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  1. Willie Rushton was born in Chelsea, London, on 18 August 1937. He attended Shrewsbury School from 1950, where he met his future Private Eye colleagues Richard Ingrams and Christopher Booker. A talented cartoonist from a young age, he produced cartoons for the school’s official magazine The Salopian and its satirical counterpart, The Wallopian ...

  2. 13. Dez. 1996 · Rushton was also the author of humorous books such as William Rushton's Dirty Book (1964), The Filth Amendment (1981) and Willie Rushton's Great Moments of History (1985) and the spoofs The Day of ...

  3. 15. Dez. 2013 · William George [Willie] Rushton (1937–1996), cartoonist, comedian and author, was born on August 18, at 3 Wilbraham Place, Chelsea. He was the only child of John Atherton Rushton, a publisher ...

  4. (1937-1996) UK actor, cartoonist, editor, journalist and author who often wrote or drew as Willie Rushton. The influence of J B Morton is particularly clear in serial cartoon Satires like Brimstone Belcher (June 1960-March 1961 Liberal News), an influence which permeated the journal Private Eye, which Rushton co-founded in 1961.

  5. 17. Sept. 2018 · Sadly missing from the 'complete' Secret Policeman's Biggest Ball DVD (no idea as to why). I must have taped this back in 1989 and I'm glad I hung on to it e...

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  6. Willie Rushton (1937-1996) One of the architects of the 1960s satire boom, Willie Rushton co-founded the magazine Private Eye, producing its first cartoons and its layout from his mother’s home in Kensington. He achieved fame as part of the 1962 BBC series, That Was the Week That Was, alongside the likes of David Frost and as a regular ...