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 Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Fred Basset by Alex Graham
Posted by maggie
The basset hound Fred has his own Wikipedia entry, and his first appearance by cartoonist Alex Graham (1917-1991) appeared in The Daily Mail July 8, 1963. (Huzzah! A British strip for which the first publication date appears online!) Graham based the strip's character on his own pet. Don Markstein has an entry on the strip, too -- as does Lambiek. Here are a few from 1964. 
9/30/2008 3:44:42 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, September 29, 2008
Odd Bodkins by Dan O'Neill
Posted by maggie
Dan O'Neill (1942-) is a talented underground comix creator about whom the Lambiek.net site says he "began his career in 1967 with a strip called Odd Bodkins." Well, far's I can tell, this sampling was first published in 1964 -- and he'd been active in comix prior to that. Just saying. He drew national attention when the Disney organization stomped him for his Air Pirates comix material dealing with its characters, but comix buffs had been following his work for some time. He has his own website and sells rarities there. Lambiek also says, "O'Neill has largely remained inactive in the field of comix since [1979]." As you'll see on his website, you'll find he has continued to produce distinctive cartoons. 
9/29/2008 4:07:20 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, September 25, 2008
King Aroo by Jack Kent
Posted by maggie
Jack Kent (1920-1985) is best known today as a children's book writer and artist, but he also produced a wonderful comic strip titled King Aroo, whose title character sort of ruled the kingdom of Myopia. His cohorts included sidekick Yupyop, the mail-carrying kangaroo Mr. Pennipost, and the forgetful Mr. Elephant. Kent incorporated some of the strip's characters ( e.g., Mr. Pennipost and Mr. Elephant) in some of his children's books. The strip itself ran from 1950 to 1965, but most installments carried no information regarding the year of publication. There was one book of reprints, King Aroo, released in 1953, but it can be hard to find, and bookfinder prices range from $30 to $100. The samples shown here are not necessarily in sequence, but at least two are from 1962: 
9/25/2008 11:23:36 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Hayseeds by Harry Hargreaves
Posted by maggie
In its obituary for Harry Hargreaves (1922-2004), The Independent wrote, "Although he also worked as an illustrator, animator, advertising artist, toy designer and writer, Harry Hargreaves will probably be best remembered as one of the most successful animal cartoonists of his day -- in particular for his creation of the widely syndicated 'The Bird' and 'Hayseeds' features - and as a regular contributor to Punch for 17 years."
Here's almost the start of Hayseeds, which ran from 1968 to 1980. I say "almost the start," because what I have starts with Strip #2. Sigh. (By the way, there were two book collections of the strip.)
9/24/2008 8:08:09 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Lance by Warren Tufts
Posted by maggie
Warren Tufts (Dec. 12, 1925-July 6, 1982) was a terrific artist specializing in Western comics. His Casey Ruggles newspaper strip began in 1949 with a storyline involving the 1849 Gold Rush, but Tufts left the strip in 1954 in a dispute over ownership of the feature. To conclude his contract, he briefly drew a comedic science-fiction strip, Lone Spaceman, which he demonstrated was capable of syndication but that the syndicate turned down, ending its contract with Tufts. Following that, he began his Lance Western strip as a Sunday full-pager in 1957 and added a daily in 1957.
Tufts experimented with what was possible for the newspaper format. On at least some Sunday strips, he dropped the line art from the illustration. In this sequence of the dailies in 1957, he went from line art to an experimentation with toning.
9/23/2008 6:21:51 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Jeff Hawke by Sydney Jordan
Posted by maggie
The science-fiction strip ran in England's Daily Express from Feb. 15, 1955, to April 18, 1974. In August, Titan Books released the collection Jeff Hawke: Overlord (ISBN 1845765982). George Hagenauer has commented on how to solve dating problems with British strips, so I'll note that in this specific era, strip #H-1723 was in the paper dated Oct. 9, 1959. Those with calendar programs can work out when these specific strips were published. (At this point, Jordan's friend William Patterson was scripting the feature and possibly helping to plot the tales, as well.)
9/23/2008 6:10:44 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Saturday, September 20, 2008
Sir Bagby's Dragon
Posted by maggie
In his comment regarding my Sept. 18 post about Sir Bagby, George Hagenauer wrote, "Is this the strip with the miniature dragon?" I don't know whether it's the strip with the miniature dragon, but it was certainly a strip with a miniature dragon. In fact, in the following 1964 sequence, there are even two dragons, as the cast of Sir Bagby meets a group of Asian characters. 
9/20/2008 1:39:23 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, September 19, 2008
Gordo by Gus Arriola
Posted by maggie
This is one of the strips I followed virtually from the first time I came across it -- in The Pittsburgh Press, as it happens. I clipped and saved it for months, one aspect being that the story that was running when I found it was the brilliant competition between long-time amigos Gordo and Poet for the affections of waitress Rusty. You'll find the entire story in R.C. Harvey's wonderful Accidental Ambassador Gordo: The Comic Strip Art of Gus Arriola, along with a wealth of information about its creation. Gus Arriola (1917-2008) had an impeccable sense of design and a great gift for storytelling and comedy, and Gordo began in 1941 and ended March 2, 1985. Here's a sampling from 1966, in which Gordo's Pepito has to contend with the wealthy Mary Frances, who has come to Mexico from Texas. 
9/19/2008 10:16:56 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, September 18, 2008
Sir Bagby: A Strip for Fans of Knighthood?
Posted by maggie
Today, such strips as the online Sword & Sarcasm and Nodwick provide comedy entertainment for fans of medieval fantasy. From 1959 to 1965, artist Rick and writer Bill Hackney produced such entertainment for newspapers via the Bell-McClure syndicate. More samples appear here. Isn't it time for someone to reprint these in more permanent form? (The strips below appeared in 1964.) 
9/18/2008 8:31:49 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Percy Crosby's Skippy
Posted by maggie
Joan Crosby Tibbetts has been waging a campaign for years now to defend rights to her dad's "Skippy" character. Percy Crosby (1891-1964) created an incredibly popular feature starring a little boy playing with his buddies and making observations about life -- at first in the pages of the 1923 pre-photo-magazine version of Life and then (1925-1945) via a syndicated newspaper feature. There were books, toys, and a movie that starred Jackie Cooper and brought Norman Taurog the Best Director Oscar, and the strip can't be properly conveyed with only a few samples. Nonetheless, here are three from 1939. (Owing to the size of the printed strips, I can't get more than three at a time on the scanner.) The top two of these feature the fence that lingered on jars of Skippy peanut butter long after the connection to the strip's character had been forgotten by most. 
9/17/2008 9:58:15 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Sam's Strip: Due for Complete Reprinting!
Posted by maggie
In case you've been frustrated by seeing a bunch of strips that are part of a larger whole that you'll probably never see, here's a taste of a treat you can own yourself. Fantagraphics will release Sam's Strip by Jerry Dumas (1930-) as a $19.99 208-page compendium (ISBN 1560979720) in mid-December. While there was one previous collection, Sam's Strip Lives! provided only a sampling from the complete 20-month run, so, even if you have that, you'll want to reserve a copy of this with your kindly comics shop now. Dumas' concept was that his characters were aware they were appearing in a comic strip, and he took the device to the extent that at times the strips took on gentle political commentaries -- since among the other characters were the cartoon devices used by editorial cartoonists. It ran from October 1961 to June 1963 but was never what syndicates would term a "success." The two primary characters, Sam and his assistant, appeared in a revamped version titled Sam and Silo in 1977, but they didn't seem to be aware any longer that they were only two-dimensional occupants of a two-dimensional world. This is one of my favorite sequences; it appeared in 1962: 
9/16/2008 9:11:43 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, September 15, 2008
Non-Raymond Rip Kirby
Posted by maggie
Flash Gordon and Secret Agent X-9 artist Alex Raymond began his detective strip Rip Kirby March 4, 1946, and the strip was scripted by Raymond, Ward Greene, and Fred Dickenson. But Raymond died in a car crash Sept. 6, 1956, and John Prentice took over the art, while Dickenson continued to script the feature. Prentice died in 1999, and the last Rip Kirby strip was June 26, 1999. When The Cleveland Plain Dealer picked up Rip Kirby on Aug. 24, 1964, the strip was in the middle of an adventure. Solution: The paper provided a summary of what had happened to this point. (By the way, in case you were worried about the resolution to the sampling I've shown here, the strip for Aug. 28 featured Kirby making a hasty exit from the house, accompanied by the thought balloon, "Can't shoot him ... It's his house ...") 
9/15/2008 9:02:55 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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