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IMDbPro

Carl Barks(1901-2000)

  • Writer
  • Animation Department
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
As the creator of 'Scrooge McDuck', Carl Barks did more than any other comic book artist to widen the popularity of Donald Duck, bringing in the process a vast array of memorable supporting characters into the Disney universe, among them Uncle Scrooge himself, Gladstone Gander, Gyro Gearloose (and his Little Helper), the Beagle Boys, and the Junior Woodchucks.

Unlike many other artists working (all anonymously) for the Disney company, Barks did not mindlessly churn out condescending, forgettable stories of a childish nature during his 24-year stint on the Disney Ducks. He consistently produced delightful top-quality material, both in his scripts and in his art as well as in his dialogues, which echoed with deep human resonance. "I polished and polished on the scripts and drawings until I had done the best I could in the time available", he said. In both types of stories -- the 10-page comedies and the longer adventure stories -- he produced between 1942 and 1966, he managed to convey the intricacies and subtleties of the full scope of human emotions (from envy and cynicism and alarm and desperation to joy and scorn and triumph and smugness) while capturing the essence of exotic locations from the four corners of the world (from scorching deserts and primal forests to humid jungles and freezing snow-clad mountains through the urban setting of Duckburg).

His mastery at this is witnessed to by, among others, Newsweek's homage to his artistry and by Time's conclusion that "Scrooge and his creator Carl Barks belong in the great mainstream of American Folklore." Beyond that is the plain fact that he was known to his readers simply as "the good artist" (a descriptor necessary during a time when the Disney company didn't identify any of its cartoonists). His publishers tried in the early '50s to replace him on the 10-page comedies in Walt Disney's Comics and Stories so that he could concentrate on the longer adventure epics in Donald Duck and Uncle $crooge (these were the three titles that contained the bulk of Barks' output through the years); they were promptly flooded with a barrage of pleading and irate letters from readers demanding that "the good artist" be brought back.

Among his many fans were George Lucas, and Steven Spielberg, who were inspired by the adventure comic books. One South American adventure in particular ("The Prize of Pizarro", Uncle $crooge nr 26, June-August 1959) inspired sequences in all three Indiana Jones films (the booby traps both in the lost temple in the opening pre-credits sequence of Les Aventuriers de l'arche perdue (1981), and in the final scenes of Indiana Jones et la Dernière Croisade (1989), as well as the flood through the mines of Indiana Jones et le Temple maudit (1984)). In an homage printed in Uncle Scrooge: His Life & Times (edited by Edward Summer and published by Gary Kurtz), Lucas writes that when he discovered the McDuck character as a kid, he liked him "so much that I immediately went out and bought all the Uncle $crooge comics I could find on the newsstand. My greatest source of enjoyment in Carl Barks' comics is in the imagination of his stories .... The stories are also very cinematic .... these comics are a priceless part of our literary heritage." Indeed, the titles of his adventures (many of which were inspired by the National Geographic) duly resonate with exoticism and adventure: "The Mummy's Ring", "Terror of the River", "Mystery of the Swamp", "Ghost of the Grotto", "Lost in the Andes", "Sheriff of Bullet Valley", "Trail of the Unicorn", "The Golden Helmet", "The Seven Cities of Cibola", etc...

His stories were constantly reproduced in Disney comics across the globe, after his retirement in 1966 (the same year that Walt Disney, who was born nine months after Barks, died). And soon his 6,371 comics pages (according to one count) from some 450 comic books were being reprinted (by then computer-colored) in impressive coffee-table volumes and hand-sewn hardback tomes, not just in the United States, but throughout the western world (Scandinavia, Germany, Italy, etc...).

Certainly the most widely read comic book artist of all time, Barks is also in all probability, what with Disney being the world's largest publisher of children's magazines and books (every year over two billion people around the globe read a Disney book or magazine, the company claims), the most widely-read author of any type of reading material of the 20th century.

Born to a homesteading family in Oregon on March 27, 1901, Carl Barks left school at 15 and spent the next two decades "in grim and demanding jobs" (to quote Michael Barrier's "Carl Barks and the Art of the Comic Book". These included rancher, logger, railroad repairman and printer. During the Depression, he went on to become an illustrator for a humor magazine, eventually becoming its most productive member. He joined the Disney studio in 1935, where he became a story man on the animated cartoons of a character created a year earlier (a duck by the name of Donald) and worked with such people as Harry Reeves, Chuck Couch, Jack Hannah, Homer Brightman and Nick George. Health problems eventually forced Barks to leave the Burbank studio during World War II for the dry air of the California desert, where he made the transition to comic books.

And so, it was after the age of 40, in an era when most people had little more than a third of their lives in front of them, that Carl Barks made the fateful jump of his life, the one that would leave his name an immortal one in the annals of what the French call "le neuvième art" (the ninth art form). And yet, it would not be until after his retirement that his name would, slowly but surely, become known to the mainstream public. It was during the 1960s that persistent fans (among them his official biographer, Michael Barrier) finally managed to identify "the good artist" (also dubbed the Duckman and the comic book king), become his correspondents, and proceed to make his name known to the outside world.

Despite having retired (and as his name was slowly becoming famous), "Unca Carl" did not remain inactive. He turned to painting, specifically signed oil paintings of his Disney Ducks, paintings that today easily fetch thousands of dollars and whose prices have occasionally topped $100,000. Indeed, it is easy to forget that Barks' retirement years lasted far longer than his comic book career and he spent many more years before the canvas than he did over the drawing board. In fact, Barks lived to the ripe old age of 99, and it is somewhat amazing to realize how vast an amount of time this actually means. His life spans such an extensive amount of time that his date of birth is further removed from that of his death than it is to the Lewis and Clark expedition to explore the untamed wilderness west of the Mississippi (including Oregon, the region where the Barks family would eventually settle).

He was sprightly and active until the very last. People half his age reported that he could remember events they had long forgotten. His pace was such that during his 1994 trip to Europe (his first outside North America) to celebrate Donald's 60th birthday, young Disney handlers and PR staff (imagine yuppies in their 30s) at Paris' Euro Disneyland had to quicken their pace to keep up with the then-93-year-old man. His philosophy could be summarized in these words: "I worked hard at trying to make something as good as I could possibly make it... I always tried to write a story I wouldn't mind buying myself."
BornMarch 27, 1901
DiedAugust 25, 2000(99)
BornMarch 27, 1901
DiedAugust 25, 2000(99)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Add photos, demo reels

Known for

Hamilton Camp, Chuck McCann, Frank Welker, and Alan Young in La Bande à Picsou (1987)
La Bande à Picsou
8.0
TV Series
  • Writer
Brando Improta, Roberto Ormanni, Omar Cotugno, Alberto Vito, and Bruno Padula in È solo questione di punti di vista (2012)
È solo questione di punti di vista
  • Writer
  • 2012
Donald Duck et ses compagnons (1960)
Donald Duck et ses compagnons
7.2
  • Writer
  • 1960
Justin Hollobaugh in Donald Duck in Cheltenham's Choice (2023)
Donald Duck in Cheltenham's Choice
Short
  • Writer
  • 2023

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Writer



  • Justin Hollobaugh in Donald Duck in Cheltenham's Choice (2023)
    Donald Duck in Cheltenham's Choice
    Short
    • comic
    • 2023
  • Donald Duck in Silent Night (2022)
    Donald Duck in Silent Night
    Short
    • comic
    • 2022
  • DuckTales: Remastered (2013)
    DuckTales: Remastered
    7.5
    Video Game
    • characters
    • 2013
  • Brando Improta, Roberto Ormanni, Omar Cotugno, Alberto Vito, and Bruno Padula in È solo questione di punti di vista (2012)
    È solo questione di punti di vista
    • inspired by the works of
    • 2012
  • Walt Disney Cartoon Classics: The Goofy World of Sports (1992)
    Walt Disney Cartoon Classics: The Goofy World of Sports
    7.4
    Video
    • Writer (uncredited)
    • 1992
  • QuackShot Starring Donald Duck (1991)
    QuackShot Starring Donald Duck
    7.7
    Video Game
    • character: Daisy Duck; Huey, Dewey, and Louie Duck (uncredited)
    • 1991
  • Christopher Lloyd, Terence McGovern, Russi Taylor, and Alan Young in La Bande à Picsou, le film : Le Trésor de la lampe perdue (1990)
    La Bande à Picsou, le film : Le Trésor de la lampe perdue
    6.8
    • character: Scrooge McDuck (uncredited)
    • 1990
  • Hamilton Camp, Chuck McCann, Frank Welker, and Alan Young in La Bande à Picsou (1987)
    La Bande à Picsou
    8.0
    TV Series
    • story "The Unsafe Safe"
    • story "Tralla La"
    • story "The Status Seeker" ...
    • 1987–1989
  • An Officer and a Duck (1985)
    An Officer and a Duck
    7.6
    Video
    • Writer (segment "'Donald Gets Drafted'")
    • 1985
  • Walt Disney Cartoon Classics Limited Gold Edition: Daisy (1984)
    Walt Disney Cartoon Classics Limited Gold Edition: Daisy
    7.1
    Video
    • stories
    • 1984
  • A Walt Disney Christmas (1982)
    A Walt Disney Christmas
    7.7
    Video
    • stories
    • 1982
  • Hollywood at War: A Compilation of War Time Shorts
    Video
    • stories
    • 1980
  • Walt Disney's Cartoon Carousel (1975)
    Walt Disney's Cartoon Carousel
    5.9
    TV Movie
    • stories
    • 1975
  • Si Disney m'était conté (1973)
    Si Disney m'était conté
    6.5
    TV Movie
    • stories
    • 1973
  • Donald et Dingo champions olympiques (1972)
    Donald et Dingo champions olympiques
    6.7
    • stories
    • 1972

Animation Department



  • L'univers magique de Mickey (1988)
    L'univers magique de Mickey
    8.1
    Video
    • animator (uncredited)
    • 1988
  • Inventions modernes (1937)
    Inventions modernes
    7.1
    Short
    • inbetween artist (uncredited)
    • 1937
  • Walt Disney in De l'autre côté du miroir (1936)
    De l'autre côté du miroir
    7.5
    Short
    • animator (uncredited)
    • 1936

Personal details

Edit
  • Height
    • 1.75 m
  • Born
    • March 27, 1901
    • Merrill, Oregon, USA
  • Died
    • August 25, 2000
    • Grants Pass, Oregon, USA(leukemia)
  • Spouses
      Garé WilliamsJuly 26, 1954 - March 10, 1993 (her death)
  • Other works
    Was a major writer/artist at Dell/Gold Key Comics best known for his acclaimed adventure stories featuring Donald Duck and his friends and relatives including original characters like Uncle Scrooge McDuck.
  • Publicity listings
    • 1 Print Biography
    • 3 Interviews
    • 23 Articles
    • 5 Magazine Cover Photos

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    One of his Donald Duck comic books - "The Sunken Yacht" (1949) - was the inspiration for a maritime salvage operation fifteen years later. In the comic, Donald and his nephews re-float Uncle Scrooge's sunken yacht by pumping it full of ping-pong balls. In 1964, the freighter "Al Kuwait" sank with approximately 6000 sheep in its cargo hold in a fresh water harbor near Kuwait City. Since the harbor was the source of most of the city's drinking water, it was feared that the rotting sheep would poison the city's water supply. A Dutch engineer named Karl Krøyer remembered the comic and suggested pumping 27 billion polystyrene balls into the ship's double hull to re-float it. The plan worked and the city's drinking water was saved. Later, when Krøyer applied for a Dutch patent for this process, he was denied because it was deemed that the idea belonged to Barks.
  • Quotes
    Recognition is fine if the rewards are high enough to repay me for loss of privacy and freedom of expression.
  • Nicknames
    • The Good Artist
    • The Duck Man
    • The Comic Book King
    • The Good Duck Artist

FAQ

Powered by Alexa
  • When did Carl Barks die?
    August 25, 2000
  • How did Carl Barks die?
    Leukemia
  • How old was Carl Barks when he died?
    99 years old
  • Where did Carl Barks die?
    Grants Pass, Oregon, USA
  • When was Carl Barks born?
    March 27, 1901

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