As a child, London was "pen pals" with comedian Stan Laurel, who provided critiques on London's youthful cartoons.[2] His first professional cartooning was for the left-wing National Guardian in the late 1960s. He created his underground newspaper comic stripMerton, in New York in 1969. He also drew cartoons for Rat Subterranean News before moving to the West Coast.[2]
The nucleus of the Air Pirates collective began to form in c. 1970 when London met Ted Richards at the office of the Berkeley Tribe, an underground newspaper where both were staff cartoonists. (London later drew a highly fictionalized account of their experiences at the Tribe in his story "Why Bobby Seale is Not Black" in Merton of the Movement [Last Gasp's "Cocoanut Comix" imprint, Oct. 1972]). In 1970, London and Richards attended the Sky River Rock Festival at Washougal, Washington, and met Shary Flenniken and Dan O'Neill at the media booth,[3] where Flenniken was producing a daily Sky River newsletter on a mimeograph machine. Before the festival was over the four of them produced a four-page tabloid comic, Sky River Funnies, mostly drawn by London.
In early 1971, O'Neill invited Flenniken and Richards, along with London and Gary Hallgren, a Seattle cartoonist they had met at the festival, to San Francisco to form the Air Pirates collective.[4] The Air Pirates lived together in a warehouse on Harrison Street in San Francisco,[2] where London and Flenniken began a relationship that turned into a short-lived marriage.[1]
London developed the raunchy Dirty Duck strip in 1971. Dirty Duck had been originally published by the Los Angeles Free Press and subsequently in books like Air Pirates Funnies and The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers. His non-duck work also appeared in underground titles such as Merton of the Movement, Left Field Funnies, Douglas Comics, Facts O' Life Funnies and El Perfecto Comics. In 1972, London moved Dirty Duck to the original National Lampoon where it was a regular monthly feature until 1976; it continued to run in Playboy for over 25 years.
London returned to comic books for the first time in 30 years with contributions to the Grammy-nominated box set from Rhino Records, Weird Tales of The Ramones, in 2005.[6]
References
^ abBoyd, Robert. "The Shary Flenniken Interview,"The Comics Journal #146 (November 1991): "We were up here from 1973 ’til ’76. We broke up and Bobby went back to New York."
^ abcDonahue, Don and Susan Goodrick, editors. The Apex Treasury of Underground Comics (Links Books/Quick Fox, 1974), p. 153.