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Bunny Hoest (born 1932), sometimes labeled The Cartoon Lady, is the writer of several cartoon series, including ''The Lockhorns'', ''Laugh Parade'' and ''Howard Huge'', all of which she inherited from her late husband Bill Hoest.〔King Features: Bunny Hoest〕 She is the co-creator of ''Bumper Snickers'' in 1974, ''Agatha Crumm'' in 1977, ''Laugh Parade'' in 1980, ''Howard Huge'' in 1981, ''What A Guy!'' in 1986 and ''Hunny Bunny's Short Tales'' in 1992. Born in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, as Madeline Mezz, she was the only child of a doctor and an opera singer. She received the nickname "Bunny" as a child, as she recalled, "My mother and father called me Bunny from day one. They said I was little and cute and had dark eyes like a little bunny." Her father, Dr. David Mezz, was a surgeon who invented the nose clip used by springboard divers.〔(Donovan, Dick. "Cartoonist's wedded bliss far cry from ''Lockhorns''," ''The Palm Beach Post'', April 22, 1979, p. C1. )〕〔(Copquin, Claudia Gryvatz. "Bunny Hoest: Life On and Off the Funny Pages," ''Newsday'', August 2,, 2008. )〕 After attending a magnet school as a music student for four years, she graduated in 1953 from Adelphi University, where she studied literature and creative writing, noting, “I feel that writing is a gift which should be perfected. English is a beautiful language. Why muck it up?”〔(Adelphi University: Alumni Profiles )〕 When she was 19, she married Ted Jungreis, and the couple moved to Huntington, Long Island, where she raised three children. With a master's degree in secondary education from C. W. Post, she taught English as a second language. She joined a local community theater, where she composed original scores for three musical comedies, in addition to singing, dancing and directing the music in productions of ''Gypsy'', ''Damn Yankees'', ''Guys and Dolls'', ''South Pacific'' and other musical comedies. During this time, she also became a member of the Huntington Choral Society.〔 ==Cartoon connection== The couple separated after 21 years together, and not long after that, she landed a job with cartoonist Bill Hoest, creator of ''The Lockhorns'', who needed an assistant to help compile his cartoons into books. She recalled, "I was 40 years old. My kids were 20, 18 and 15." Hoest, who had six children, was also recently divorced. The two married in 1973. She reflected, "Marrying Bill meant taking on a whole different kind of life, a new direction with much responsibility. He needed a working partner as well as a marriage partner. It was scary and challenging. I thought, what the hell, I'll give it a shot."〔 Soon she was writing captions for ''The Lockhorns'', and eventually they worked together on the scripts for their other features. After Bill Hoest's death in 1988, she continued the cartoons and strips, working closely with illustrator John Reiner, who began as Bill Hoest's assistant in 1986. They usually work three or four months in advance of publication. In 1996, she met and married Dr. Walter T. Carpenter, Jr., who died on October 23, 2008, at the age of 97.〔"Deaths, Carpenter, Walter T., Jr., M.D. ''The New York Times'', October 24, 2008.〕 Her daughter is Sharon Bowers, who collaborated with Adrian Sinnott on ''Hunny Bunny’s Short Tale'', brief bedtime stories for kids. Syndicated by King Features in the mid to late-1990s, the feature was one of the first panel cartoons delivered electronically. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bunny Hoest」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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