This may be the most surreal cartoon the Fleischer Brothers ever made (although it has a lot of good competition).
Author Archives: STWALLSKULL
Crumbling Paper: Gluyas Williams Circa 1927 Strip #8
Another in a series of scans of 1927 strips from cartoonist Gluyas Williams. Click on the image for the full strip.
You can see some more great stuff by Gluyas Williams at gluyaswilliams.com, at The Stripper’s Guide, and at Barnacle Press. I’ll be posting Williams strips here for about a month.
Woozlebeasts and Upside-Downs
Peter Maresca of Sunday Press Books (publisher of the recent gigantic Little Nemo book I mentioned previously), is planning on including a variety of strips in his upcoming book reprinting Winsor McCay’s Little Sammy Sneeze. These include J.P. Benson’s The Woozlebeasts and Gustave Verbeek’s The Upside-Downs, both excellent and bizarre strips. He is looking for some help locating some strips for this reprint… help him somebody! Here is what he posted to the Platinum Comics Group:
Call to all Winsor McCay collectors!
As many already know, I will be publishing two reprint books this year. After the full-size, Sundays with Walt and Skeezix the second project is a full-size volume collecting all of McCay’s color Sammy Sneeze pages. I’m putting Sammy on just one side of each page, and the other side will feature whatever monochrome strip appeared on the back in the 1904-05 newspapers. Strips include the Woozlebeasts, Upside-Downs, and McCay’s own Hungry Henrietta.
My problem is that not all of my Sammy collection is from the New York Herald, the only paper to put Henrietta on the back. As a result, I am missing Hungry Henrietta pages.
I could substitute other strips, but obviously the best thing to do is have the complete Henrietta. Anybody out there know the whereabouts of Herald sections from 1905? Or another source for Henrietta (Jan-July1905)? My usual contacts along with the SF collection at OSU have all come up short. Exciting prizes offered as a reward!
Thanks for helping out with the hunt!
Pete
Searching for some images to post with this, I made an awesome find… nonsenselit.org. It is a site offering, among other wonders, a complete online version of J.P. Benson’s Woozlebeasts 1905 book collection along with various Woozlebeasts strips, and reprints of Gustave Verbeek’s Loony Lyrics of Lulu, Tiny Tads (courtesy of Barnacle Press), and Easy Papa (courtesy of the Stripper’s Guide)… no Upside-Downs there, yet. Additional strips offered at nonsenselit.org include Peter Newell’s Naps of Polly Sleepyhead (along with a lot of other great Peter Newell stuff), Helen Stilwell’s Laughable Looloos, and other very interesting stuff, like this 17 foot long unfolding panorama by Aliquis called The Flight of the Old Woman Who Was Tossed Up in a Basket… wow.
In addition to all of this they also have a fantastic blog called A Blog of Bosh… I don’t know how I missed this site previously, but I sure am glad I found it!
Verbeek’s Upside-Downs is a pretty amazing strip. The strips have six panels which you read right-side up, and when you get to the last panel you flip it over and read the same panels upside-down to conclude the strip. To do this successfully once would be impressive… Verbeek did a whole series of them. To see an example I just blatantly stole out of Nemo #10 (I’m pretty sure this is “fair use”), click on the image below… then click on the strip example that comes up when you’re ready to flip it over. Nemo #10 reprints 16 of these ingeniously inventive strips… copies of the wonderful Nemo magazine can still be found at reasonable prices on Ebay.
The Woozlebeasts offers an array of marvelous and funny fantastic creatures. These strips (along with Verbeek’s The Terrors of the Tiny Tads) seem to me like a direct predecessor of two of my favorite cartoonists, Basil Wolverton and Dr. Seuss, although I have no idea if they were influenced by the Woozlebeasts and the Tiny Tads or not. Here is an example from the book on the nonsenselit.org site… click it to go view the entire book at nonsenselit.org.
Crumbling Paper: Gluyas Williams Circa 1927 Strip #7
Another in a series of scans of 1927 strips from cartoonist Gluyas Williams. Click on the image for the full strip.
You can see some more great stuff by Gluyas Williams at gluyaswilliams.com, at The Stripper’s Guide, and at Barnacle Press. I’ll be posting Williams strips here for about a month.
Recent Interesting Links: March 11th, 2007
- Nonsense Lyrics: Slim Gaillard
- Mairzy Doats
- Nonsense Lyrics: Chi-Baba, Chi-Baba
- The Limerick Craze!
- The Woozlebeasts
- The Laughable Looloos
- Jungle-Jangle
- Unorthodox Taxidermy
- The 1903 Alice Movie
- Peter Newell’s Patents
- Smokey Stover
- Obscurity of the Day: Sammy Stahl
- Obscurity of the Day: Just Humans
- Obscurity of the Day: The Captain’s Gig
- Rooty-toot
- Whatever Happened to Virtual Reality?
- Pseudo-skeptics and Pseudo-logic
- DoJ: FBI misused Patriot act in domestic spying activities
- Audit Finds FBI Abused Patriot Act
- Influences: Matt Feazell
- “Let’s get a movie!”
- Chapter 99: Franky Punjob
- Count Spinoff Cousins
- Bicyclopolis Poster for ARTCRANK
- 365 Days #67 – WFMU Marathon Madness with The Old…
- WFMU’s Old Codger with Courtney T. Edison from Dec…
- The Geek’s Guide to Getting Free Stuff
- Hill’s Chopped Frozen Horse Meat
- Downloading Is a Packrat’s Dream
- Mini-doc on creationist dinosaur park
Crumbling Paper: Gluyas Williams Circa 1927 Strip #6
Another in a series of scans of 1927 strips from cartoonist Gluyas Williams. Click on the image for the full strip.
You can see some more great stuff by Gluyas Williams at gluyaswilliams.com, at The Stripper’s Guide, and at Barnacle Press. I’ll be posting Williams strips here for about a month.
Billy DeBeck Sketches, and Barney Google
Rob Stolzer just posted 18 wonderful pages of Billy DeBeck character sketches and mentioned them on the excellent PlatinumAgeComics Yahoo group. I’m going to start pointing out some of the stuff that gets shown off on this group, as much of it deserves wider viewing. Here’s what Rob has to say about the sketches:
My apologies in advance for the cross-post, but I thought both lists might have an interest in these DeBeck studies.
Many years ago, Howard Lowery auctioned off a lot of 18 sketch pages by Billy DeBeck. These appear to be from the late 20s or early 30s, though I’m far from 100% sure. I was the under bidder on these pieces way-back-when, but was lucky enough to be able to acquire them recently.
The pieces appear to be fleshed out studies from when DeBeck was staying at the Continental Hotel. You can see that some characters are drawn directly from life, while others appear to come directly out of DeBeck’s fertile imagination. I assume that the pieces were drawn in NYC, though that’s only a guess. Whatever the case, it’s an interesting look at DeBeck’s character development. It’s almost like he was coming up with characters for a play, or maybe secondary characters for Barney Google.
Any info or light that could be shed on these would be appreciated. Thanks!
Best,
Rob
Click on the below image to view the gallery.
If you want to see more of DeBeck’s wonderful work, check out the Yahoo group googlegang for regular reprints of Barney Google strips (courtesy of cartoonist Roger Langridge), and these DeBeck strip reprints from Barnacle Press.
Barney Google is way up there on my list of great neglected comics. It is beautifully and distinctively drawn (I love DeBeck’s loose, scratchy style), and very funny.
Although this was one of the most popular strips of the 1920s and 1930s, there are only two major print reprints of the strip I’ve run across, neither of which provides a thorough reprinting. One is Bill Blackbeard’s Barney Google 1919-1920 volume of The Hyperion Library of Classic American Comic Strips from 1977 (reprinting the early years of the strip before Barney was divorced and before he found his horse Sparkplug)… the other is the book Barney Google and Snuffy Smith by Brian Walker which offers some short runs from different time periods (hillbilly Snuffy Smith, who is still in the papers today, got his start as a secondary character in Barney Google, and then took over the strip). There are some good runs of the strip in The Smithsonian Guide to Newspaper Comics and The Comic Strip Century as well.
Crumbling Paper: Gluyas Williams Circa 1927 Strip #5
Another in a series of scans of 1927 strips from cartoonist Gluyas Williams. Click on the image for the full strip.
You can see some more great stuff by Gluyas Williams at gluyaswilliams.com, at The Stripper’s Guide, and at Barnacle Press. I’ll be posting Williams strips here for about a month.
Recent Interesting Links: March 7th, 2007
- Checking in with Google Book Search
- Gumby World
- Mel Brooks’ The Critic
- 1943 article on Pal’s Puppetoons
- You might be a Walmart shopper…
- German Scientists Invent Mind-Reading Machine
- US Senate: Broadcast Treaty subverts copyright!
- Kids Love Comics Day: a report
- J.J. Defends 2-D
- Nightmare on Oak Street (News)
- Ride On A Troll
- Florabeasts
- Train kept a-rollin’
- The artist at play
- Government cheese
- Sooted up for work
- ATT ‘net-spying whistleblower went to NYT when LAT…
- Crumb Crisp Coating: more tidbits
- Hollywood Censors Its Animated Cartoons (1939)
- Creepy automated photo retouching software
- Obscurity of the Day: Sammy and Sue and Slobbery Slam
- Comic book censorship illustrated, 1939
- John Edwards’ Virtual Attackers Unmasked
- Diebold to Withdraw from E-Voting?
- Privacy Board OKs Eavesdropping
- DoJ sets surveillance sights on content-sharing websites
- Lost in Space: Astronaut’s Wasabi
- HOW TO – Make Oobleck from Dr. Seuss
- RIAA Boycott: Worst Company in America?
- Second Life: John Edwards assaulted by poo-slinging…
Crumbling Paper: Gluyas Williams Circa 1927 Strip #4
Another in a series of scans of 1927 strips from cartoonist Gluyas Williams. Click on the image for the full strip.
You can see some more great stuff by Gluyas Williams at gluyaswilliams.com, at The Stripper’s Guide, and at Barnacle Press. I’ll be posting Williams strips here for about a month.