Thursday 24 December 2020

PIERRE 'PEYO' CULLIFORD, THE FATHER OF 'THE SMURFS'

Today, The Grandma continues relaxing at home. She has been reading The Smurfs one of her favourite cartoons that were created by Pierre Peyo Culliford, the Belgian cartoonist, who died on a day like today in 1992.

Pierre Peyo Culliford (25 June 1928-24 December 1992) was a Belgian cartoonist who worked under the pseudonym Peyo. His best-known works are the comic strips The Smurfs and Johan and Peewit, in which The Smurfs first appeared.

After working briefly at a Belgian animation studio, Peyo began making comic strips for daily newspapers such as Le Soir shortly after World War II. At the beginning of the 1950s, he brought his character Johan to the magazine Spirou, whom he soon gave a companion, the diminutive Peewit; the strip soon became a staple of the weeklies.

Peyo introduced The Smurfs in the Johan and Peewit storyline The Magic Flute in 1958; the characters quickly supplanted Johan and Peewit in popularity and left them behind for their own series.

In 1960, Peyo founded a studio to accommodate his assistants such as François Walthéry, Gos, and Marc Wasterlain and created the series Steven Strong and Jacky and Célestin.

Peyo's output diminished in the 1970s, at first due to the time he invested in the film The Smurfs and the Magic Flute (1976); in the 1980s, he put in more time, despite recurring health problems, into an American adaptation of The Smurfs as an animated television series.

After the series concluded, he left his publisher Dupuis to found his own publishing house, Cartoon Creation, and a cartoon magazine, Schtroumpf!, which soon folded due to management problems. He joined Le Lombard in 1992 but died a few months later. Since his death, Peyo's children have continued to promote his work under the brand Peyo.

More information: The Smurfs

Peyo was born in 1928 in the Belgian municipality Schaerbeek, as the son of an English father and a Belgian mother. On Christmas Eve 1992, Peyo died of a heart attack in Brussels at age 64.

He took on the name Peyo early in his professional career, based on an English cousin's mispronunciation of Pierrot, a diminutive form of Pierre.

Peyo began work, fresh from his coursework at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, at the Compagnie belge d'actualités (CBA), a small Belgian animation studio, where he met a few of his future colleagues and co-celebrities, like André Franquin, Morris, and Eddy Paape.

When the studio folded after the war, the other artists went to work for Dupuis, but Peyo, a few years younger than the others, was not accepted. He made his first comics for the newspaper La Dernière Heure, The Latest Hour, but also accepted many promotional drawing jobs for income. From 1949 to 1952, he drew Poussy, a gag-a-day comic about a cat, for Le Soir. For the same newspaper, he also created Johan. 

In 1952, Franquin introduced Peyo to Spirou, a children's Franco-Belgian comics magazine published by Dupuis.

Peyo wrote and drew a number of characters and storylines, including Pierrot, and Benoît Brisefer, translated into English as Steven Strong.

But his favourite was Johan et Pirlouit, translated into English as Johan and Peewit, which was a continuation of the series Johan he had created earlier. He also continued Poussy in Spirou. Set in the Middle Ages in Europe, Johan et Pirlouit stars a brave young page to the king, and his faithful, if boastful and cheating, midget sidekick. Johan rides off to defend the meek on his trusty horse, while Peewit gallops sporadically behind on his goat, named Biquette. The pair was driven by duty to their king and the courage to defend the underpowered. Peewit only appeared in the third adventure in 1954 but would stay for all later adventures.

The first Smurf appeared in Johan and Peewit on 23 October 1958 in the album La Flûte à Six Schtroumpfs, The Six Smurfed Flute.

As The Smurfs became increasingly popular, Peyo started a studio in the early 1960s, where a number of talented comics artists started to work. Peyo himself supervised the work and worked primarily on Johan and Peewit, leaving The Smurfs to the studio. The most notable artists to come out of this studio were Walthéry, Marc Wasterlain, Roland Goossens, Derib, Lucien De Gieter, and Daniel Desorgher.

In 1959, The Smurfs got their own series, and in 1960, two more began: Steven Strong and Jacky and Célestin. Many authors of the Marcinelle school collaborated on the writing, or on the artwork, including Willy Maltaite aka Will, Yvan Delporte, and Roger Leloup.

More information: The Culture Trip

Peyo became more of a businessman and supervisor and was less involved in the actual creation of the comics. He let his son, Thierry Culliford, lead the studio, while his daughter Véronique was responsible for the merchandising, I.M.P.S. was established in 1985 by her.

The merchandising of The Smurfs began in 1959, with the PVC figurines as the most important aspect until the late 1970s.

Then, with the success of The Smurfs records by Pierre Kartner, The Smurfs achieved more international success, with a new boom in toys and gadgets. Some of these reached the United States, where Hanna-Barbera created a Saturday morning animated series in 1981 for which Peyo served as story supervisor. Peyo's health began to fail. In 1989, after his partnership with Dupuis ended, he established Cartoon Creation to publish new Smurf stories.

In late 1991, the company was forced to shut down due to mismanagement. The publishing rights were soon sold to Le Lombard.

Peyo died at age 64, on Christmas Eve 1992, of a heart attack in Brussels. His studio still exists, and new stories for various series are regularly produced under his name.

In the 2011 film The Smurfs, Peyo was included in the plot as a researcher who studied the myths concerning The Smurfs, who were made to be real-life legendary creatures in the film's storyline.

More information: The Comics Journal


 Have a very Smurfy day!

Smurf

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