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Fonds

Calman Collection

Catalogue reference: CA

What’s it about?

This record is about the Calman Collection dating from 1980-1986.

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Full description and record details

Reference
CA
Title
Calman Collection
Date
1980-1986
Description

Over 2,500 pieces of artwork for pocket cartoons by Mel Calman published in The Times 1980-1986

Note

Partially catalogued

Held by
University of Kent: Special Collections & Archives
Language
English
Creator(s)
Mel Calman
Physical description
2500+ items
Access conditions

Available for consultation at the University of Kent's Special Collections & Archives reading room, Templeman Library, University of Kent, Canterbury, CT2 7NU (specialcollections@kent.ac.uk).

Administrative / biographical background

Melville (Mel) Calman (19 May 1931, Stamford Hill ? 10 February 1994, London) was a British cartoonist best known for his "little man" cartoons published in British newspapers including the Daily Express (1957?63), The Sunday Telegraph (1964?65), The Observer (1965-6), The Sunday Times (1969?84) and The Times (1979?94).

Calman was the youngest of the three children of Clement Calman, a timber merchant, and his wife Anna (both Russian-Jewish immigrants who came to England about 1912).

Sent to Cambridge to avoid The Blitz in World War II, he was educated at the Perse School. Failing to gain entrance to Cambridge University, he returned to London where he enrolled at the Borough Polytechnic Art School, later studying illustration at Saint Martin's School of Art and Goldsmiths College.

After two years of National Service, in 1956 he attempted to find work as a freelance cartoonist. Punch was discouraging about his work, but in 1958 he succeeded in placing work with the "William Hickey" column in the Daily Express. Although in regular work, he left the Express after five years, seeing no prospects being in competition with Osbert Lancaster and Giles.

In 1962 he began producing his trademark "little man" character for the Sunday Telegraph, and in 1979 he brought this as a regular and long-running contribution to The Times. Additionally, he made contributions to Cosmopolitan and House & Garden, as well as publishing some 20 books of his cartoons.

In later life he became an art dealer and collector, in 1989 co-founding the Cartoon Art Trust. In 1994, he died of a coronary thrombosis (heart attack) at the Empire cinema, Leicester Square while watching the film Carlito's Way with writer Deborah Moggach, his partner for the last ten years of his life.

He was married twice, to the magazine designer Pat McNeill and to the artist Karen Elizabeth Usborne. He had two daughters with Pat McNeill, the novelist Claire Calman and author and scriptwriter Stephanie Calman. He is buried alongside his mother and sister at the Jewish cemetery, Waltham Abbey, Essex.

Calman's trademark character was the angst-ridden "little man", who strongly reflected Calman's own lifelong depressions (in Who's Who he listed his recreations as "brooding and worrying"). Topics focused on the little man's anxieties about health, death, God, achievement, morality and women, a style of humour that his Times obituary described as "of the black, self-deprecating Jewish variety, in the style of his New York heroes, James Thurber, S. J. Perelman and Woody Allen".

Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/3c7dca68-5000-4174-90df-221af1ef7e38/

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Calman Collection