Art Finley
{{short description|American cartoonist}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Art Finley
| image = Mayor Art and Cheri Block.JPG
| caption = Mayor Art and Cheri Block
| birth_name = Arthur Finger
| birth_date = 1926
| birth_place = Fairmont, West Virginia, U.S.{{Cite web|url=http://www.bcradiohistory.com/Biographies/ArtFinley.htm|title = Art Finley}}
| death_date = August 7, 2015
| death_place = Vancouver, British Columbia
| occupation = TV/Radio Anchor
| yearsactive = 1943-1995
| spouse = Geraldine (1950–2006)
}}
Art Finley (born Arthur Finger; 1926 – August 7, 2015) was an American television and radio personality, mostly in San Francisco and Vancouver, until his retirement in 1995.{{cite web | title = Art Finley biographical materials | publisher = Bay Area Radio Museum | url = http://www.bayarearadio.org/stn_documents/art-finley_kgo-1978-bio.shtml | access-date = 2009-04-17 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101018012440/http://bayarearadio.org/stn_documents/art-finley_kgo-1978-bio.shtml | archive-date = 2010-10-18 | url-status = dead }}
His broadcasting career began at KXYZ Houston in 1943. He enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II, and in the Korean War, he was recalled to active duty as a reserve officer in the U.S. Air Force, where he helped establish radio stations in Newfoundland and Greenland for the Strategic Air Command. Afterward, he worked in New York City in TV and radio. He moved to Stockton, California in the mid-1950s, to host a children's program, Toonytown, on KOVR-TV, where he remained until 1958.
He is widely remembered as "Mayor Art," the host of a live children's show, featuring "Popeye" cartoons, that aired weekday afternoons on KRON-TV{{cite web|url=https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/sfbatv/bundles/208796|title=Mayor Art - San Francisco Bay Area Television Archive}} in San Francisco beginning in 1959 through 1966.{{cite web | title = Fifty Years of Broadcasting in Bay Area | publisher = Marin Independent Journal | url = http://www.marinij.com/ci_4532931?source=most_emailed | access-date=2009-04-17}}{{cite book |last=Hollis |first = Tim | title = Hi there, boys and girls!: America's local children's TV shows | publisher = Univ. Press of Miss. | year = 2001 |location = Oxford |pages = 60 |isbn = 9781578063963 |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=hHZ3wYy7e9gC }} Dressed in a top hat and a morning coat,Image of Mayor Art: {{cite web | title = Bluey, Bluey | publisher = Notes from around the Block | url = http://cheriblocksabraw.com/2009/01/30/bluey-bluey/ | access-date=2009-04-17}} he addressed his live audience of attendant children, who wore similar top hats, as the "city council."{{cite web | title = Art Finley biographical materials | publisher = BC Radio History | url = http://www.bcradiohistory.com/Biographies/ArtFinley.htm |access-date=2009-04-17}} Each program featured a short science segment; and in between Popeye cartoons, Finley used a hand puppet, "Ringading," {{cite book |last=Horton | first = Jane | title = The 50 / 60 Kid - A Palo Alto Dreamer | publisher = Lulu.com, 2008 | year = 2008 | pages = 198 | isbn = 9781435708174 |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=cyfK1mqLd8gC }} to teach introductory French, Spanish, German, and Italian words and phrases. The show's catchphrase, echoed by the City Council in every episode was "Bluey, Bluey" which may have related to Art's time in Greenland, where airfields are known as bluie. The traditional close to each show was "I'll be seeing you subsequently.".
He would also introduce creative art and imagination when he would have one of the kids from the audience come up and haphazardly draw a shaped line on a blackboard. Mayor Art would then complete the line by continuing it into a cartoon or real world object. He was wonderfully gifted with many talents.
"Mayor Art's Almanac" was the first TV newscast for children in the U.S., and the State of California awarded him two gold medals for the feature, in 1963 and 1965. The Mayor Art character was partly a way of introducing young people to civic matters, which, in retrospect, revealed Finley's true interests and foreshadowed his later career as a radio talk show host.
When the Mayor Art Show ended in the summer of 1966, Finley joined KRON-TV's news department as a reporter and producer-host of "Speak Out," a weekly political interview program, until 1968.
During the last half of his 50-year career, Finley returned to radio as a newsman and talk-show host. He relied on his wife Geraldine as his career advisor, researcher and editor throughout their 56-year marriage. She died in 2006.
In the U.S., Finley's station affiliations were primarily in San Francisco: 10 years at KGO, and KCBS. Three interim years were spent at XTRA in San Diego and WNIS in Norfolk. Two radio stations in Vancouver, B.C., needed a talk-show host with U.S. experience and a knowledge of Canadiana, and Finley spent five years at CKNW, and later, six years at CJOR. He retired in 1995; his final years in broadcasting were as a KCBS news anchor.
While living in Canada, Finley contributed many news stories and features from that country and Europe, as byline writer for the San Francisco Chronicle Foreign Service.
Art Finley served as Master of Ceremonies for San Francisco's official celebration of Independence Day for 14 years between 1960 and 1979.
From 1962 to 1981, the San Francisco Chronicle and scores of other North American newspapers published his syndicated daily panel "Art's Gallery", consisting of 19th Century woodcuts, to which Finley had written humorous modern-day captions. All 6200+ original panels are now in the archives of San Francisco State University.
On February 12, 2002, Finley donated tapes of 100 of his memorable radio interviews, to the University of British Columbia Library's Rare Books and Special Collections.{{cite web |url=http://www.library.ubc.ca/spcoll/AZ/PDF/EFG/Finley_Art.pdf |title=List of interviews donated to the University of British Columbia}}
Finley died of a heart attack on August 7, 2015.{{Citation
| last1 =Johnson
| first1 =Lizzie
| last2 =Lee
| first2 =Wendy
| title = Arthur Finger, media veteran and local TV's Mayor Art, dies
| newspaper =SFGate
| date =August 9, 2015
| url =http://m.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Arthur-Finger-media-veteran-and-local-TV-s-6434580.php
| access-date =August 9, 2015 }}
Notes and references
External links
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060214141944/http://www.bayarearadio.org/audio/kgo/kgo_art-finley_may-9-1978.shtml Art Finley interviews rock impresario Bill Graham on KGO Radio, San Francisco, 1978]
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0p-eg0tENqs Art Finley Tribute]
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Category:Artists from West Virginia
Category:Artists from San Francisco
Category:Artists from Vancouver
Category:Canadian radio personalities
Category:People from Fairmont, West Virginia
Category:Radio personalities from San Francisco
Category:Television personalities from San Francisco
Category:Writers from West Virginia
Category:Writers from San Francisco
Category:Writers from Vancouver
Category:American comics writers
Category:American editorial cartoonists
Category:Canadian comics writers
Category:Canadian editorial cartoonists
Category:Radio personalities from West Virginia
Category:Comedians from San Francisco