Born in
Brooklyn, Lariar studied illustration at the
New York School of Fine and Applied Art but then switched to cartooning. After graduation, he teamed with two of his friends, and they started a cartoon agency, selling their own work under a dozen different pseudonyms. In 1927, they moved the operation to
Paris, selling to British magazines and
Fleetway. Two years later, they were back in New York looking for work, as Lariar recalled, "To make a living, we did everything. We had a service for printers, drew cartoons for calendars, played messenger and did some of the first work for the slicks." They scored with a series of cartoon postcards that Boy Scouts could use to write home, selling more than a million cards in a direct-mail campaign. From 1930 to 1938, working in an office on 45th Street, Lariar did freelance
gag cartoons,
comic strips and spot drawings, including
political cartoons for the
New York Journal American and pages for some of the earliest
comic books. In 1938 he moved to California to work at
Walt Disney Studios, including on the film
Fantasia, but was dissatisfied with the factory approach of the work and quit after a short time. ==
Liberty==