Geoffry Morgan Pike

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Geoff Pike
Geoff Pike, pictured with wife Glenys (née Evans)
Geoff Pike, pictured with wife Glenys (née Evans)
Born(1929-10-17)17 October 1929
Tottenham, Middlesex, England
Died8 March 2018(2018-03-08) (aged 88)
Sydney, NSW, Australia
OccupationNovelist and Cartoonist
NationalityNaturalised Australian
Period1974–2010
GenreAdventure novel, Historical novel
Notable worksRed Lotus
SpouseGlenys Evans
Website
paikitfai.com

Geoffry Morgan Pike (who wrote as Geoff Pike and Pai Kit Fai) was an English-born, naturalized Australian writer and cartoonist.

Early years[edit]

Geoffry Morgan Pike was born in Tottenham, Middlesex on 17 October 1929, to parents Mildred and Robert Pike. He has two siblings Anthony J. Pike and Peter Robert Pike. At age 14 he entered training on the Navy ship HMS Indefatigable, and went to sea in 1945 aged 15. In 1949, Pike emigrated to Australia where he worked in the outback breaking horses, felling trees and sailing aboard deep-sea trawlers before he signed on as an artistic director on many popular cartoons such as Beetle Bailey and Krazy Kat with American Paramount Studios. Unbearable Bear in T.V. Tours, an animated cartoon series for Artransa Park Television, featured a globe trotting koala with itchy feet.[1]

Pike worked with Bryce Courtenay at McCann Erickson advertising agency, most notably on the Mortein advertisement, "Louie the Fly". Bryce wrote the jingle and Geoff created the cartoon and animation. He also created the animation for the McWilliam's monk advertisement and the popular Yowie characters featured in children's picture books and Cadbury's line of confectionery containing small plastic toys.

In 1977 Pike was diagnosed with throat cancer and learned the art of qigong and traditional Oriental medicine rather than surgery, beating cancer and becoming a master of qigong, creating books and videos teaching others the philosophy and practice of aligning breath, physical activity and awareness for mental, spiritual and corporeal health.

He passed in March 2018 at the age of 89 after many years of ill health.

Pike's brother, Anthony (better known as Tony Pike), opened Pikes Hotel in Ibiza, famous for its lavish celebrity parties during the 1980s.

Writing[edit]

In 1974 he published the first of many books, Henry Golightly: a novel of the sea. Published by Angus and Robertson, it was the story of a Gweilo (caucasian foreigner) living in Macau and building a boat amongst the locals; a youthful search for adventure and love among the post-war wreckage of 1945 and the horror that was Hiroshima.

Pike also wrote under the name Pai Kit Fai, which was given to him by his Chinese in-laws. Loosely translated, it means "White Person of Letters and Grand Ambition'.[2] He wrote two books under this pen name, The Concubine's Daughter and Red Lotus.

Bibliography[edit]

Fiction:

Non Fiction:

Animated scripts:

Children’s books, 1995–2001:

Children’s books, 1964: Around the world with Unbearable Bear series (adapted by Laurie Sharpe):

Awards and honours[edit]

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Geoff Pike, Unbearable Bear in Boy Meets Bear (Sungravure 1964), p. 25
  2. ^ "About – Pai Kit Fai". Pai Kit Fai. Retrieved 6 December 2020.
  3. ^ Geoff Pike, Unbearable Bear in Boy Meets Bear (Sungravure 1964)
  4. ^ Geoff Pike, Unbearable Bear in London (Sungravure 1964)
  5. ^ Geoff Pike, Unbearable Bear in Ireland (Sungravure 1964)
  6. ^ Geoff Pike, Unbearable Bear in Scotland (Sungravure 1964)