REMEMBERiNG JiM NEEDLE

Pete’s Pup was the antithesis of all those funny pet strips in comics when I was growing up. Even Gnasher had nothing on the gigantic, destructive, flea-ridden and yet completely loveable (for the readers at least, not his owner’s dad) dog of some far-fetched, unknown breed that made us laugh so much. In my memory he’d been a regular character despite only appearing in early issues, their strips staying with me for decades.

Jim Needle’s scratchy art perfectly brought this monstrous good boy to life. Jim was a superb cartoonist who was known for contributing to local newspapers and publications. His signature style was energetic and larger-than-life, much like his canine creation. “Jim came via Bob Paynter (IPC Magazine’s Group Editor of Humour),” says co-editor Patrick Gallagher. “Jim submitted Pete’s Pup to Bob on spec as a sample of his work and Bob thought it would be a good fit for OiNK, which we were currently developing. Bob was right! We loved the character and Jim’s style, and the rest is history!”

These crazy strips of Jim’s appeared in almost all of the very earliest issues of OiNK but by the time I started reading as a kid he’d already moved on. Thankfully, a couple of strips had been left in reserve by the comic’s editors for the first Holiday Special and appropriately enough the Big Soft Pets Issue, #27. While I did eventually get a couple of back issues from a cousin, those two issues and the reprint of the preview issue’s strip in the second annual were all I originally saw of the mangy mutt.

When I came to collecting OiNK as an adult for the blog I was surprised to find the strip only appeared nine times, even more shocked to see I’d missed most of these first time around. They instantly brought back happy memories, this monstrous shaggy pile of ever-shedding fur must’ve made quite the impact on my young self for him to stay planted in my memory that way. Physically, he definitely did so for the family he lived with anyway!

A resident of Jericho in Oxford, England, Jim’s work could often be found in frames on the walls of the local offices and pubs and at one point he worked as a stage hand at the New Theatre, Oxford, the theatre life running in his family’s blood. His local newspaper, the Jericho Echo, commissioned him to draw a panorama of the town’s streets which can still be found near the top of every page of Jericho Online. Unfortunately, as they themselves explain, “Reproduction at this size unfortunately gives only an impression of the detailed quality of the original – another testimony to Jim’s great skill and versatility.”

Jim sadly passed away in the early months of 1997 and it is with sadness that I add another name to OiNK’s obituaries. The Echo newspaper, in its own write-up about Jim described him as “a big man, in every way, and will be greatly missed.” It sounds to me like he may have been just as big a character as the one he created, one that brought so much fun to pig pals all those years ago.

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