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・ Milt Drewer
・ Milt Dunnell
・ Milt Earnhart
・ Milt Fankhouser
・ Milt Franklyn
・ Milt G. Barlow
・ Milt Gabler
・ Milt Galatzer
・ Milt Gantenbein
・ Milt Gaston
・ Milt Ghee
・ Milt Gooden House
・ Milt Graff
・ Milt Graham
・ Milt Gray
Milt Gross
・ Milt Halliday
・ Milt Harradence
・ Milt Heflin
・ Milt Herth
・ Milt Hill
・ Milt Hinton
・ Milt Holland
・ Milt Jackson
・ Milt Jackson and the Hip String Quartet
・ Milt Jackson at the Museum of Modern Art
・ Milt Jackson Quartet
・ Milt Jackson Quintet Live at the Village Gate
・ Milt Jordan
・ Milt Josefsberg


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Milt Gross : ウィキペディア英語版
Milt Gross

Milt Gross (March 4, 1895 — November 29, 1953) was an American cartoonist and animator. His work is noted for its exaggerated cartoon style and Yiddish-inflected English dialogue. He originated the non-sequitur "Banana Oil!" as a phrase deflating pomposity and posing. His character Count Screwloose's admonition, "Iggy, keep an eye on me!", became a national catchphrase. The National Cartoonists Society fund to aid indigent cartoonists and their families for many years was known as the Milt Gross Fund. In 2005, it was absorbed by the Society's Foundation, which continues the charitable work of the Fund.〔(NCS )〕
==Comic strips and books==
Gross was born in the Bronx and served as a soldier in World War I. After apprenticing as a teenage assistant to Tad Dorgan, Gross's first comic strip was ''Phool Phan Phables'' for the ''New York Journal'', begun when he was 20, featuring a rabid sports fan named George Phan. It was one of several short-lived comic strips (and other undertakings, including his first animated film) before his first success, ''Gross Exaggerations'', which began as an illustrated column, "Gross Exaggerations in the Dumbwaiter", in the ''New York World''.〔 Originally titled ''Banana Oil'' until 1925, the comic strip was retitled ''Gross Exaggerations'' until becoming ''The Feitelbaum Family'' on June 1, 1926, and finally ''Looy Dot Dope'' on January 7, 1927. Its Yinglish vocabulary would set the tone for much of Gross' work, as would its reworkings of well-known tales, as in "Nize Ferry-tail from Elledin witt de Wanderful Lemp" and "Jack witt de Binn Stuck". These were gathered in a 1926 book ''Nize Baby'', which evolved into a Sunday newspaper color comic strip.〔〔
Also in 1926, he published ''Hiawatta witt No Odder Poems'', a 40-page parody of Longfellow's ''The Song of Hiawatha'', each of its pages, in the words of Jim Vadeboncoeur, Jr., "with a barely decipherable stanza and a drawing which only sometimes helped".〔 In subsequent years, Gross followed with ''De Night in de Front from Chreesmas'', ''Dunt Esk'' (1927) and ''Famous Fimmales witt Odder Ewents from Heestory'' (1928).
In 1930, Gross published what many consider his masterpiece, the pantomime tale ''He Done Her Wrong: The Great American Novel and Not a Word in It — No Music, Too''. Minus words, this "novel" is composed entirely of pen-and-ink cartoons, nearly 300 pages long, and is comparable to such silent films serials as ''The Perils of Pauline.'' It resembled (and parodied) Lynd Ward's ''Gods' Man'', the first American wordless novel, published the previous year.. It has been reprinted several times, including an abridged version in 1983 (retitled ''Hearts of Gold'') and in 2005 by Fantagraphics, under its original title.〔〔
Starting in 1931, Gross worked for the Hearst chain, doing various syndicated comic strips and Sunday topper strips, including ''Dave's Delicatessen'', ''Banana Oil'', ''Pete the Pooch'', ''Count Screwloose from Tooloose'', ''Babbling Brooks'', ''Otto and Blotto'', ''The Meanest Man'', ''Draw Your Own Conclusion'', ''I Did It and I'm Glad!'' and ''That's My Pop!'' (which later became a radio show). While his strips' vocabulary moved closer to standard English over time, his work always maintained Yiddish touches. In 1936, he illustrated two books in collaboration, ''Pasha the Persian'' (by Margaret Linden) and ''What's This?'' (with Robert M. Low and Lou Wedemar).〔
In 1945, the year of his book ''Dear Dollink'', he suffered a heart attack and went into semi-retirement. His last book was ''I Shouda Ate the Eclair'' (published 1946), in which one Mr. Figgits nearly starts World War III because he refuses to eat a chocolate éclair. In 1946–47, his work appeared in the short-lived comic book ''Picture News''.〔〔 His final published work appeared in the pages of comic books published by American Comics Group, including two issues of ''Milt Gross Funnies''. In 1950, two of his earlier books were combined as ''Hiawatta and De Night in De Front From Chreesmas''.〔

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