Mort Gerberg: The Person Who Pushes the Pen


Mort showing off his tshirt.

Mort Gerberg and I met in 2017, in a stuffy conference room/holding pen in the offices of The New Yorker. We were among the dozen or so people who milled about that day, each of us waiting our turn to show our drawings to the cartoon editor, Emma Allen.

I had just sold my first cartoon to the magazine; Mort, who started contributing in 1965, had sold hundreds. In that room, Mort was a legend, but he wore the status lightly—joking, inquisitive, and kind to all, including newcomers like me. We struck up a conversation about sketching from life, and before long, in spite of the sixty years between us, we were fast friends.

Today, at ninety-three years old, Mort is still regularly contributing cartoons to The New Yorker, as he has for the past fifty-nine years. He and his wife, Judith, have since moved from Manhattan to Denver, to be closer to family, but we’ve continued to talk regularly, trading updates about life, work, and the other cartoonists. This is my first visit to his new home: I’ve come to interview him about his long career, and to mine him for advice.

Mort and Sofia talking at a table.
Mort and Sofia talking at a table.

It’s a formidable task, to do justice to Mort’s personal history. To make a long story impossibly brief: Mort was born in Brooklyn, in 1931. He grew up short, with bad eyes and a keen interest in three things: music, drawing, and stickball.

Mort and Sofia talking at a table.

Immediately after graduating from City College, he was drafted into the Army, where he served in the public-information office.

Finger pointing at old newspaper article.
Sofia and Mort looking at old newspaper.

He then spent the remainder of his twenties in uninspiring ad-sales-promotions jobs, until, after a dramatic episode involving a flipped desk and a nearly severed finger, he left it all behind and drove to Mexico, where he spent a year reinventing himself as a cartoonist.

It worked. By 1963, Mort was selling cartoons and illustrated spreads to various smaller magazines. With some encouragement, he began submitting to The New Yorker, and spent a year or two dropping off cartoons with the receptionist each week, with no further interaction, as was standard practice in those days.

Young Mort handing submissions over to a receptionist.
Mort gesticulating.

Finally, in 1965, the cartoon editor’s assistant came out to the lobby—

Cartoon Editor's assistant holding out one of young Mort's submissions.
Young Mort pleading with the Cartoon Editor's assistant.

Sofia and Mort sitting and talking at a table.

After some more back-and-forth with the editor, Jim Geraghty, the cartoon below ran as a full-page, in 1965. It was the beginning of a long, illustrious career.

Two ladies looking up at the vaulted ceilings of a large church in Gothic style. They stand in the middle of the nave.

October 30, 1965

Sofia talking to Mort who is rifling through drawers looking for pens.
Sofia talking to Mort who is rifling through drawers looking for pens.

Sofia talking to Mort who is rifling through drawers looking for pens.

Mort and I spend many hours looking through his drawings and books. For a while, we talk shop: Does he work from roughs? Rarely; he prefers the energy of a first draft. How does he come up with his cartoons? He keeps a list of things that have been bothering him; often, these days, his gripes come from the news.

Sofia and Mort sitting in rollerchairs and talking.
Sofia and Mort sitting in rollerchairs and talking.
Sofia and Mort sitting in rollerchairs and talking.
Mort sitting in rollerchair and talking.
Mort talking.
Sofia and Mort sitting in rollerchairs and talking.

We go on, and on. I lose track of how many times Mort says “Sorry, but I have to tell you—” and launches into a tale: drawing the 1968 Democratic Convention; pitching a book with Walt Frazier; sneaking Shel Silverstein into Disneyland; that time he met Hugh Hefner; that time Bill Clinton invited him to the Inauguration; that time he played Cole Porter’s piano in front of a packed house. Eventually, my stomach gets the better of me, and we break for lunch.

Mort and Sofia sitting and eating at counter.
Mort and Sofia sitting and eating at counter.

Mort and Sofia sitting and eating at counter.

Sofia and Mort walking outside.

Sofia and Mort walking outside.
Sofia and Mort walking outside.
Mort walking outside.
Sofia and Mort walking outside.

Sofia and Mort walking outside.

Sofia and Mort walking outside.



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