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Will(am Jacob) Cuppy (1884-1949)

 

American humorist and journalist. Cuppy was best-known for his mock-scientific observations of nature. One of his favorite places for observation was the Bronx Zoo, from where he perhaps picked up the following note: "The Chameleon's face reminded Aristotle of a Baboon. Aristotle wasn't much of a looker himself." Cuppy satirized with his dry and subtle humor everything from arrogant experts to modern society and popular culture. His method was to read as much as possible about his subject, and then squeeze everything into an essay of about two pages. His knowledge of history and literature was extensive, but he abandoned academic studies for the sake of journalism.

"It's easy to see the faults in people I know; it's hardest to see the good. Especially when the good isn't there."

Will Cuppy was born in Auburn, Indiana. His father, Thomas Jefferson Cuppy, was a lumber buyer for a railroad. In his childhood young Will spent happy summers on the Cuppy farm near South Whitley, where he acquired his first knowledge of nature. He attended the Auburn public schools and in 1902 he entered the University of Chicago. During these years Cuppy worked as a reporter for several Chicago newspapers and studied literature. He graduated in 1907 and continued his studies for Ph.D. In 1914 he decided to settle for an M.A. degree and moved to New York.

"Etiquette means behaving yourself a little better than is absolutely essential."

As a writer Cuppy made his debut with MAROON TALES, which appeared in 1910. It was written while he was in graduate school. The collection included eight stories about college and fraternity life. Nineteen years later appeared HOW TO BE HERMIT (1929), which was based on Cuppy's experiences on Jones Island, off Long Island.

Most of the stories in HOW TO TELL YOUR FRIENDS FROM THE APES (1931) appeared first in New Yorker. Cuppy was a book reviewer for the old New York Herald-Tribune - the column was published under the title 'Mystery and Adventure'. He also wrote for the Saturday Evening Post.

Cuppy's lifestyle was reclusive. He had a city apartment in Greenwich Village, where he did his writing at night. "I do not travel. I am not much of an extrovert, and I'm not much interested in extroverted objects. I do not care for the 'ideas' of novelists. Novels are wonderful, of course, but I prefer newspapers." (from World Authors 1900-1950, see below). Cuppy became in the 1930s a well-known figure in New York literary circles. In the 1940s he edited three collections of crime and mystery stories.

Will Cuppy died on on September 19, in 1949. He was buried in Auburn's Evergreen Cemetery next to his mother, Frances Stahl Cuppy. In mid-1980s Cuppy's readers placed a new headstone for his grave, to honor the memory of the writer. In 2003 a nomenclature committee of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) honored Cuppy by naming an asteroid after him. "15017 Cuppy", originally discovered by the astronomer Edward Bowell, is in the main asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. The name was suggested by Mr. Michael Walter from Auburn; Edward Bowell welcomed the idea and revealed in his reply that he was also a fan of Cuppy's writings.

In 1950 appeared posthumously Cuppy's THE DECLINE AND FALL OF PRACTICALLY EVERYBODY, which was edited by his friend Fred Feldkamp. The well planned and researched book went through the great historical figures from ancient Egypt to Queen Victoria. It was not only a work of great humor, but of great scholarship. Feldkamp also edited HOW TO GET FROM JANUARY TO DECEMBER (1951). Cuppy's quotations have appeared in several anthologies, among others in The Wordsworth Dictionary of Quotations, and his satirical works are still in print.

"Henry VIII had so many wives because his dynastic sense was very strong whenever he saw a maid of honour."
Will Cuppy in Finnish: Will Cuppyn aforismeihin voi tutustua mm. Hannu Tarmion toimittamassa teoksessa Elämänviisauden kirja (1986). "Aristoteles oli kuuluisa siitä, että hän tiesi kaiken. Hän opetti että aivojen tarkoitus on viilentää verta ja että niillä ei ole roolia ajatustyössä. Tämä pätee kuitenkin vain tiettyihin henkilöihin." - For further reading: World Authors 1900-1950, vol. 1., ed. by Martin Seymour-Smith and Andrew C. Kimmens (1996); Contemporary Authors Vol. 108, (1983); The American Humorist by N.W. Yeats (1964) - See also: Charles Nordhoff

Selected works:

  • MAROON TALES, 1910
  • HOW THE BE A HERMIT; OR, A BACHELOR KEEPS HOUSE, 1929
  • HOW TO TELL YOUR FRIENDS FROM THE APES, 1931 (with an introduction by P.G. Wodehouse)
  • THE GREAT BUSTARD AND OTHER PEOPLE, 1941
  • HOW TO BECOME EXTINCT, 1941 (illustrated by William Steig)
  • ed.: WORLD'S GREAT DETECTIVE STORIES, 1943
  • ed.: WORLD'S GREAT MYSTERY STORIES, 1943
  • ed. MURDER WITHOUT TEARS, 1946
  • HOW TO ATTRACT THE WOMBAT, 1949 (with illust. by Ed Nofziger)
  • THE DECLINE AND FALL OF PRACTICALLY EVERYBODY, 1950 (ed. by F. Feldkamp drawings by William Steig)
  • HOW TO GET FROM JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1951 (ed. by F. Feldkamp, drawings by John Ruge)


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