
JOHN UPDIKE ON THE POWER AND CHARM OF COMIC STRIPS “Part of the power and charm of the newspaper comic strip is that it be constantly renewing itself before our eyes – that it arrive with our coffee and cereal, and be relished in less than a minute and not seen again for twenty-four hours, when its little adventure moves forward another notch, like a big cogwheel that the full diurnal sweep of our ticking lives has barely budged,” John Updike. Foreword to My Well Balanced Life on a Wooden Leg: Memoirs by Al Capp (Santa Barbara, Ca: John Daniel & Company Publishers, 1991). ** MIC BOOKS MAKING THEIR FIRST APPEARANCE “Comic books with original material and with a whole book focusing on a single strip did not appear until the 1930s. The first one, Funnies on Parade (1933) was distributed as an advertising giveaway by Proctor and Gamble. The next year, Max Charles Gaines, a salesman for the Eastern Color Printing Co. repackaged comic strips into a book called Famous Funnies, which her sold for 10 cents. The success of this commercial venture inspired competition, and in February of 1935 New Fun Comics was published, consisting solely of original material. The name was eventually changed to Adventure Comics, which today continues to publish both Superman and Batman. From Encyclopedia of 20th-Century American Humor by Alleen Pace Nilsen and Don L.F. Nilsen. (Oryx Press, 2000) ** ON BILL MAULDIN BEING HONORED BY CHARLES SCHULTZ IN PEANUTS On Strips: Schulz, Mauldin, & Veterans Day By Sean Kleefeld | Friday, November 10, 2017\ "For many years, Charles Schulz would have a special Veterans Day comic in Peanuts. Many of them involved Snoopy heading over to Bill Mauldin's house to quaff a few root beers. Maudlin, of course, was a Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonist himself, who became for his "Willie and Joe" cartoons in Stars and Stripes. Schulz managed an original joke pretty much every Veterans Day, despite them all pretty much centering around that same notion of Snoopy walking over to Mauldin's. IMPOTRTANT SITE FOR COMICS FANS http://www.kleefeldoncomics.com/2017/11/on-strips-schulz-mauldin-veterans-day.html *** THE BEST SATIRIST IN THE WORLD John Steinbeck once wrote about the cartoonist Al Capp that "I think Capp may very possibly be the best writer in the world today. I am sure that he is the best satirist since Laurence Stern." RAY BRADBURY & BUCK ROGERS “The most beautiful sound in my life, dearly recollected, fully remembered, was the sound of a folded newspaper kiteing through the summer air and landing on my front porch… The door burst wide. A boy, myself, leapt out, eyes blazing, mouth gasping for breath, hands seizing at the paper to grapple it wide so that the hungry soul of one of Waukegan, Illinois’ finest small intellects could feed upon. "That small boy still uses my soul for a trampoline.” Ray Bradbury in his introduction to The Collected Works of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1977 “I have never got over the initial impact of Buck Rogers on my life, and I am grateful for his explosion in my midst sometime in the year 1929 when the newspaper thudded against the screen door of my home in Waukegan, IL”. Ray Bradbury (1980 San Diego Comic-Con) Bradbury loved comics and loved Waukegan. As a boy, he obsessively cut out Buck Rogers, Tarzan, and Flash Gordon from local Waukegan newspapers, filling dozens of scrapbooks with their adventures.His Waukegan boyhood sparked a life-long love and career in comics. from his comment in E.C. Comics as part of his appearance at the very first Comic Con San Diego. ** UNKNOWN FILMS CITIZEN (BOB) KANE – Orson Welles’ classic movie about a cartoonist/illustrator who created Batman & Robin. Unfortunately he dies unhappy because he could never find the sled he had in his childhood, ** Not-so-secret Origin story In the emerging comic book industry of the late 1930s, Captain Marvel was the champion of Fawcett Publications. The thriving magazine firm was named for its founder, Wilford H. Fawcett, who entered the publishing field in the early 1920s with a humor publication aimed at soldiers and veterans like himself, entitled Capt. Billy's Whiz Bang. Fawcett ran the firm with his four sons. They tasked writer Bill Parker and artist C.C. Beck with sketching out the basics of a superhero named "Captain Thunder." But by the time he first appeared in 1939's Whiz Comics #2 -- yes, that's a year after Superman arrived -- the name had changed, even if his rank remained the same. He was now "Marvel," which would prove to be something of a magic word in the history of American comics that followed. Magic words were essential to the character. According to his origin story, orphan boy reporter Billy Batson was lead by a stranger to a mysterious subway, where he rode a magical train to meet the wizard Shazam. When Billy spoke the wizard's name, he was transformed into Captain Marvel, and given the six powers of six patron heroes and gods (Solomon's wisdom, Hercules' strength, Atlas' stamina, Zeus' power, Achilles' courage and Mercury's speed.). Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Captain Marvel, But Were Afraid to Google | https://comicsalliance.com/dc-comics-captain-marvel-shazam/?utm_source=tsmclip&utm_medium=referral ** ] THE CANCELLED CHECK Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel, the creators of Superman, sold all the rights to their work, for $130. Superman became a billion dollar industry, and the men sued to be recognized for their original idea and asked for fair monetary compensation Jeremy Dauber in his book – American Comics: A History – writes: “In something that felt like an overdetermined symbol, the original check for $130 made out to Siegel and Schuster for Superman, the site of the grandest battle between creator and corporation, netted $160,000 at auction in 2012.” ** ALLEY OOP & POP MUSIC “Mr. Frazier’s big break , though, came five years earlier with ‘Alley Oop,’ a novelty song that reached No. 1 on the pop chart (No. 3 on the R&B chart) for the Hollywood Argyles in 1960. Inspired by the V.T. Hamlin comic strip of the same name, the song has been recorded several times since, including versions by the Beach Boys and the satirical British art-rockers the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band. “David Bowie also interpolated the line ‘Look at those cave men go” from “Alley Oop” in his 1973 single “Life on Mars.” Bill Friskics-Warren. Obituary for Dallas Frazier in the New York Times (January 17, 2022) ** ONE OF THE STRANGEST COINCIDENCES IN COMIC STRIP HISTORY On March 12, 1951, “Dennis the Menace” appeared for the first time in the British weekly comic magazine The Beano. That same day, “Dennis the Menace” debuted in 16 American newspapers. Was it the same character arriving in different countries by way of an international distribution deal? Nope. The British Dennis, drawn by David Law, was dark-haired, scowling, and known to deliberately stir up trouble; American Dennis, from the hand of Hank Ketcham, was blonde, friendly, and more likely to foul things up through good intentions turned sour. It was reported that neither artist initially was aware of the other's work, and apparently, neither cared about any sort of copyright infringement, as both the British and American Dennis went on to long, successful runs in their respective countries.” https://www.interestingfacts.com/strangest-coincidences-history/YfRM33nUVAAGtuQa


Thanks, LP! I have always loved the comic strip pages of the Daily News in the 1970’s when I was growing up in the Bronx. Over the years I started to delve further into reading about the men and women who created the comics I read….Peanuts, Dondi, Blondie, Calvin & Hobbes, Brenda Starr, Winnie Winkle, Beetle Bailey. By the late 80’s I was seeking out comics and graphic novels by Glenn Baxter, Daniel Clowes, Nick Drnaso, Alison Bechdel. I know you are a big SUPERMAN comic book reader. I’d love for you to write about the changes over the years as Superman has grown up with the times. Thank you always for each new Bits & Pieces of a Misplaced Life. Bravo!
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These are fascinating “bits and pieces.” Brings back great times at my dad’s grocery store. He put me in charge of the comic rack so I always got to read the new ones before Jimmy Kirschner
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thanks for jogging my memory, Jack– same experience in MY dad’s grocery store in NJ …
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Dear Jack: Thank you for your response. I think you should write a short essay
about your reading comic books in your father’s grocery store.
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I was a religious reader of every comic in both The Daily News and The Daily Mirror throughout high school. So much so that when I went off to the University of Virginia, my mother would cut out the strips every day, put them in order along with the complete Sunday comic sections and mail them to me every Monday for all of my college years. I didn’t detoxify from my comic addiction until I began my film career, in Greece of all places.
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Thanks LP: Captain Marvel my hero, Daisy Mae my first crush. Cut outs for scrapbook were “Ripley’s Believe it if Not” and Hal Foster’s “Prince Valiant in the Days of King Arthur”
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