Saturday Leftover Day.
I have been looking forward to posting this. I have been sold a lot of Sunday newspaper sections from the Honolulu Star Bulletin form the fifties. It wasn;t actually a Sunday, but came with the Saturday paper. In 1956 thye had a period where the Saturday daily strips were included in the Sunday section and I scanned all four of them. To make them readable here I cut them into four parts. Lots of interesting strips. Why they chose to have the title in the bottom of the first panel, when almost every strip leaves some room for that in te top, I don't understand.What are your favorites?
Showing posts with label Steve Canyon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Canyon. Show all posts
Saturday, June 22, 2019
Friday, March 07, 2014
Bruce Canyon, Flying Ace
Friday Comic Book Day.
Here is my new favorite Jack Kirby strip. Link The Flying Fool was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby when they came to Hillman after their first postwar series at Harvey failed. The first one appeared in May 1947. As some people have pointed uot, this series looks as if it was inspired by Milton Caniff's Steve Canyon, which did not appear in newspapers until january 1947. Caniff had worked on the strip in secret for a year. If you take into account the fact that comic were predated by a couple of months and that the whole thing had to be written, drawn and printed, that gives Simo and Kirby a very short time to have produced it. On the other hand, former Caniff assistant Ray Bailey had been doing a strip of his own that was very similar to the later Canyon, called Bruce Gentry. Although I don't think that it is likely that The Flying Fool was based on Gentry, I do think that the so-called secrecy around Canyon may have been overstated. Or maybe Simon and Kirby were capable of producing such a pretty strip in a manner of weeks.
Because pretty it is. It lacks the visual choas of many of their previous work and it is still all Simon and Kirby (where so much of their studio work later became a mishmash of styles). I think you see more traces of the later Jack Kirby here than in many places. Of course, some art spotters have seen other hands in these stories as well, but there are many visuals and concepts here that we would see later.
Th last story is not by Simon and Kirby, who left Hillman pretty soon after arriving there, because they got a better deal at Prize Comics and ere able to do their own books there. Their first effort, a new romance comic, became an industry changer on it's own. The story here may be by Carmine Infantino and Bernard Sachs. Infantino followed Simon and Kirby to Prize soon after and began working in a style that was very similar to Kirby's for a while.
Here is my new favorite Jack Kirby strip. Link The Flying Fool was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby when they came to Hillman after their first postwar series at Harvey failed. The first one appeared in May 1947. As some people have pointed uot, this series looks as if it was inspired by Milton Caniff's Steve Canyon, which did not appear in newspapers until january 1947. Caniff had worked on the strip in secret for a year. If you take into account the fact that comic were predated by a couple of months and that the whole thing had to be written, drawn and printed, that gives Simo and Kirby a very short time to have produced it. On the other hand, former Caniff assistant Ray Bailey had been doing a strip of his own that was very similar to the later Canyon, called Bruce Gentry. Although I don't think that it is likely that The Flying Fool was based on Gentry, I do think that the so-called secrecy around Canyon may have been overstated. Or maybe Simon and Kirby were capable of producing such a pretty strip in a manner of weeks.
Because pretty it is. It lacks the visual choas of many of their previous work and it is still all Simon and Kirby (where so much of their studio work later became a mishmash of styles). I think you see more traces of the later Jack Kirby here than in many places. Of course, some art spotters have seen other hands in these stories as well, but there are many visuals and concepts here that we would see later.
Th last story is not by Simon and Kirby, who left Hillman pretty soon after arriving there, because they got a better deal at Prize Comics and ere able to do their own books there. Their first effort, a new romance comic, became an industry changer on it's own. The story here may be by Carmine Infantino and Bernard Sachs. Infantino followed Simon and Kirby to Prize soon after and began working in a style that was very similar to Kirby's for a while.
Labels:
Bruce Gentry,
Carmine Infantino,
Hillman,
Jack Kirby,
Joe Simon,
Milt Caniff,
Ray Bailey,
Steve Canyon
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