Showing posts with label Teena-a-go-go. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teena-a-go-go. Show all posts

Friday, July 10, 2020

Here We Go-Go Again

I have to clean out my blog folder, so here are some odds and ends.

Saturday Leftover Day.

I am a fan of Bob Powell's work. The last ten years have been almost forgotten by evey historian. He drew a lot for Mad imitation Sick, of course. But when that died down, he had an actual newspaper strip, Teena-a-go-go. I did several posts with dailies and one with all the sundays I could find. I am combining that ast one here with a set of photos of the wash originals and the first Sunday, I missed the first time around. This means I am close to a complete run.





















I have shown various Al Hirschfeld cartoons over the years. Recently I shared a couple of gags from Hank Ketcham's It's Only Your Imagination series in True. But he also sometimes illustrated The Saturday Evening Post's You Be The Judge column (as did many others, including Bill Elder).


I am still surprised there is no complete list, website or even book of his work. I keep coming across unknown ones and they are always great. Here is a Bob Hope poster from movie magazine Modern Screen.



Monday, September 16, 2019

Inspect Her Gadget

Monday Surprise Me Day.

I have to admit that I have shown samples of today's treat before, but those were only dailies and black and white microfiche scans. Teena-A-Go-Go is the last big project by Bob Powell before he sadly died of cancer in 1967. Writer Bessy Little had been involved with girl magazines from the forties on. She first worked for the teenage and women magazines from Martin Goodman's Timely/Atlas comics, stuff like both the comic book and the magazine version of Miss America. By the early sixties she had become the editor of the popular girls' magazine Teen Life, which was mostly made up with articles and photo features about the popular pop band heroes of the day. Early in she introduced comics to that magazine as well, using Bob Powell for various short stories (one of which, featuring Herman and the Hermits) I have shown here before. She also started the black and white Teen-A-Go-Go strip with Powell, often using a small image of the titular hero on the cover. Around the same time, or slightly thereafter, she managed to sell a newspaper strip version of the same strip, which ran daily and Sunday for most of 1966. I had seen some of those dailies (and showed them here) but recently I came across a couple of Sundays, which were even more impressive than I thought from the black and white copies I saw. I will try and find some more dailies to ad to this, but for now, just feast your eyes.

I also found an online source for this strip, so I have added the first few Sundays in black and white. If you come back in a couple of months I will probably have added the rest of it's five month run. I do. ot yet have the accompanying dailies, but it seems to me that the dailies and Sundays had seperate storylines. As noted in the comments, the second story here is exceptionel in the fact that it shows a catfight between women over a flimsy dress and ends up with one of them in her bra. However that got past the cencors we'll never know. Maybe Bessy Little's track recond and seniority helped.

Sunday, March 05, 2017

Go-go Strips

Saturday Leftover Day.

In my new book Behaving Madly (about the Mad magazines imitators of the late fifties, click on the Amazon button on the right to preorder your copy) I was not able to use any material from Sick due to copyright reasons. Which I idn't mindm because it gave me lots of room to show other stuff. The only bad thing about it, is robed me of a chance to highlite the later career of Bob Powell, who work for Sick for the last seven years of his life. After his death, Powell was accused of having no sense of humor by isonce pupil.studio mate Howard Nostrand and the huge body of work proves him wrong. Powell had an acute, if very sharp sense of humor. In fact, I was able to show some of it in my book, because he developed his satirical style on magaziens such as Panic, before going to Sick. But does that mean that Powell was a harsh or mean man. I think it proves he was a realist rather than a clown or fantasist. His mean contribution to any of his work from the forties onward is that he aded a level of realism and believabillity to the situation. Never more so than in his last and most important post Sick production, the shortlive newspaper strip Teena-a-go-go. Created together with Teen Life editor Betsy Little, he created a special girls strip for her magazine, which they later soold als a Sunday and daily strip as well. GHaving shown some of the Sundays, I never knew there was a daily version as well, until I ran across these micro-fiche sampels. Is there anyone out there who saved all three months of this strip?

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Teen Powell

Friday Comic Book Day.

For most of the sixties Bob Powell had disappeared into his work for Sick (with a few small sidesteps as a magazine illustrator). I have written an article for Alter Ego about his last few years as an active artist which I hope oy Thomas will soon be able to publish (but I have written more than one article for him, at least one of which will come sooner). When Sick crimbled in the mid-sixties (and before he was diagnozed with cander) he had to go out and look for new accounts. One of these was with the youth magazine Teen Life, where former Miss America editor Bessy Little was in charge. She hired him to illustrate a teen strip called Teena-a-gogo, which soon was turned into a newspaper strips as well. Though shortrun, I have ben able to show a lot of those (though sadly not all the Sunday pages, which I am still looking for). Before that he did a couple of one-off strips for Teen Life. Maybe these were his first work for the magazine. Anyway, if we can classify hs later worked as mostly forgotten, strips like this are firtually unknown.

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Clean Teens

Thursday Story Strip Day.

In 1967 Bob Powell dies after a long and succesful career in comics, which strted with Will Eisner in the late thirties and included his own studio in the late forties and early sixties and numerous very destinctly draw comics for many companies, including Harvey and Atlas. A true master of the form, he seems to have disappeared from comics after the late fifties, first taking over the Bat Masterton newspaper strip from Howard Nostrand (which I have shown here) and then settling in as one of the resident artists of the satirical magazine Sick (when it was tryong not to be a Mad imitation). For some reason these last years of his career have remained mostly unknown among fans. After Sick was bought by a new owner and decided to become more and more like a cheap knockoff of Mad, Powell left and went back to comics. he drew an issue of Archie's Madhouse and strated newspaper strip and monthly comic strip serial with teen magazine editor Bessy Little called Teena-A-Go-Go. From what I have seen it was as beautifully drawn as anything Powell did and even though it was not a succes, I am sure Powell would have gone on to greater heights and have been remembered better had he not died of cancer. I have never heard of anyone who had a complete set of Sundays and dailies of Teena, but last month I did come across a complete online set of the daily episodes of the whole of Teena's half year of existance... well, almost. Coevering the whole period, the set I came across only had the Saturday edition of that particular paper. I found another paper carrying the strip, but there also a large portion of the dailies was not represented. Still, together with the Sundays I showed earlier, they do give a good impression of this unjustly forgotten teen soaper.