Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Ready when you are.

Wednesday Ad day.

Looking at the Johnstone & Cushing article from Hogan's Alley I was able to identify at least one of the realistic artists they employed. I knew that Creig Flessel (whose name I often mistype as Greg Fleissel) was a regular there. He was involved in Boy's Life comics section that Johnstone & Cushing produced from the very first issue, drawing many of it's one page stories and sometimes even the covers. I don't know if he was a very religious man, but he often got to do the stories from the bible, that were included for the young scouts education. In the Hogan's Alley article he mentions doing several series of ads, including one I am showing here. This series of ads for Eveready batteries ran for a long time. The samples I am showing are from 1954, 1958 and 1960. But I also remember seeing them in one page form in some comics from the late forties. I'll have to look out for those. The concept was quite simple. Readers were asked to provide their own stories about life threatening situations and how they were saved by Eveready batteries. I am sure some liberties were taken with these stories, because it went on far longer than one would have thought.





Here's one of his covers for Boy's Life in a totally different style.



Flessel also did covers for the Sunday magazine Pictorial Review, like Bud Blake after him.




Most of the stuff he did for Boy's Life were illustrated articles, but he also did two separate adaptations of Charles' Dickens' Christmas Carol. One in 1952 (which was reprinted a couple years later) and one in 1957. I took the color out of these, but I managed to retrieve three quarters of it in the first story. The 1960 Christmas page is more similar to the stuff he used to do for Boy's Life.









Last time I checked Greig Flessel was still alive and doing commissions. I will be showing some of those later, as well as some samples of his late fifties, early sixties newspaper strip David Crane (which he inherited from Superman artist Win Mortimer).

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Marvelous Reprints

Lumped In

Tuesday strip day.

One of the first strips I featured was Stan Lee and Dan DeCarlo's Willie Lumpkin. Fellow fan Angelo sent me a bunch of scans from Willie Lumpkin strips that were colored and republished in Marvel Age, the advertising/publicity magazine Marvel published in the late eighties. I tried to make out the strip dates to order them chronologically.

The first one was probably published in Marvel Age #54 and was accompanied by this little write-up by Stan the Man himself.






















Last time I lookedthere was a huge storyline in the current Marvel Universe about Skrulls taking over all sorts of heroes. I wonder if ols Willie is going to feature in that...

Monday, June 23, 2008

Short post, tall tales.

Monday cartoon day.

It all started with Mad.

Everything you see in this blog is a result of my discovery of Al Feldstein's Mad when I was about 15 years old. I had always loved and read comics from a very young age, but Mad's mad artists reached me in a completely different way. The satirical humor reinforced my hidden feelings that that world was not just a happy place. The social and political references hinted to a world on the other side of the ocean that was much more exciting than the social paradise of my home county. I was already following American television (which was rebroadcast over here in the original language with subtitles instead of dubbing) and I loved reading the spoofs of those shows. And the smart humor with cleverness finding an excuse for anti-social comment, silliness and general rudeness. I quickly tried to get hold of all the issues I could find, first buying (and one time even stealing) the pockets and soon after that getting back issues from Lambiek (still the oldest and best stocked comics store in the Netherlands and possibly the world). After I discovered the Kurtzman years through the pockets, all bets were off. I had to have every issue... a goal I reached about ten years ago.

Much has been written about Mad, but very little attention has gone to the artists that made up Al Feldstein's crew. In America Harvey Kurtzman's years were much more influential, groundbreaking, inspirational, etc. After he left, the magazine became so popular, that is seemed unnecessary to pay homage to the individual artists who made it all up. There was Larry Siegal's book about Bill Gaines and there have been several magazines devoted to the middle years... but no one has sat down with Mort Drucker, Angelo Torres, Bill Clark, Jack Rickard, George Woodbridge, Paul Coker, Jack Davis, Don Martin or any of Mad's Maddest Bunch to discuss the intimate details of creating their masterpieces from issue to issue. And the same goes double for the writers. Dick deBartolo wrote an autobiography, but that's about it. Maybe they all were feeling so secure in their work, that they didn't need the attention. Or maybe their bosses at Mad had dictated that no one would get attention on his own. I would have loved to sit with any of them to discuss specific details with them. There isn't a single page Frank Miller created in his career that hasn't been analyzed and discussed, but no academic attention has been paid to the skill and pure genius that was displayed every eight weeks in Mad.

One of the most skillful, intelligent and funniest artists in Mad was Al Jaffee. There may be people who do not particularly care for his style or the artificiality of his line, but for pure inventiveness and anti-social humor few people were his equal. He is best know for two regular features he created for Mad, the fold-in and his Snappy Answers To Stupid Questions, but he did a lot more than that. He wrote a clever new article for almost every issue of Mad. Many of those he illustrated himself, but sometimes he worked for and with others as well. The concepts he devised for these features were often just as ingenious as the two that made him famous. David Letterman has acknowledged that the humor of his NBC Show more often than not came from Mad (which a comparison between the book of that show and early issues of Mad confirms), but he is not the only one. A thorough review of all those concepts Al Jaffee (and others, like Jack Menselsohn) created reappeared at many places in American culture. Because of it's frequency and endurance Mad magazine was both the focal point of all the humor that was created before it and the starting point of much that came after it.

One of the sad things about the fact that many of these artists were never properly interviewed, is that any career they had before joining Mad remained often undiscussed. Bill Clark's years in advertisement (or where he learned to adept his style as well as he did) is still a mystery to me. Mort Drucker, George Woodbridge and Angelo Torres all had a very interesting start as comic strip artists, which was never discussed. An Al Jaffee had not one, but two careers before he joined Mad.

His first career was as a writer and artist for funny animal and teen girl books. After the war he started on Timely's then popular range of funny animal books. In the late forties funny animals gave way to teen humor and Jaffee found himself writing and drawing Patsy Walker's adventures for the next ten years or so. In the end, he got so experienced at it, that editor Stan Lee let him run his own books. When comic sales dropped near the end of the fifties, everyone in the industry tried to get out and find a better job. Some artists went into advertising, others took the change to jump ahead to their ultimate dream - a newspaper strip of their own. Al Jaffee completely reinvented himself by going back to his gag cartoon roots and selling a daily panel strip for The Herald Tribune Syndicate called Tall Tales. This strip was sold through the same agent and syndicate as Arnold Roth's Poor Arnold's Almanac (another cartoon based feature, be it Sunday only). So there clearly was some sort of connection there. The correspondence of their syndicate is being kept at Ohio State University and I hope some day to go through all of it, to unlock any secrets that are to be found in there. The biggest secret being, how Al Jaffee after all these years of girlie strips knew he would be good at creating a daily silent gag panel in the specific format he had chosen. Tall Tales' main selling point was, that it was three times as long as it was wide. This takes a special kind of jokes and Al Jaffee turned out to be very good at them.

Most of the Tall Tales material was later repackaged in Al Jaffee's many Mad pockets. He also created a character for the series, called (then or later) Willie Weirdie. No one has ever noticed this, but to me Willie Weirdie seems to be a caricature of the young Bill Elder. Just like Elder, Willie Weirdie was an almost sadistic practical joker. Many stories of Bill Elder's practical jokes have become legend in the industry, the most famous being the one about when he made his face pale with chalk and hung himself in a school locker to be found by a devastated teacher. When he started putting his zaniness into his Mad work, he calmed down, but it seems as if Al Jaffee took over his anti-social class clown personality for Willie Weirdie and all of his Mad work.

Tall Tales will now be republished by Abrahms. The 128 page hardcover edition will be available on August 20th 2008 and Amazon is already taking pre-orders. The format used for this book is the same as the one (and only) official collection in 1960, whose battered covers of my copy can be seen above. This means, the book will only cover the daily version of the strip (and only 128 pages of it as well). There is a foreword by Stephen Colbert, who is an Al Jaffee fan (having had him as a guest on his show), but there is no further editorial effort. You will find a lot of editorial material (as well as unused drawings, sketches and other interesting stuff) in the also upcoming re edition of Humbug. I have gone on here long enough, so I won't go on about that (Harvey Kurtzman's second post-Mad effort - and probably his best) other than saying that the beautiful slipcover was drawn especially for this edition. Jaffee was a contributor to Humbug before joing Al Feldstein's Mad and it's a major part in his late fifties transformance from cartoonist to satirist.

Well, I've gone on long enough... let's get to the pictures. I have always been a big fan of Tall Tales (which reads like an early version of Sergio Aragones' Marginal Tales in the later Mad) but I had never seen the Sunday version. Recently, I got hold of two samples and I was stunned by their quality. There's something about that half page Sunday format that makes it work really well for me. I can only hope one day Al Jaffee will get his own art book (along the lines of Bill Elder's Mad Playboy Of Art), which I would be more than happy to write. Al Jaffee is in his eighties, but still working. He contributes new Fold-Out pages to Mad about eight times a year and I have heard it said that he plans to be the oldest working artist since Hirschfield. That would mean we still have twenty years of great gags to go. One can only hope.


Sunday, June 22, 2008

Ask me anything.

Sunday leftover day.

Now that I know I am doing leftovers in the weekend as well as correcting everything that went wrong during the week, I have started putting things aside that come up during scanning or seem too much out of the scope of a post to be included on the day itself. Here's what I came across this week.

When I was scanning the Mort Walker cartoons for Monday I stumbled on this rare Charles Schulz cartoon from early 1951. There is a great looking book with all of Schulz's early cartoons featuring kids he before he started Peanuts by Derrick Bang (published by the Schulz Museum). This one seems to be from the same run (the early 1951 date makes it possible that it was done before Peanuts started), but it doesn't feature kids. I don't know if it is included in the book (which you can read more about at http://www.peanutscollectorclub.com/lilbegin.html) since I still haven't ordered it. But my guess is it isn't, so I am including it here.


This weeks ad space was devoted to the illusive Betts, but I did find and scan another twin kids ad from the early fifties, probably by Dik Browne.


I jumped the gun on Howard Post, so I couldn't yet show any of his work on Drop-Outs. Fortunately the heritage Archives has two originals, which I am glad the share with you.




Finally, I mentioned Wilbert Plijnaar (who alerted me to the Post entry on John Kricfalusi's blog). He asked for more Bud Blake, so here we have an ad from 1961, which I am pretty sure is his work. This is three years before he started Tiger. I am a sucker for requests, so keep 'm coming.



Finally I want to draw your attention to the poll I have started. It is just a bit of fun, but who knows - maybe I'll be influenced by it. It's a list of stuff I have featured up till now and have loads and loads more of. I want this blog to be an oilspill that slowly grows to cover all of my interests, so I have many things to come you have probably never even seen or heard off. But it takes time to scan it all in and when I introduce soimething new, I want to cover it as good as I can. Still, the Howard Post post triggered a lot of new visitors and got the largest amount of page downloads in the history of this blog. So clearly many of you are here to be surprised. I want to make it a mix of surprises and more (rare samples) of the same. You can tick more than one box, so just tell me which features you want me to expand... I might even listen to your opinion.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Foxy Lady

Saturday leftover day.I was quite busy this week, so I had to skip the regular Jeanie post on thursday. Here is where I correct things. The last tier probably is the third tier of the sunday strip for August 3. Newcomers can click on the label to read more about this strip.

Tomorrow I will do some real leftovers (such as a nice Bud Blake ad for Wilbert).





Hey Presto!

Friday comic book day.

On another list Dutch cartoonist Wilbert Plijnaar (who has worked for Disney as a story man for the last 15 years or so) alerted me to the fact that John Kricfalusi had a bit on his blog about the remarkable Waly Kelly-like work of Howie Post in the forties. Well, actually the post is about all of Post's career, but he uses three pages of one of Post's Presto Pete stories for DC's Animal Antics in the early forties. And he said he would love to see more.

As it happens Howard Post is on my list of artists I would like to visit sometime in the future. I have samples of all periods of his work, although I have to confess I am not a big fan or collector of his work in Harvey's kiddie titles. But I do have quite long run of his 70's newspaper strip The Drop-Outs, most of his work for Stan Lee in the fifties and when I found out he had imitated Walt Kelly in the early forties I tried to get as much of those books as possible. I just didn't plan on sharing it with you this soon, because I want to create a nice overview of his work and career and that involves quite a lot of scanning.

Still, to accommodate the extremely talented Wilbert Plijnaar (whose business card is so clever and funny that it inspired the titles of Disney/Pixar's animated movie Ratatouille) I have quickly rounded up a Presto Pete story and a couple of other tidbits. I have added John K.'s blog to my blog list, so you can go and see what he has to say about this talented (but in my view ultimately too lazy) artist. If you want to see more of the Presto Pete story he shows, you can go to Pappy's excellent blog to see the full thing. I wouldn't be surprised if the Kricman borrowed his scans from Pappy. It certainly wouldn't be the first time he borrowed something.

The link function on my blogspot desktop doesn't seem to work, so you have to copy and paste.

http://pappysgoldenage.blogspot.com/search?q=presto+pete

That by the way, is the first Howard Post Presto Pete story, from Animal Antics #9. Presto Pete did have stories in the earlier issues of that title as well, but with #9 Post took over and made the strip his own. With #10, he immediately got to do the cover, which was unique for this title (and didn't occur after that). I'll be showing the cover and story from #10.









Howard Post had two distinct period in the forties when he worked in this style. The first was in the early part of the decade, when he did Presto Pete for Animal Antics and other series for the two other funny animal books. Then he probably was drafted. I would love to know where he was stationed, so I could try and see if he worked for any of the camp papers in the places he was stationed. Most artists of his generation did. When he returned after the war, he worked for a comic called Wonderland, where he was the star artist, doing the covers and most of the stories. I will show some of those later. He also did another Waly Kelly inspired series for DC. This ran in More Fun #123 to #127. He also drew the covers for most of these book and it is the most visually stunning work of his career. Unfortunately, these books demand quite a high price (mostly because they contain the earlier incarnation of Superboy), so I have not yet been able to get my hand on one yet. I did find the original art for one of these stories in the Heritage Archives. This was from the period, that Heritage usually left out one of the pages of a story, so no one could use their high end scans for a secret printing project. But here it is, five of the six pages of Jimminy.







In the fifties Post returned to his Kelly style once more, when he was asked by Dell to take over Walt Kelly's The Brownies for the Four Color series. He did about three or four of them and they are quite entertaining. Here's the back cover for Four Color #482.

Steve Rowe informs me that these books were in fact done by Mel Crawford and not by Howard Post. Crawford was an interesting cartoonist, who worked for Dell and Western. These days he does paintings and runs a blog of his own, which I have added to the list.