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Ted Key, famous for creating the witty and independent maid
character Hazel, died on Saturday at his home in Tredyffrin Township, near
Philadelphia, at the age of 95.
His death was confirmed by his son Peter, who said Key had
found out he had bladder cancer in 2006 and he had also had a stroke in
September.
Key’s best known creation is Hazel, a character that debuted
in the Saturday Evening Post in 1943. The cartoon was successful, so it became
a regular feature in the magazine. Hazel was then portrayed by Shirley Booth on
television from 1961 to 1966 and the first collection of “Hazel” cartoons,
published by Dutton in 1946, sold 500,000 copies. In all, Dutton published eight
collections of “Hazel” cartoons.
Key’s son told the Los Angeles Times that his father drew
his inspiration for “Hazel” from a dream he had had.
"He woke up, wrote it down and went back to
sleep," Peter Key told The Times on Monday. "He woke up the next
morning and looked at it, expecting the thing to be crummy, because most of the
gags that occurred to him in his sleep were crummy."
But this time he liked the inspiration his dream had
provided him with, and immediately drew the cartoon and sold it to the Saturday
Evening Post.
The following week, he sold maid cartoons to three newspapers,
until the Post said it wanted the maid cartoons exclusively.
Key had picked the name for the maid randomly, but was later
proud to see it became synonymous with maids.
But there are two of Key’s characters that are more famous
than Hazel nowadays: genius dog Mr. Peabody and his adopted boy, Sherman, who
traveled in time together. The two characters were created for producer Jay
Ward in the late 50’s for the cartoon series “Rocky and His Friends.”
Key was born as Theodore Keyser in Fresno on Aug.25, 1912. He
graduated from UC Berkeley in 1933 and then moved to New York to start a career
as a cartoonist. He wrote the screenplay for the Disney film “The Cat from
Outer Space” and also wrote the stories for Disney’s “the Million Dollar Duck”
and “Gus.”
Key is survived by his second wife, Bonnie, and three sons
and three grandchildren. His first wife, Anne, died in 1984.
Image Credit: www.tedkey.com
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