Animator Art Clokey dies at 89 in California; created claymation sensation Gumby

By AP
Saturday, January 9, 2010

Gumby animator Art Clokey dies at 89 in California

LOS OSOS, Calif. — Animator Art Clokey, whose bendable creation Gumby became a pop culture phenomenon through decades of toys, revivals and satires, died Friday. He was 88.

Clokey died in his hometown Los Osos on California’s Central Coast, caretaker Chrisanne Wollett Clokey told the San Luis Obispo Tribune.

Gumby grew out of a student project Clokey produced at the University of Southern California in 1963 called “Gumbasia.”

That led to his making shorts featuring Gumby and his horse friend Pokey for the “Howdy Doody Show” and several series through the years.

He said he based Gumby’s swooping head on the cowlick hairdo of his father, who died in a car accident when Clokey was nine. And Clokey’s wife suggested he give Gumby the body of a gingerbread man.

Clokey said that though Gumby eventually became one of the most familiar toys of all time, he was at first resistant to roll out the bendable doll.

“I didn’t allow merchandising for seven years after it was on the air,” Clokey told The Tribune of San Luis Obispo in 2002, “because I was very idealistic, and I didn’t want parents to think we were trying to exploit their children.”

Clokey also created the moralizing and often satirized claymation duo “Davey and Goliath.”

The Lutheran Church hired Clokey to make the “Davey and Goliath” shorts, and Clokey used the money to help bring a Gumby series back to television in the 1960s.

Eddie Murphy brought a surge in Gumby’s popularity in the 1980s with his send-up of the character on “Saturday Night Live” as a cigar-smoking show business primadonna.

Clokey said he enjoyed Murphy’s profane Gumby.

“Gumby can laugh at himself,” Clokey told The Tribune.

Murphy’s Gumby brought new toy sales and eventually led to a new syndicated series starting in 1988.

It was only then that Clokey started seeing serious financial returns on his creation.

“It took 40 years,” he said.

Information from: The Tribune, www.sanluisobispo.com

(This version CORRECTS Corrects age to 88 sted 89. UPDATES with detail)

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