Friday, October 31, 2008

 

A Mysterious One


A real quickie today folks. I'm going to be out canvassing for Obama all day and didn't have the foresight to get a Halloween post ready ahead of time. So BOO already.

Anyhow, here's a mystery item. Percy Crosby's Skippy had a long-running Sunday topper strip titled Always Belittlin', but I'd never encountered or even heard of the possibility that there was a daily panel until I stumbled across these two examples.

Both are from the pages of the New York American, Hearst's flagship paper, and date from January and February 1933. If these were just some oddball item and not a continuing series I wouldn't expect them to have dates and syndicate slugs.

Does anyone have any additional evidence that there was a daily panel series of Always Belittlin', or perhaps even have running date info?

Comments:
Could it not be an ad made by a publicity department using a panel froM the strip?
 
Hi Ger -
Could, I suppose, but there was no accompanying advertising fanfare for the Sunday strip. These just ran as if they were a regular feature.

--Allan
 
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Thursday, October 30, 2008

 

Obscurity of the Day: The Clownies

NEA Sundays seldom fit into our obscurity category, but The Clownies is a notable exception. This rare addition to the NEA list ran in very few papers -- it almost seems as if it was an extra offering not included in the standard package. In fact, even the NEA archives at Ohio State University are missing this strip. I used to think that these Sundays might have been pilfered from the syndicate bound volumes, but as I've come to see just how rare these Sundays are I wonder if they were never bound in to begin with, much like other oddball items like the NEA Christmas strips and such.

The Clownies seems to have started sometime in 1931 (earliest I've found is October 11 but take that as a start date at your peril) as a sort of Sunday adjunct to the daily kiddie story feature The Tinymites. Both The Clownies and The Tinymites were being produced by writer Hal Cochran and cartoonist Joe King at the time. The Clownies started off as a full page feature without a topper, but gained a half-page companion called Animal Cracks sometime around mid-1932.

Joe King's art was serviceable but The Clownies turned into a real graphic knockout in April 1933 when the fabulous George Scarbo took over the art chores. Scarbo was a real workhorse of the NEA bullpen, but he lavished great attention on The Clownies and Animal Cracks when he took over. I apologize that the only sample I had in reach for this essay was a Joe King production, so you'll have to take my word for the quality of Scarbo's work on the feature -- it is definitely worth seeking out.

Scarbo also brought new life to the activity panel Comic Zoo that ran as a sub-sub-feature of Animal Cracks. Whereas Joe King usually produced uninspired panels like the one above, Scarbo's version of the panel was so delightful that it survived the end of The Clownies page (my latest is June 25 1933) . Comic Zoo was brought back in 1936 as the topper to the Out Our Way Sunday, and Scarbo produced that delightful feature for almost thirty years more.

As you can tell by all the prevarication above, I'd be more than delighted to hear from anyone who can supply more definitive running dates for this feature and its topper.

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Comments:
My name is Robert Johnson I have artwork by George scarbo from 1912 in 1919 World Series with the famous baseball greats Babe Ruth George Whiteman rube McGuire Arthur Fletcher Travis speaker J Franklin Baker and the manager Connie Mack Philadelphia Athletics winning the World Series from the New York Giants
 
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Wednesday, October 29, 2008

 

Obscurity of the Day: Hubert


You wouldn't think that any feature that ran for fifty years could be classified as an obscurity, but I think Dick Wingert's Hubert may honestly fit the category.

Hubert first came to life in Stars & Stripes during World War II. He was the eternally confused little dope who doggedly tried to do his duty but constantly ran into trouble. It's said that Wingert's creation was almost as popular as Mauldin's Willie and Joe with the GI audience.

After the war Wingert brought Hubert back home in a syndicated panel offered by King Features starting December 3 1945. Hubert made a painless transition from foxhole to suburbia with his dishy wife Trudy, and started out strong enough in sales that a Sunday page was added February 3 1946.

No one expected the panel to last long. Many wartime features tried to adapt themselves to a post-war world and lasted only as long as the nostalgia of returned GIs held out. Seldom did that sentimentality last beyond a decade. Although Hubert lasted much longer, I think his welcome was generally worn out by the end of the 1950s as it's rare to find the feature after that. However, King Features continued to make the feature available to an increasingly tiny number of newspapers for decades more. King is notable for keeping features well beyond their profitable life, whether through inertia or affection for their veteran creators.

Even in the 50s the humor in Hubert was, to put it politely, low-key. The Sundays especially, as you'll see in the samples above, barely even had gags. The panels and strips often seem to set up for a punchline that never really arrives, sort of a do-it-yourself feature where the reader does the heavy lifting. Wingert desperately needed a gag-writer, and if he did have one any pay they were getting was an overpayment. The only assistance that Wingert is known to have had was Tex Blaisdell, who says he assisted on the art in the 50s.

By the 1960s Wingert's artwork was degrading, and by the 80s and 90s there's just no nice way to describe the truly awful clumsiness of it. King Features finally put the feature out to pasture on January 16 1994.

Labels:


Comments:
All this goes to show what a truly modern strip Hi and Lois was. I hopw to be showing more of that on my blog this year, but I have relatively few sundays from the first years. Love the ones I have from 1959, though, when it was stil a work and family strip instead of the family strip it became later.
 
It is also a current obscurity.
The King Features Weekly Service brought back the panel as a part of its weekly package.
http://www.kingfeatures.com/features/wklysvc/KFWS_Comics.pdf
I don't know when they started offering it as part of the Weekly Service, only that by 2003 it was in the package and it still is.
 
From what I can find, Dick Wingert died in November 1993. This suggests that King Features terminated the strip not because it was losing papers or had dropped in quality, but because the cartoonist had died and his backlog of strips had run out.
 
You're not kidding about the artwork. Here's an example from 1987 (from NCS' website)

http://www.reuben.org/ncs/members/memorium/wingert.jpg
 
Thanks Anon, I suspected that Wingert didn't give up the feature until he died but couldn't find an obit for him. And DD, thanks for the link -- I haven't seen anyone that uses the weekly package actually print any of these moldy oldies (Hubert, Breger and Laff-a-Day). Have you?

--Allan
 
Allan,

I have. There's a free weekly 'paper' of sorts called Tidbits of Madison County and they run "Hubert" and "Laff-a-Day," along with their up-to-date comics.
 
Hi Charles -
Thanks for the info! Guess they draw the line at Breger, eh? I'll add notes to my database that Hubert and Laff-a-Day are definitely being recycled.

--Allan
 
From Google News Archive, I found two articles about Wingert's death. Both are for pay with only a small portion visible free:

Cedar Rapids-Iowa City Gazette

Buffalo News
 
"The Sundays especially, as you'll see in the samples above, barely even had gags. "

well, they both made ME laugh.
 
You know who runs Mr. Breger? The Onion, on its second-to-last page. Other strips from the King Features package they use are Laff-A-Day and The Spats.

They also run the Spanish-language version of Ziggy.
 
Hi Anon -
Wow. I've never seen the print edition of the Onion, but I assume that line-up is purely intended as a mocking of mainstream newspaper comics page humor? As such that's an inspired lineup.

-Allan
 
The Onion's selections are a very mixed bag. Besides the King Features selections and Ziggy in Spanish, other cartoons they run are Red Meat by Max Cannon, Wondermark by David Malki, and Postage Stamp Funnies by Shannon Wheeler. So some of the comics they run were selected ironically, but others nonironically.
 
While trying to find a paper that runs one or more of the new JW Syndicate panels
http://jwsyndicate.com/cartoon_features.htm
I found a paper that ran the hat trick of Hubert/Mr. Breger/Laff-A-Day.
Go to http://www.smalltownpapers.com/index.htm
and find the Dickey County Leader.
Page 4 of the November 6, 2008 edition.
Of the score or so papers there that carry comics, they are overwhelmingly the KFS Weekly package.
Though I was surprised to find Reid's "Cow Pokes" still running. Any idea when the last new "Cow Pokes" ran?
Never did find a JW offering.
 
Allan,

Dick Wingert passed away in a hospital in Bloomington, Indiana, shortly before the end of the strip. He had been living in nearby Nashville, Indiana, known for its artists' colony, for some time. I don't have the date of his death handy. I agree--Wingert's later art is almost painful to look at. It's hard to believe it remained in syndication, but then there's a lot of bad art in syndication even today.

Terence Hanley
 
Allan,

Just an update: Richard Thomas "Dick" Wingert passed away on Nov. 21, 1993, in Bloomington, Indiana. He was born on January 15, 1919, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, so Hubert would have ended 75 years and one day after his birth.

Terence Hanley
 
Hubert by Dick Wingert. I found a copy that was circulated this Spring--it had a little girl crying & Hubert says to Abby: "Just because I won't let her hit me on the head with a hammer doesn't mean I don't love her." Do Hubert & Abby have children ?--I have not seen one 'till this sample. June 2011.
 
Hubert had a daughter named Elli. Also in the cast: his mother-in-law; his boss, Dexter L. Baxter; Charlie the milkman; a sheepdog named Freddy; and the office secretary, Miss Prim.

TH
 
Hi, my grandfather was good friends with Dick Wingert and acted as a gag writer for him, contributing to Hubert throughout much of its run. What you said about his joke-writing may be somewhat harsh, but perhaps rather true. Thankfully, his work with Bill Hoest on the Lockhorns and Mort Walker on Hi & Lois seems to be a lot better.
 
Meu Amigo parabéns pelo Blog e pelo Belo trabalho de Preservação da memória dos Comics ! Gostaria de saber quantos anos durou a Publicação de Hubert?
 
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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

 

News of Yore 1919: Bert Green on Animation

[from The Student's Art Magazine, June-July 1919]

To begin with, if an animated cartoonist had any sense, he wouldn’t be an animated cartoonist. The art of animated cartoons is just a new form of manual labor which requires no sense, but untiring patience.

I have been asked a hundred times, “How is it done?”

The process involved is so complicated that it is difficult to explain intelligently because of the great number of parts to a “subject”; by this I mean the drawings, celluloid, tones, cut-outs, etc., and their relation to one another in order to complete a certain scene.

It must be borne in mind that film passes through the projector (of your pet theater) at one foot a second and that the cartoons you see on the end of a Pathé News run in length from fifty to one hundred and fifty feet. This means that if you should see a cartoon of one hundred and twenty-five feet it would be before your eyes just two minutes and five seconds; or in other words, you would have seen two thousand individual pictures, as there are sixteen pictures to every foot of film.

Now the fun begins. I have from two days to one week to draw that film if the editor wants that particular cartoon for a certain issue. This means that I have to “get over” an idea as elaborate as possible, as instructive or as funny as possible with as little technical work as possible, as the amount of tracing and camera work consumes all kinds of time. I have reached a point by experience that if I figure a cartoon to be finished under the camera by five o’clock, I am safe by just adding three more hours for luck.

For instance, a week ago I made a cartoon on “Prohibition,” in which I showed a street scene at night, and as you would look a block down the street you would see a man come around the corner, rush to the front of a saloon on which there was a sign, “Closed.” He then rushed across the street to the next, to find the sign, “Closed.” He did this all the way down the street, pausing and jumping before a half-dozen saloons, until he got to the foot of the street, or the foot of the screen, after which he went through several fool stunts before taking to the “water” that awaited him. I roughly figured I would have to make about one hundred and sixty drawings of the man as he came down the street, but before I had him up to the water faucet I had made about four hundred and fifteen drawings. The same thing happened in a “Zeppelin Raid” cartoon made recently. I had figured the aeroplane to catch up with the Zeppelin and bomb it from the top in about three hundred and fifty drawings, but before I was finished I had something like five hundred. So you see it’s no use making any engagements while in this business, as you might as well be serving a sentence in Joliet. I think that if an animated cartoonist had any time to himself he would go to pieces.

Cartoons like the “Katzenjammer Kids,” “Happy Hooligan,” “Mutt and Jeff,” etc., that run five hundred feet, require a staff of from fifteen to thirty people, men and women, to produce this amount of animated cartoon a week, with salaries ranging from ten to three
hundred dollars per week, so you can readily get some idea of the time and expense involved. Cartoons such as these contain from two thousand to three thousand drawings, and it takes two photographers one solid week working into the nights under pressure to photograph these drawings.



Since Winsor McCay invented the business and produced “Gertie,” which took him nearly three years, many short-cuts and inventions have been developed which save time, but I can truly say that there has never been a cartoon that could touch Winsor’s “Lusitania Disaster” for animation.

The most rapid animator in the game is Frank Moser. Moser literally shakes them out of a hat. I have seen Moser take a scenario of “Happy Hooligan” and in thirty days hand you a pile of between two and three thousand drawings that you couldn’t jump over and live through it. Yes, and catch the 5:15 for Hastings “nine times running.”

To explain the art, let us take, for example, one of the news reel cartoons like this: First we see a line gradually drawing itself across the screen to form the horizon line. This is done by drawing under the camera about a half-inch of line, then stopping and photographing, then another half-inch of line and photographing and so on until we have the line complete. Next we draw in a small part of Uncle Sam’s hat, then photograph, draw some more, etc., until we have Uncle Sam complete. Now we have Uncle Sam standing on the horizon line representing America. Immediately we start to draw the top of the Kaiser’s helmet, stop, photograph, etc., until we have Uncle Sam on one side of the water and the Kaiser on the other. Drawings are now made of Uncle Sam throwing a brick. The act of throwing the brick across the ocean may go into one hundred and fifty drawings, and when the brick strikes the Kaiser it changes to the Liberty Loan. In other words, the drawings are so made that the brick gradually changes into a huge block, which crushes him, and then the words “Liberty Loan” shape themselves.

This is a simple example, but when we go into scenes that contain two or more figures and which contain tones it requires endless tracing, and of my assistant, Miss Kelly, I cannot say too much, as she has the patience of Job. I think Miss Kelly has traced more legs, arms, hats, faces than there are fleas on a dog’s back, and believe me, that’s going some. And if it wasn’t for Miss Kelly I’d probably be selling canary bird swings at Forty-second street.

When a stack of drawings are finished we have a bunch of “paper actors,” and it is then a most difficult task to make them move at their proper speed. In short, you are the director. You take the “exposure,” for instance, of a man who walks across the room to sit down. These are all drawings of the man walking. Each drawing is from three thirty-seconds of an inch to three-fourths of an inch ahead of the last, and you then proceed to “expose” or direct his movements at your command. The drawings are then gone over carefully from one to a thousand, and the speed of each “paper actor” is listed on an “exposure sheet,” and the sheet, together with the drawings, are turned over to the camera-man to photograph.

An animated cartoon is photographed by “stop motion,” by which we mean one picture to one revolution of the crank instead of sixteen pictures, as is used exclusively in photoplay. This is one reason that makes it a time consumer.

Nearly all “trick photography” is done by “stop motion.” I took great delight once in watching two fellows making an advertising film in which the screen showed a knife come out of a drawer, the bread out of the box, the butter unwrap itself, the knife cut the bread, then spread the butter and a lot of other junk doing such tricks, all photographed by “stop motion.” These poor chaps had been working about two weeks, night and day, and at the time I saw them you couldn’t get near them. They had only about thirty-five feet photographed, and the sweet things they were calling each other, the knife, the bread, etc., was wonderful to me, as I could appreciate it. They were about ready for the “nut factory,” for they had to keep books on the movements of the knife, the bread, the butter, etc. For instance, they would move the paper on the butter one quarter of an inch, stop, photograph one picture, write down that, then move the bacon or bread another quarter of an inch and so on until the butter unwrapped, the knife cut a slice, etc. All this, mind you, was done in the “sky,” so the man moving the junk had to walk around in his socks for fear of soiling the “cloud.”

Unfortunately I am a glutton for hard work and long hours, but if somebody will only be good enough to induce the editor of the Pathé News to slip me the Croix de Guerre or the Legion of Honor for all the cartoons I made to kill the Kaiser and “Clown Prince” or “Crown Quince” I’ll buy him a drink before my contract runs out, because after the first of July we have to drink Jap-a-Lac.

In conclusion, an animated cartoonist must be able to talk English, Irish and Swedish, must know the Ten Commandments, the law of gravitation, locomotion and its uses, mind over matter, psychology and its action on cheese, the rules of the road, “cohesion” and its lifting capacity, navigation, a strong believer in Darwin, the art of tuning a
bass violin, the internal combustion engine and its use in the home, how to fry an egg, many innumerable things touched upon so lightly by our famous men and, above all, the animated cartoonist must have a one-track mind.

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Monday, October 27, 2008

 

Obscurity of the Day: Ralph


For a long time now it's been pretty much standard operating procedure for editorial cartoonists to attempt to supplement their incomes by moonlighting with a comic strip feature. Wayne Stayskal, editorial cartoonist for the Tampa Tribune, made his latest attempt with Ralph, a daily panel/Sunday strip feature syndicated by King Features.

Ralph is an everyman schlub who can't catch a break. The feature was similar to many others in the same vein -- Herman, Big George, Frank & Ernest and others all plowed much the same turf. Although Stayskal's entry was well done, it didn't sufficiently set itself apart from these other features and got lost in the crowd. The feature began on January 2 1995 and ended sometime in 2001.

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Comments:
It's not even Stayskal's first comic. He did a strip for a brief time called "Balderdash."
 
Didn't say it was. He's actual done at least three - can you name the other?

--Allan
 
The only one I've actual got tearsheets of...Trim's Arena.
 
Give that man a seegar!

--Allan
 
You should see how many he submitted before Balderdash and Ralph were finally accepted. Many, many, many. Wayne was a persistent and patient man.
 
Looks like the final "Ralph" comic appeared on 2/24/2001. Here's a clipping of it:

https://www.newspapers.com/clip/17944548/the_tampa_tribune/
 
Thanks Ed, great to have the Tampa Trib online! Looks like the final Sunday was 2/18.

--Allan
 
"Trim's Arena" could be a future OBSCURITY OF THE DAY!
 
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Sunday, October 26, 2008

 

Jim Ivey's Sunday Comics


Jim Ivey's new book, Graphic Shorthand, is available from Lulu.com for $19.95 plus shipping, or you can order direct from Ivey for $25 postpaid. Jim Ivey teaches the fundamentals of cartooning in his own inimitable style. The book is 128 pages, coil-bound. Send your order to:

Jim Ivey
5840 Dahlia Dr. #7
Orlando FL 32807

Also still available, Jim Ivey's career retrospective Cartoons I Liked, available on Lulu.com or direct from Jim Ivey for $20 postpaid. When ordered from Ivey direct, either book will include an original Ivey sketch.

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Comments:
Thanx for the info on Jim's new books - didn't know of "Cartoons I Liked"; will have to order it. Jim is a big reason I became a cartoonist - but I'm fond of him anyway ;)
 
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