Jim Benton

For the American football player of the same name, see Jim Benton (American football).
Jim Benton
Residence Bloomfield Township, Michigan[1]
Nationality American
Education Western Michigan University
Occupation Illustrator, author
Spouse(s) Mary K. Hart[1]
Website http://www.jimbenton.com/

Jim K. Benton (born March 25 1960) is an American illustrator and writer. Licensed properties he has created include Dear Dumb Diary, Dog of Glee, Franny K. Stein, Just Jimmy, Just Plain Mean, Sweetypuss, The Misters, Meany Doodles, Vampy Doodles, Kissy Doodles, and the jOkObo project, but he is probably most known for his creation It's Happy Bunny.

Early life and education

Jim Benton was raised in Birmingham, Michigan, graduating from Seaholm High School in 1978. He studied fine arts at Western Michigan University.[1]

Career

Benton began his career in a T-shirt shop where he started designing his own characters on T-shirts. At the same time, he did illustrations and artwork for magazines and newspapers.[2] People magazine named him "one of the most visible cartoonists in America."[3]

Benton also created greeting cards and worked in the magazine and publishing industry. In 1998, his SpyDogs characters became an animated series, The Secret Files of the Spy Dogs, that aired on Fox Kids. Licensing his own creations brought them widespread attention on products, such as It's Happy Bunny, which he created in the mid-1990s but licensed in 2002.[4]

Benton currently lives in Michigan, where he operates out of his own studio. He is married and is a father of two children.

Dear Dumb Diary

Dear Dumb Diary: Year Two

It's Happy Bunny

Franny K. Stein

Awards

References

  1. 1 2 3 Dalka-Prysby, Sandra (February–March 2007). "It's Happy Benton!". Signature. Retrieved 2007-12-01.
  2. Campbell, Janis (2007-09-25). "Jim Benton, artful writer". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved 2007-12-01.
  3. Reed, Susan (1989-05-08). "Success Brings Cartoonist Jim Benton a Pile of Funny Money". People. Retrieved 2012-04-14.
  4. Holmes, Elizabeth (2007-06-19). "How Licensing Helped an Artist Pull a Rabbit Out of His Hat". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2007-12-01.
  5. Gryphon Award - Center for Children's Books
  6. "It's Happy Bunny wins public service awards". License! Global Weekly E-news. 2007-03-27. Retrieved 2007-12-01.
  7. "This Year's Nominees". National Cartoonists Society Website. Retrieved 2011-05-29.
  8. "2011 Reuben Award Winners". National Cartoonists Society Website. Retrieved 2011-05-29.

External links

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