Showing posts with label Warren Tufts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warren Tufts. Show all posts

Sunday, November 13, 2022

Lone Sundays

Saturday Leftover Day. 

 Many years ago (in 2009 and 2010) I clipped and shared all of Warren Tufts short run comedy sciencefiction strip The Lone Spaceman. Reportedly, he did this after leaving Casey Ruggles and before staring Lance, to fill out some sort of contract. Anyway, it's a hoot and a very good satire. It was also a daily only strip, or so I thought. A couple of years later I found three samples of a Sunday version. Quite find I would say, because they seem to have been (and until now unknown) addition. 

On closer inspection, I found out that this was probably not an official Sunday, just a reworking of the daily strip in color. Maybe done for just one paper, which I had happened to come across. I never cleaned the three samples I have and didn't add them. 

But (you knew another twist was coming) upon giving them a closer look, I noticed that there were a few changes added panels. And they (as well as the coloring) were done so professionaly, they might have been done by Tufts himself. I still believe they were a one-off, not part of a lager syndication effort. Or maybe Tufts (a known tinkerer, with a mind and a will of his own) just did them to try out some coloring for his next project, Lance. 

And another twist, when I looked to colect the dailey belonging to these 'Sundays', I found I may have skipped the first four weeks of this strip in dailey from. I use a different online micro-fiche newspaper service these days, but fortunately this one had Lone Ranger as well - from the start on December 06 in 1954 to two weeks later, on monday 21. After that, it seems to have been dropped in that particulary paper (the Erie Times). 

I have collected the two weeks I could. Odly, the ,aterial used for the Sundays always came from the week after that. I'll do a comparison after each one. Sadly, the quality of the Erie Times-News samples isn't as good as the earlier ones I grabbed years back from newspaper.com. If anyone has access to that site, please have a look for me (and please grab those missing weeks for me).

On this Sunday, the changes seem to have been minimal. One of the panels is shortened (ever so slightly), the spaceship has been reangled and some of the dialogue is changed.
Since I don't have the Sunday or the full week of dailies of this week, I can say how much was used or even if this daily was part of the regular sequence (it seems a bit early for a recap).

 

On this first week of 1955, I have more from my previous post. As you can see, some of the art was reused, but some is also exclusive to the Sunday, like the fuller caricature of Edward R. Murrow. The first panel on the fifth daily has been expanded a bit and some of the dialogue has been adjusted. Noting much, but enough to suggest that the Sunday is indeed by Tufts himself.

How many of these he did, I am not sure. I am missing the Sunday for the first week and I am assuming that was there as well. It seems Tufts tried to sell a Sunday version seperately, but unless we find some more of these later in in the run, it is safe to say he quit doing them when they were nog longer profitable.

Sunday, October 21, 2018

No Question About It

Sunday Toth Triumph.

Continuing my run of Alex Toth's Sierra Smith stories from DC's Dale Evans Comics. There is a link to yesterday's Casey Ruggles post. In the early fifties Alex Toth also did a well remembered and even reprinted run as a ghost artist on Warren Tufts' daily strip.

Saturday, October 20, 2018

The Mild Mild West

Saturday Story Strip Day.

Regular visitors to my blog will know, that I am a sucker for the unknown and the obscure. That doesn not mean I don't like the big succesful comics or strips. I like Warren Tufts' strips Casey Ruggles and Lance and will buy both collections coming from Classic Comic Press. But I won't show them here, because of that same reason. If you like it as well, you can go and buy the book (And while you are there, look for their other great books as well: https://www.classiccomicspress.com/products/lance). Recently, I sold a lot of newspaper sections with Casey Ruggles in them, but what I scanned weren't those pages, but the few I had from 1955, when Tufts had left the strip and the syndicate continued it with another artist. Wikipedia says it's Al Carreno, but I am not familiar with his work enough to say if he did these. Not as good as those done by Tufts by a long shot, but I guess you have never seen them anywhere. With that I have an earlier ghosted Sunday, from a half year period in 1953 when Tufts didn't do Casey Ruggles. The best guess seems to be Al Plastino, but I have to confess to seeing some Bob Powell in there as well. Then again, maybe not enough to say it is by Powell (who had a very distinct style). Little else to add, except maybe that the sections with Tufts sold out immediately. The ones with these strips (and Tarzan on the back) did not.



Sunday, October 29, 2017

A Liffte Tufts

Saturday Leftover Day.

Warren Tufts' first newspaper strip Casey Ruggles ran from 1949 to 1954. According to the Wikipedia page (citing the always reliable Don Markstein), Tufts did not draw the Sunday page between Auust 1953 and January 1954 (before resuming it himself until September). I knew the strip was continued after that by another artist (acoording to Wikipedia it was Al Carreno). Ghost artists mentioned on the strip are Al Plastino, Alex Toth, Edmund Goode and Ruben Moreira. Of course Alex Toth's work was much earlier and on the dailies. This early Sunday looks like none of the others. Al Plastino was the most adaptable of them, but even him I don't recognize here.

Saturday, March 01, 2014

Lancing A Break

I have been very busy this week and missed a couple of posts. To make it up, here are some beautiful Lance Sundays by Warren Tufts.


also, a weird strip from the mid sixties called Sir Lancalittle.


And of course Paul Cokers mildly mysogystic 1970 view of the battle of the sexesin Lancelot.


And a delicious one-off by Dik Browne from Boy's Life: