Showing posts with label The Yardbirds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Yardbirds. Show all posts

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Sloppy Joes

Saturday Leftover Day.

Yesterdag post about the army Sunday section made me go back to what I have of Ziff-Davis' G.I. Joe and I found I had a couple more stories from The Yardbirds by Dan DeCarlo I hadn't shown yet. This obviously was a long run. If you follow the tag you will find many more.
































Monday, April 25, 2011

More offa da Carlo

Monday Easter Extra.

Dan DeCarlo was nothing if not prolific. Apart from doing at least two books a month with Stan Lee, he did stories for other publishers as well in the fifties. Yardbirds seems to have run in at least thirty issues of G.I. Joe. They are unsigned and could have been inked by Rudy LaPick.






Friday, March 11, 2011

Digging for Goldbricks

Friday Comic Book Day.

For many fans the name Dan deCarlo conjurs up images of Betty and Veronica at their most sexy or the original Jody and the Pussycats. But he shold be equaly known for the work he did before that. From the late forties all through the fifties, he was Stan Lee's number one dumb blonde artist on titles such as My Friend Irma and in fact set the style for the whole genre pretty much from the start. And even that is not all he did. Last year Craig Yoe edited a reprint collection of deCarlo's futuristic adventurs of Jetta, which was a delight and a surprise for all the fans. Around the same time he did Jetta (when things were a bit slow at Stan Lee's Timely/Atlas company, he also did an army feature for Ziff-Davis' G.I. Joe not starring a pretty girl (although they were always around). One of these was shown around several blogs (including Sherm Cohen's Cartoon Snap), so I thought I'd show some of the others. Actually, I came across them while researching all thise Ziff-Davis books I showed last week and then found someone had beaten me to it last month. Well, at least I have different stories. Additionlly, there was another series in G.I. Joe #8 about a WAF, which I am showing after the others. My guess is the then new succes of Beetle Bailey may have been a factor in creating this series, althugh deCarlo certainly had his own war experiences to fall back on.