Peter Arno

[4] He also formed a jazz band called the Yale Collegians, in which he played piano, banjo, and accordion.

[6] The iconic cartoons and covers he created there, from 1925 through 1968, helped establish the magazine's reputation for sophisticated humor and fine illustration.

[9] Arno often worked with gag writers, one of whom coined the popular expression "back to the drawing board" in a famous March 1, 1941 cartoon.

[10][11] In 1927 he married Lois Long, a popular New Yorker columnist and fashion editor who wrote under the pseudonym "Lipstick."

After his second divorce, Arno moved to a farm near Harrison, New York, where he lived in seclusion, enjoying music, guns, and sports cars.

March 3, 1928 cover of The New Yorker by Arno
Lois Long aka "Lipstick" in the 1920s