but from c.1955 to c.1990, the dundee media empire had three other beano-esque weeklies:
the beezerthe topper sparky
the beezer i have no surviving copies of: its most legendary strip was "the numskulls", and it wz fronted by "ginger" (more boring if possible that beano's "biffo the bear"); the tagline i remember best is "colonel blink: short-sighted gink", the only place i ever saw this word*
the topper, like the beezer, was A3 format: they were considered sister papers, like beano and dandy (and in fact eventually combined). it was fronted by mickey the monkey (a chimp, and again no improvement on biffo the fkn bear), and its best strips was - i always felt - "send for kelly", who was a kind of secret agent but very silly... and the VERY VERY GREAT beryl the peril (drawn by david law, with his brilliantly slapdash and energetic style) - the single copy i still own also has a story called "jiffy and the glyphs" which is about a boy and his magic egyptian wallpaper! (which features tiny figures which come to life when you speak the mystical word "ooyah!")
sparky started later than the others, and ended sooner (it was absorbed into the topper): it featured pansy potter the strongman's daughter, keyhole kate and hungry horace (all transferred from the dandy, to bulk up big-nameishness: kate's "thing" was looking through keyholes, though this rarely went anywhere remotely interesting), and an adventure strip called - paging d.perry! - invisible dick. it wz fronted by a character was actually called sparky, who seems to have fallen out of history a bit, possibly bcz he wz a JAW-DROPPINGLY OUTRAGEOUS RACIAL STEREOTYPE!! i'm sorely tempted to add "but in a good way" there - judging by the single copy i still have, there was no malice involved (any more than there is towards cats in korky the kat) and i also suspect if you showed him to an unsuspecting youngster today and said "this is sparky the martian" they wouldn't see through this ruse, so stylised and extreme is the caricature ---- basically, sparky is a watusi warrior, or similar, naked except for a kind of green skirt, bangles on ankles and wrists, and a strange red topknot... he is so black he's shiny, and he's obviously fun to draw as really (unlike anyone else in the strip, in an ordinary english urban setting) he's just a series of interlocking circles (cranium, nose, mouth, shoulders, chest, belly, arms as big bulge small bulge big bulge, ditto legs, then feet as heel, ball and five toes) (with the "shininess" as white circles out of the black) ; he's cheerful and helpful but gets into scrapes by not knowing english ways (but his english speech is as good as anyone else's)... i find him a bit of a puzzle really: the date on the comic is oct 26th 1968, so obviously dundee wz a bit behind the rad-pol curve here, but really he seems to me to be one kind of alien (comical outlander) struggling to be another kind of alien (like "the moonsters" on the back, classic little green men complete with aerials in their heads)
― mark s (mark s), Saturday, 9 October 2004 10:17 (twenty years ago) link
― mark s (mark s), Saturday, 9 October 2004 10:18 (twenty years ago) link
― mark s (mark s), Saturday, 9 October 2004 10:33 (twenty years ago) link
I vaguely remember seeing a documentary about DC Thomson in (I'm guessing) the late 80s and the entire company seemed to have been transported through time from the 50s - it was all uptight round-faced balding men in suits, except for one of the artists who wuz a green haired punker kinda girl. It was like cunningly realised parody.
Which of these comice was the Jocks and the Geordies in? That was always my favourite because of the lunatic idea that Newcastle had to have a fight w/Scotland every week.
― Raw Patrick (Raw Patrick), Saturday, 9 October 2004 11:42 (twenty years ago) link
(but the midlands is not totally the south, so maybe the flow dried up as you went further)
the company was indeed very extremely old-fashioned (anti-union; also anti-catholic hiring at one time); that said, some of its best - and most anarchic - artists-for-hire were probably oldish men by the 70s, who actually drew wilder than they looked in person (but they were shopfloor not management)
(since i posted this thread i've been rereading my sister's 1973 beryl the peril annual, all 60s strips collected two years after david law died suddenly - aged 63 apparently: i wish i cd find something to link to, bcz it wd get across why i think he's so terrific... hunting around i found that his 60s style, very thin and scratchy and angular and dynamic, is controversial!! this attitude is bonkers: he wz one of those artists who used an apparently unhelpful technical restriction [eg panels too crammed] to liberate himself from stodgy convention!!)
― mark s (mark s), Saturday, 9 October 2004 12:06 (twenty years ago) link
the jocks and the geordies = the dandy i think (though several strips appeared in more than one over the years)
― mark s (mark s), Saturday, 9 October 2004 12:13 (twenty years ago) link
― Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Sunday, 10 October 2004 11:04 (twenty years ago) link
― Raw Patrick (Raw Patrick), Sunday, 10 October 2004 11:38 (twenty years ago) link
― mark s (mark s), Sunday, 10 October 2004 11:40 (twenty years ago) link
― mark s (mark s), Sunday, 10 October 2004 11:43 (twenty years ago) link
― mark s (mark s), Sunday, 10 October 2004 11:51 (twenty years ago) link
(and sorry for constantly making this thread not about 'not the beano, not the dandy'. I think part of this is that hardly anyone can remember which character went with which comic, bar the comics flagship caharacters. Which kind've leads back to the difficulty of being an 'obsessive' about this stuff).
― Raw Patrick (Raw Patrick), Sunday, 10 October 2004 16:07 (twenty years ago) link
I still have my Dad's 1962 Beezer Book which, despite some hilariously un-PC action strips, is a thing of beauty. There's a particularly gorgeous painted re-telling of the legend of King Arthur, and some great full-page Banana Bunch spreads by Leo Baxendale. Check out the 1969 book however, and the rot has clearly set in - the strips are already set in a pattern which will remain for about twenty years, and there's no Baxendale to be seen.
I also dug out a Topper Annual from the same era - and a more generic bunch of characters you've never laid eyes on(King Gussie? Postie Knox? Big Uggie? Who are these losers?)
There are a view oddities of note: "The Bustem Boys" - Hans and Fritz have adventures on an island with lots of wacky ethnic stereotypes - this appears to've escaped from Film Fun c. 1949. "Smart Art" - vaguely post-modern idea in that the character is aware that's he in a cartoon strip, and is constantly demanding the artist draw him things(it's a bit like "Duck Amok"). And there's the unexpected appearance of a non-Thompson strip, Ernie Bushmiller's "Nancy"(he's even famous enough to get his name at the top of the page).
There's also an actual David Law Beryl The Peril - hurrah!
― Philip Alderman (Phil A), Monday, 11 October 2004 03:13 (twenty years ago) link
http://www.electro-comicsonline.com/art_store/jpegs/dirk-ck2.jpg
basically it is rudolph dirk's "the kantzenjammer kids" which began life in the 1890s
(aw, i always kinda liked "king gussie": he was a KING!ยก! to whom nothing much happened)
― mark s (mark s), Monday, 11 October 2004 06:19 (twenty years ago) link
― robster (robster), Monday, 11 October 2004 06:54 (twenty years ago) link
― mark s (mark s), Monday, 11 October 2004 06:57 (twenty years ago) link