ! The judge was non other than harmonica supremo, .
Elsewhere on the web
- The Herald reports on the GI bride's homecoming
- Publishers of the Broons and Oor Wullie official website
More Scottish arts on bbc.co.uk
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Scotland's favourite painting Dali's Christ of St John of the Cross
- For another slice of west of Scotland life, view
- Lithographs and typefaces in this profile.