Age, Biography and Wiki

Bud Neill was born on 5 November, 1911, is a Scottish cartoonist. Discover Bud Neill's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 59 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 59 years old
Zodiac Sign Scorpio
Born 5 November, 1911
Birthday 5 November
Birthplace N/A
Date of death 1970
Died Place N/A
Nationality

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 5 November. He is a member of famous cartoonist with the age 59 years old group.

Bud Neill Height, Weight & Measurements

At 59 years old, Bud Neill height not available right now. We will update Bud Neill's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Bud Neill Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Bud Neill worth at the age of 59 years old? Bud Neill’s income source is mostly from being a successful cartoonist. He is from . We have estimated Bud Neill's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income cartoonist

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Timeline

1911

William "Bud" Neill (5 November 1911–28 August 1970 ) was a Scottish cartoonist who drew cartoon strips for a number of Glasgow-based newspapers between the 1940s and 1960s.

Following his death, his work has attained cult status with a worldwide following.

Born as William Neill in Partick, he moved with his family shortly thereafter to Troon in Ayrshire.

(He is not to be confused with William Neill, the poet, also from Ayrshire originally).

Growing up there, the young Neill would spend his Saturdays at the local cinema, and was particularly enthralled by the adventures of silent movie Western star William S. Hart.

These experiences fuelled Neill's childhood imagination, and proved to be a formative influence for his future career.

His other great passion in childhood was a love of horses.

When not watching the stars of the silver screen, Neill would often be found at the local stables where he bartered some mucking out and grooming duties in return for the opportunity to ride the horses.

After leaving school, where he excelled at art, he returned to Glasgow and enrolled for a course in commercial art at Glasgow School of Art.

1930

In the late 1930s Neill lived and worked in Canada for a year.

He learnt a great deal from the experience, observing the sophistication of the North American newspaper cartoonists.

On his return to Scotland he served as a gunner in the Second World War, but was injured and invalided out of the service.

Back in Glasgow, he took up temporary employment as a bus driver.

His experiences there led him to develop a series of "pocket cartoons" depicting the city's "caurs" (tramcars) and their "clippies" (female conductors).

1944

In 1944 Neill commenced a series of cartoons for the Glasgow Evening Times, themed around Glasgow life.

His wry observational humour focused on local wartime attitudes, and plundered the rich resource of the Glasgow vernacular.

They frequently featured "wee wifies", in the early cartoons gossiping about the war ("They tell me yon yin Hitler's a richt bad rascal an' a'...") and victory ("if ye ask me, they'll never catch him. He'll tak' yin o' his Luftwuffy airyplanes and scram tae Thibet or Edinbury.."). In later cartoons they discussed their wean (one clutching her girning [crying] baby says "It's his teeth, aye. Awfy crabbit. Like a bear wi' nae fags." ) and went "doon the watter" on Clyde steamers for their holidays: one irritating a smartly dressed man in yachting blazer and officer's cap by quizzing him "Yaffayat? Whityatyaffa?".

1949

Neill's most famous characters first appeared in the Evening Times cartoon strip in January 1949.

1950

Further adventures were published in the Sunday Mail in the late 1950s.

The strip was extremely popular with Glaswegians and it merged the adventurous style of the silent era western movies with traditional Glasgow stage humour, particularly pantomime.

The outrageous puns and surrealistic drawings have endured over time and now attract a cult following.

The G.I. Bride frequently featured in the pocket cartoons, and became a long running character in the Lobey Dosser series, always standing in Arizona with her "wean" in her arms (her baby, prophetically called Ned), invariably trying to thumb a ride with plaintive cries like "Ony o' youse blokes goin' the length o' Pertick?".

(A bronze statue of the G.I. Bride is now in Partick Station, (Rail and Underground), commissioned by SPT and sculpted by Ranald MacColl.) Neill was a regular theatregoer at the time, and this character was probably inspired by Tommy Morgan's popular stage character, Big Beenie, the G.I. War Bride.

The popularity of the Glasgow stage comedian's pantomime-style parodies of the city's culture was not lost on Neill, and was to influence his best known cartoon strip.

The fictional Calton Creek (Calton is a district of Glasgow) was an outpost of the wild west, supposedly located somewhere in Arizona, but its inhabitants were all Glaswegians from the Calton area and spoke with Glasgow accents.

"Lobey Dosser" was the pint-sized, whiskered Sheriff of Calton Creek who, assisted by "El Fideldo" (Elfie), his resourceful two-legged horse, strove to maintain law and order and protect the citizens against the evil plans of "Rank Bajin" ("rank bad yin/one").

The character names drew heavily on the Glasgow vernacular and were often only comprehensible to Glaswegians.

Given Neill's childhood exposure to early Westerns, and his passion for wartime theatre and pantomime, it was no surprise that the Lobey strips exhibited many of those genre's stylistic devices: depiction of good and evil as white and black respectively, the overblown evil machinations of "Rank Bajin" and the rhyming speech of "Fairy Nuff" are good examples.

The compliment was repaid in the early 1950s when a Lobey sketch was included in a production of Little Red Riding Hood at the Citizen's Theatre in Glasgow.

Other characters include:

The immense popularity of Neill's work led to the Lobey Dosser stories being published as small one shilling booklets, and a decade after the strip ended he was still getting enquiries from around the world from fans desperately trying to purchase one of these increasingly rare volumes.

1956

Sheriff Lobey Dosser of Calton Creek was a memorable series that ran in the newspaper until 1956.

1970

By the mid 1970s Glasgow artist Ranald MacColl had begun collecting material for a biography.

The Daily Express closed its Glasgow print works and dozens of bin bags of Neill's original work were thrown out.

1979

Fortunately, another local artist Calum MacKenzie, Director of The Glasgow Print Studio and Gallery, found and saved some of the works, which eventually were exhibited in the exhibition, The Scottish Cartoonists (1979).

During Glasgow's European Year of Culture, Ranald MacColl organised a comprehensive exhibition of Bud's work, including unpublished pieces, at Glasgow's Art Galleries and Museum.

Julian Spalding, the Director at this period, pronounced the show one of the most popular of that year.

The Lobey legend has proven to be Neill's enduring legacy to Glasgow, and has been marked by the erection of a bronze statue in Woodlands Road, Glasgow, across from The Finsbay Flatiron Bar.

1989

The idea came up in that location in 1989 during discussion between the artist and stained glass designer Calum MacKenzie and friends about Glasgow's 1990 European City of Culture status, and the statue was funded by donations following an appeal in the Glasgow Herald.

1992

Ranald MacColl drew up the crosslegged Elfie/Lobey/Rank statue concept and art students Tony Morrow and Nick Gillon sculpted and erected the statue in 1992 which features "Lobey" and "Rank Bajin" astride "El Fideldo".