Jim Davis

American cartoonist
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External Websites
Also known as: James Robert Davis
Quick Facts
Full name:
James Robert Davis
Born:
July 28, 1945, Marion, Indiana (age 79)
Awards And Honors:
Emmy Award (1989)
Emmy Award (1986)
Emmy Award (1985)
Notable Works:
“Garfield”

Jim Davis (born July 28, 1945, Marion, Indiana) is an American cartoonist who is best known as the creator of the comic strip Garfield. The strip’s titular character, a sardonic, lazy, lasagna-loving, Monday-hating, orange tabby cat, became a worldwide sensation after being introduced in 1978. Garfield went on to be one of the most widely syndicated comic strips in history and spawned merchandise, television shows, and movies.

Early life and cartooning

Davis is the eldest of two children born to Anna Catherine “Betty” Davis (née Carter) and James William Davis near Marion, Indiana. He was raised on a small Angus cattle farm—with many cats—in Fairmount, Indiana, where he and his younger brother, Dave, assisted with the farm work and raising cattle. Davis’s asthma, exacerbated by farm work, forced him as a youth to stay indoors, where he would entertain himself and humor his mother with drawings. He began drawing pictures of animals that were so bad and unidentifiable that he had to label them. He soon decided it was more fun to draw pictures accompanied by words—in short, cartoons.

Davis attended Fairmount High School where he acted in theater productions, played varsity football, and created a comic strip for the school newspaper. The comic strip’s characters were used to illustrate the school’s 1963 yearbook, the year he graduated. Davis went on to major in art and business at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana. While there, he joined the Theta Xi fraternity and created comics for the university’s student newspaper. He graduated in 1967.

After college, Davis worked as a commercial artist at a local advertising agency in Indiana for two years before landing a job as an assistant for cartoonist and fellow Indiana-native Tom K. Ryan, the creator of the comic strip Tumbleweeds. From 1969 through 1978 he did backgrounds, borders, and detail work for Ryan while continuing to work on sample strips of his own. He credits his experience working as Ryan’s assistant with teaching him what it took to be a syndicated cartoonist and propelling him to give it a shot on his own.

Garfield grows gargantuan

The first original comic strip Davis tried to sell to a syndicate was about a bug named Gnorm Gnat. While the syndicate thought it was funny, they were concerned that readers could not relate to insects. Davis then studied other comics and realized there were several successful strips featuring dogs but none with cats, and a central cat character, to Davis, seemed like a good marketing strategy. That was when he came up with the idea to feature a cat as a sidekick to a single, shy, socially inept character named Jon Arbuckle. His original plan was for Jon to be the star of the comic strip and to call it Jon. After realizing the cat always had the punchline, he showed the strip to Ryan, who encouraged him to make the comic strip about the cat. Davis changed the name of the comic strip to Garfield. The grumpy orange cat was named after Davis’s cantankerous and gruff-on-the-outside but soft-on-the-inside grandfather, James Garfield Davis (who was in turn named after U.S. Pres. James Garfield). Garfield’s costars include Davis’s fellow (fictional) cartoonist Jon, the dopey dog Odie, Garfield’s sometimes-girlfriend and fellow feline Arlene, the insufferably cute cat Nermal, Garfield’s teddy bear Pooky, his veterinarian (and Jon’s love interest) Liz, Jon’s various relatives, and other occasional characters.

Garfield debuted on June 19, 1978, in 41 newspapers across the United States. In early October that year the Chicago Sun-Times canceled the strip, but after more than 1,300 fans lobbied the paper asking for its reinstatement, they brought Garfield back on October 16 after a two-week hiatus with a special strip Davis created just for the paper. The reinstated strip depicted a sobbing Garfield thrown out of the newspaper’s office before being welcomed back after an onslaught of phone calls came in requesting his return.

Garfield and his friends have changed in appearance over the years as Davis has adapted and developed the characters. For the first three years of the strip Davis drew Garfield the cat (when not asleep) sitting on all four paws, like a typical cat. It was fellow cartoonist Charles Schulz who suggested to Davis that he draw Garfield standing upright with more human-like feet—rather like the beagle Snoopy in later Peanuts strips—in order to be more relatable to readers.

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By 1980 the first compilation of Garfield comic strips was a New York Times best seller, and in November 1982 7 of the 15 books on the New York Times trade paperback best-seller list were Garfield comic strip collections. Garfield was on the cover of People magazine in 1982. At the height of its popularity, Garfield appeared in well over 2,000 newspapers and had a readership of approximately 260 million people. The Garfield strip and book collections have been translated into dozens of languages around the world.

Garfield has been Davis’s primary cartooning focus, but he has tried his hand at other comics. In 1986 he created a comic strip aimed specifically at young readers called U.S. Acres. Having grown up on a farm, he came up with the idea of featuring anthropomorphic farm animals as the characters. The star of the strip was Orson the pig, along with jokester rooster Roy, phobia-filled duck Wade, twin sheep Lanolin and Bo, and two baby chickens—Booker and the partially hatched Sheldon (merely two feet emerging from an egg). The comic strip debuted in March 1986 in 505 newspapers, which was unprecedented at the time. However, the strip was not as successful as Garfield and only ran for three years. The characters of U.S. Acres were featured in the Garfield and Friends television series, where they had a longer run than the comic strip itself.

Merchandising and movies

In 1981 Davis founded the company Paws, Inc., to manage licensing rights for the Garfield enterprise. Merchandising and licensing agreements led to Garfield-themed toys and clothing, television series, movies, video games, and a wide assortment of other products and paraphernalia. Garfield balloons became a staple of Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. In 1987 Garfield car window toys became a massive cultural phenomenon in the United States. Davis, ever the entrepreneur, had planned to make a toy Garfield with Velcro that stuck to curtains, imitating a typical drape-destroying feline. The company accidentally attached suction cups to the prototype instead. Davis marketed the toy anyway, and Garfield car window decorations proliferated. By 1994 Davis had earned enough to buy back the licensing rights for Garfield from the syndicate. Paws, Inc., was later acquired by Viacom in 2019.

The Garfield franchise spawned TV shows and films for which Davis served as a creator, writer, and producer. The animated Saturday-morning series Garfield and Friends ran for seven seasons (1988–94) on CBS. The show featured Garfield and U.S. Acres segments, and Garfield was voiced by Lorenzo Music. The 2004 film Garfield: The Movie used computer-generated imagery and starred Bill Murray as the voice of Garfield, Breckin Meyer as Jon, and Jennifer Love Hewitt as Liz. The same cast made a sequel in 2006 entitled Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties. The 2024 animated film The Garfield Movie featured the voices of Chris Pratt as Garfield and Samuel L. Jackson as Garfield’s father (a new character providing the beloved orange fur ball with a backstory), among other notable actors.

Awards and recognition

Davis earned eight Emmy Award nominations and took home three wins for outstanding animated program in 1985, 1986, and 1989. He received four awards from the National Cartoonists Society: the best humor strip award in 1981 and 1985, the Elzie Segar Award (named after the creator of Popeye) for “a unique and outstanding contribution to the profession of cartooning” in 1985, and the Reuben Award for outstanding cartoonist in 1989. He was inducted into the Licensing International Hall of Fame in 1993. In 2016 he received the Inkpot Award at the San Diego Comic-Con.

Laura Payne