LONDON -- British cartoonist Ronald Searle, the creator of the willfully wicked schoolgirls of St. Trinian's who amused generations of Britons, has died, his family said Tuesday. He was 91.

Searle was a prolific illustrator who drew for The New Yorker, Punch, and Walt Disney but it was the fictional girls' boarding school where the students ran riot that most captured the public imagination.

The long-legged, leering schoolgirls drank, smoked and generally cut a swath of destruction; their weapon-wielding antics were colored by Searle's morbid sense of humor. His satire of the venerable English school system struck a chord.

Searle's secret, as one early profile noted, was to turn "the very epitome of decency and polite tradition for every right-thinking Englishman" into "a place of terror."

Searle's dark streak may well have been informed by his experiences as a soldier during World War II. His promising career as cartoonist was interrupted by his capture by the Japanese at Singapore. He spent the rest of the conflict as a prisoner of war, but somehow managed to keep drawing despite beatings and bouts of malaria and beriberi.

His drawings of camp life were published following his liberation in 1945 in fellow prisoner Russell Braddon's account of his own captivity, "The Naked Island." St. Trinian's sly schoolgirls made him famous, but Searle long insisted that the students were just "a small part of my work." He designed cover art for The New Yorker and a series of editorial cartoons for France's Le Monde newspaper. His Molesworth books, set in the fictional St.Custard's, also proved popular.

But St. Trinian's refused to die, despite Searle's attempt to draw a line under the series by having the girls' blow up their school with an atomic bomb. -- AP

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