Jump to content

David Law (cartoonist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Fratrep (talk | contribs) at 13:50, 1 December 2009 (Repairing link to disambiguation page - You can help!). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

David "Davey" Law (1908 – April 1971) was a Scottish cartoonist best known for creating Dennis the Menace and Beryl the Peril for Dundee publishers D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd .

Law was born and raised in Edinburgh and educated at Edinburgh College of Art. He first worked for Odhams Press as an illustrator, before moving to D. C. Thomson in the early 1930s. He drew cartoons for Thomsons newspapers like the Evening Telegraph, including a strip called The Wee Fella.

His most famous creation, Dennis the Menace, first appeared in The Beano issue 452, dated 17 March 1951 - a mere five days after Hank Ketcham's identically named Dennis the Menace began syndication in the USA. Law's Dennis was a juvenile anti-hero, uncontrollable and destructive, drawn in spontaneous, edgy lines, and was an immediate hit, soon displacing Biffo the Bear on the comic's full colour front cover. Law went on to create Beryl the Peril, a similarly anarchic female character, for the Topper in 1953, and the accident-prone soldier Corporal Clott for The Dandy in 1960.

He was taken ill in 1970, and his strips were taken over by other artists, including David Sutherland on Dennis the Menace and John Dallas on Beryl the Peril. Law returned briefly to The Beano in 1971, but died in April that year, aged 63.

References