Childhood & Early Life
Gary Larson was born on 14 August 1950, at Washington. His father Verner was a salesman and his mother Doris was a secretary by profession. He has an older brother named Dan.
he grew up in Washington. In his childhood, he learnt to play instruments like the banjo and guitar.
He completed his school education at the Curtis Senior High School and later graduated with a degree in communication from the Washington State University in 1972.
Career
Gary Larson’s initial aim was to take up a career in writing TV commercials. However, after his graduation he and his friend began performing music for three years. Amongst the duo, he used to play the instruments banjo and guitar while his friend used to play the keyboard and trombone.
He later found work at a music store in Washington, but soon realized that it was not his area of interest and subsequently turned to drawing.
In 1976, he drew and submitted a few of his cartoons to magazine Pacific Search. His work was appreciated and this marked the beginning of his career as a cartoonist. In 1979 he began working with newspaper The Seattle Times, which published his drawing weekly under the title ‘Nature’s Way’.
Initially, in order to sustain he had to work as an investigator for the Local Humane Society along with his drawing projects. However, in due course he decided to concentrate on drawing rather than following other occupations and decided to sell his comic strips to other newspapers.
In 1979, while at a vacation, Gary Larson approached the newspaper ‘San Francisco Chronicle’ with his cartoons from ‘Nature’s Way’. The newspaper signed a distribution contract with him and in January 1980, they began publishing the cartoon strip with a new name ‘The Far Side’. It was around the same time that ‘The Seattle Times’ stopped printing his cartoons.
‘The Far Side’ was published for fourteen more years in many more newspapers until Gary Larson’s retirement from the profession in 1995. The ‘Far Side’ cartoons primarily focused on surreal scenarios and attempted to compare the behaviour of humans with animals. His cartoons were also being extensively used on greeting cards until 2009.
His cartoons were the base to create television animated films titled ‘Tales from the Far Side’ (1994) and ‘Tales from the Far Side II’ (1998) for CBS television. Both films were screened at international film festivals and ‘Tales from the Far Side’ went on to win a Grand Prix award at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival.
In 1998, Gary Larson published his first illustrated book titled ‘There’s a Hair in My Dirt! : A Worm’s Story’. The book explained science through weird stories and sketches.This book was published by HarperCollins and became a New York Times Best Seller in May 1998.
Post his retirement as a cartoonist, he is known to take up assignments for magazines and promotional art for the Far Side related merchandise.
Since publishing his first Far Side cartoon book in 1982, he has produced 22 Far Side books till 2003. All his books were listed on The New York Times Best Seller list. His last publication was ‘The Complete Far Side: 1980–1994’ that was released in 2003.
In 2003, he worked on a cover for ‘The New Yorker’ as he considered it a celebrated opportunity.
Gary Larson has also lent his voice for an episode of the 21st season of animated sitcom ‘The Simpsons’, which was aired in 2010.