had built a reputation for his drawing skills in his newspaper comic strips before pioneering in animation.
Winsor McCay (–1934) developed prodigiously accurate and detailed drawing skills early in life. As a young man, he earned a living drawing portraits and posters in
dime museums, and attracted large crowds with his ability to draw quickly in public. McCay began working as a full-time newspaper illustrator in 1898, and started drawing comic strips in 1903. His greatest comic-strip success was the children's fantasy
Little Nemo in Slumberland, which he launched in 1905. McCay began performing on the
vaudeville circuit the following year, doing
chalk talks—performances in which he drew in front of a live audience. Inspired by
flip books his son
Robert brought home, McCay said he "came to see the possibility of making moving pictures" of his cartoons. He declared himself "the first man in the world to make animated cartoons", though the American
James Stuart Blackton and the French
Émile Cohl were among those who had made earlier ones, and McCay had photographed his first animated short under Blackton's supervision. McCay featured his
Little Nemo characters in
the film, which debuted in movie theatres in 1911, and he soon incorporated it into his vaudeville act. The animated sequences in
Little Nemo have no plot: much like the early experiments of Émile Cohl, McCay used his first film to demonstrate the medium's capabilities—with fanciful sequences demonstrating motion for its own sake. In
Mosquito he wanted greater believability, and balanced outlandish action with naturalistic timing, motion, and weight. Since he had already demonstrated in his first film that pictures could be made to move, in the second he introduced a simple story. Vaudeville acts and humor magazines commonly joked about large New Jersey mosquitoes they called "Jersey skeeters", and McCay had used mosquitoes in his comic strips—including a
Little Nemo episode in which a swarm of mosquitoes attack Nemo after he returns from a trip to Mars. McCay took the idea for the film from a June 5, 1909, episode of his comic strip
Dream of the Rarebit Fiend, in which a mosquito (without top hat or briefcase) gorges itself on an alcoholic until it becomes so bloated and drunk that it cannot fly away. '' comic strip. == Production and release ==