Showing posts with label Fred Ottenheimer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fred Ottenheimer. Show all posts

Sunday, May 30, 2021

A Puzzling Period

 Sunday Surprise Day.

Four years ago I shared scans of a rare Harvey Kurtzman book. Kurtzman is best known for being the creator of Mad and doing Little Annie Fanny for PLayboy with Bill Elder. Fans will also know he did a remarkable line of war comics for EC and had a funny filler page in all of the Timely titles in the post war years called Hey Look!. In between Hey Look! and Mad he struggled. He had a partnership with Bill Elder and Carles Stern, did some work for Varsity, but mostly was looking around for new accounts. 

One of those included a company called Kunen, which produced children's puzzle books. Not vooks with puzzles, but books that were puzzled themselves. All of these books had thick double carton pakes and pieces your could take out (and sometimes switch for a nem effect). I don't know who originated this gimicky concept. It sounds like something Kurtzman would think of and he may have. I really should reread that part of Bill Schelly's excellent Kurtzman biography, But as far as I remember even Bill did not find out anything about that period I ddn't already know and Kurtzman himself was always quite tightlipped about it.

All in all Kurtzman did several of these books. Some he did with René Goscinny, a French/Argentinian jewish cartoonist who was staying in New York at that time and even shared or rented a desk at the socalled CharlesWlliamHarvey Agency. That is also where he met another French artist called Morris and started writing his already succesful comic strip Lucky Luke for the French-Belgian magazine Spirou. After a year or so he went back to France, started working with Albert Uderzo and evenually became famous as the writer and co-creator of Asterix and the editor and co-originator of the magazine Pilote.

Another artist who did some books for Kunen was Fred Ottenheimer. Not much is known about thos silly artist, except that he went to the same school als Kurtzman, Bill Elder and later Mad artist Al Jaffee. After doing a couple of books for Kunen, he did filler pages for various Fawcett comics (most of them unsigned and unidentified, although I am keeping a list) and became a publisher when he inherited his family's company. I don't know if he was part of the coterie of Kurtzman in the late forties (Al Jaffee wasn't), but he did become friends with Morris and shared an appartment or a studio with him for a short time (as well as publishing his one and only childrens book).

The one puzzle book I shared here (linked below) was done by Goscinny on his own. In my accompanying text I said I welcomed scans of the others. This week, I saw that a comment was added by Sue (I threw away the mail before noting her last name) offering just that. We exchanged information and she sent me the scans for one of Kurtzman's own books. I kindly let it go out to the world. Two down, four more to go.

Saturday, January 16, 2021

Mythic Mystic

Saturday Leftover Day. Basil Wolverton collectors will know that the comic master had a series of four page stories in Fawcett's Comic Comic. I should go back and collect all ten of them (a small book's worth) but haven't yet, so here are the two I got. With that a twopager from one of the issues that I am pretty certain is by Fred Ottenheimer. Otterheimer did a lot of uncredited fillers for various Fawcett titles, bit this one is a bit more substantial.

Tuesday, June 06, 2017

From There Comes Insanity

Friday Comic Book Day.

It seems my book about the Mad magazine imitations of the late fifties, Behaving Badly (follow the link on your right to buy it) has arrived in the US. A copy is being sent to me right now. Official delivery is now early August, so look for it soon.


One of the biggest finds for me in researching it, wasn't the fact that there was so much very well drawn and very funny material in these books. Or not even the many suprising big names among the artists working for them (from Joe Kubert and Bill Elder to Jack Davis, Bob Powell, Angelo Torres and Russ Heath), but some of the more obscure artists doing such great work. Of course Craig Yoe wanted as many of the big names in it as possible, but I managed to sneak in a couple of lesser known but surprising ones. One of them was Fred Ottenheimer, a school mate of Bill Elder and Harvey Kurtzman as wel as a friend of Al Jaffee. He did children's puzzle books in the late forties for the same company as Kurtzman and seems to have inherited the family publishing company in the mid fifties (later publishing the Flintstone picture books). He was a regular at Charton's Mad imitation titles, from the comic book Eh! and From Here To Insanity to the later incarnations of that title: From Here To Insanity #12 and Crazy, Man Crazy. And don't worry, Behaving Madly has a handy list of all of Charlton's impossible to follow titles, volumes and dates. I could not include all of his work, but opted for a great four page television commercial satire (that was really hard to clean, as well). here is one that didn't make the cut (so at least I didn't have to clean it):


He never did a lot of comic book work, but I am pretty sure these Fawcett funny fillers are by him.

Friday, December 23, 2016

F.O.!

Friday Comic Book Day.

For my upcoming book Behaving Madly, about the Mad magazine imitations of the late fifties (which can be bought on Anazon through the link on the right) I have had to do a lot of art spotting. Credits in these books were rare and more often than not 'funny' rather than 'acurate'. This is no problem if you are dealing with talents such as Joe Kubert, Lee Elias, Ross Andr, Russ Heath, Bob Powell, Mike Sekowsky, Jack Kirby, Jack Davis or Bill Elder (all in the book). But when it comes to Carl Hubbell, or Harry Lazerus or even Carl Burgos it is a lot harder to be sure. One artist who usually signed what he did had the fortune of having a very funny and very identifyable style. Fred Ottenheimer was a contemporary of Bill Elder and Harvey Kurtzman as wel as a friend of Al Jaffee. He never did a lot of comic book work, but I am pretty sure this Fawcett funny filler is by him.