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Jewish artist and Private Eye stalwart Barry Fantoni dies aged 85

The cartoonist was also a musician, poet, playwright and actor

May 29, 2025 16:42
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British author, cartoonist and jazz musician Barry Fantoni, UK, 16th March 1968. (Photo by Evening Standard/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
4 min read

A man of many talents, Barry Fantoni, the Jewish illustrator, cartoonist, Pop artist, musician, poet, playwright and actor, has died aged 85. He died at his home in Turin, Italy.

Born to an Italian father and a Jewish mother of French and Dutch descent in 1940, Fantoni grew up in London’s East End. His father was a watercolour painter and his mother a skilled musician, from whom he gained his ability to play varied musical instruments.

He won a scholarship at the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts to study painting aged 14, and during his schooling there from 1954 until 1958, when he was expelled, he formed the first jazz group, a film society and led a drama group.

In 1963, his first cartoon was published in Private Eye, and he became a stalwart of the magazine’s editorial team over the next five decades. He retired from the satirical magazine in 2010, telling The Independent, “It was just time to leave. The establishment isn’t even worth puncturing anymore.” Not only did he create the magazine’s cover scores of times, but he was also in the team responsible for conjuring the magazine’s jokes.

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