Mr. O'Malley's conceit was matched only by his inability to grant the simplest childhood request, and his misguided attempts never failed to get Barnaby into hot water.
Mr. O'Malley was a comic strip original, though in appearance he had a passing resemblance to W.C. Fields. "Cushlamochree" (from the Irish cuisle mo chroí, "beat of my heart") was his signature cry when shocked by the inevitable down-turn of events in response to his ineffectual meddling in Barnaby's affairs. Throughout the course of his comic career Mr. O'Malley stumbled his way into the U.S. Congress and became a Wall Street tycoon.
Other media
"Barnaby and Mr. O'Malley", a 1946 stage play based on the comic, featured J. M. Kerrigan as O'Malley. The play was unsuccessful, completing only four performances before it "closed for repairs", never to return.[2][3] The play was later adapted into a 1959 episode of General Electric Theater, starring Bert Lahr as O'Malley.[4] Many of the original comic strips were republished in three volumes of paperback books.
References
^Crockett Johnson, Barnaby, Henry Holt and Company, 1943.