Showing posts with label Supersnipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supersnipe. Show all posts

15 April 2018

Sunday Morning Funnies - Old Friends Edition

Most of our friends for this morning's Sunday Morning Funnies come to us from Supersnipe. Koppy is here to help out his friend Ulysses, but his costumed persona won't be joining us this morning.
Before that, however, let's check in with a couple of residents of his book, but not his world. (I think. Y'never know...)

First up, the mad stylings of Dwig, creator of Huck Finn & Tom Sawyer and their Robot Duck. Another of his very odd strips that ran in Supersnipe was the castaway adventures of young Bobby Crusoe -


It gets stranger after that.

But strange was no stranger to Supersnipe & company. And Muffo The Magician has only gotten stranger since last we saw him...


With those sort of back-up featuers, Ulysses Q. Wacky, boy inventor, almost seemed quite normal by comparison, no? Koppy (Supersnipe) McFadd is here to help Wacky create his Flying Suit...


Okay. Let's let them rest.

While Koppy and Ulysses recuperate, we'll go check in with Ulysses Jr, from another old favorite - Louis Ferstadt. We've seen the two previous - here's the 3rd and final episode of Penny And Ulysses Jr. - Kalamazooki!


Now my day's off to a proper odd start.

pages from Supersnipe v3#8, v2#12, & v1#7 and All-New Comics #11 (1943-7)


05 November 2017

Sunday Supersnipe (sans Supersnipe)

For our Sunday Morning Funnies this week, let's revisit Supersnipe. The comic, not the hero, this time. We spoke previously of some of the back-up features and promised to come back to them later. I checked the calendar - it's later.

All three of our strips today come from issues for which we've already seen the covers, so they're presented here in smaller size, just for reference:


So, first up, let's visit with Dotty.
As we've seen on previous covers, "Dotty Loves Trouble". In later issues, they added a dog named Trouble, perhaps to soften the character a bit. Here in her first appearance, there's no dog named Trouble - she's just fond of the concept. While Koppy McFad is "the boy with the most comic books in America," Dotty "gets into more trouble than any other little girl in America." An interesting counterbalance they attempted here, before the cultural assumption became "comics are for boys" in this country. Like Supersnipe, Dotty was also drawn by George Marcoux.


Dotty for the win. As speculated above, they may have added the dog so she didn't come across as a completely wicked child.
And speaking of "wicked children" - it's well past time to take that promised look at Huck Finn & Tom Sawyer and their Robot Duck!, don't you think? We'll skip to their second episode, because that's when they find it. The first episode had them find a haunted house and have a first encounter, setting things up for the strip to really get going...


But we won't be following along on their adventures. Unlike the Wing Woo Woo strip we peeked at previously, which seemed to be trying to be a positive character portrayal, in a fumbling way, Dwig has no such intentions. In the following episode we get one page...


...and then they go to the jungle. Even the sea monsters...

So, anyway - now that we've had our cultural sensibilities jarred, how about screwing with how perceptions of people over time. Today, one can't hear the name Lou Gehrig without the word 'Disease' following right behind. Once upon a time...


Here, his death was merely a too soon end to a stellar career. Now, his death defines him. A little reminder of how perception of people (and things, and ideas) shift over time.

Hmm.
That wasn't very Sunday Morning Funnies-y, was it?

pages from Supersnipe v.2, #s 2, 3, 7, & 9 (1944)

12 October 2017

Supersnipe's Got Ya Covered

Very simple post today - let's look at some Supersnipe covers.
Okay - let's look at a bunch of them - say, a dozen and a half. In addition to what we've already seen, that'll encompass most of the George Marcoux covers. I'm limiting this look to only those he did, though there were almost as many done without him.
I think that rather than any elaborate sorting scheme, we'll just go chronologically.






Note that blurb for the Pig Latin special course. That was a one page series that went on for over a year, pretty much just listing the Pig Latin version of various words for kids to memorize by rote instead of just getting them to use the rules and sort it for themselves.
I think this may have been the single oddest feature of the title, in its way.






NEW! Dotty Loves Trouble!
Yep - they added a 'girl's comic' to round out the book.





And the final, posthumously published, Marcoux cover:


I lied, kinda.
While those covers are indeed chronologically presented, my favorite three were withheld for the end here. Perhaps not surprisingly, they are the most phantasmagorical of his covers.




While other strips get blurbs on the cover, Supersnipe's frequent partners Ulysses Q. Wacky gets only one mention above, and kid detective Herlock Domes, none at all. (And, yes - that image that just popped up in your head is probably fairly close - deerstalker cap and all)

Of course, there was this one...


Not only does that mention Wacky on the cover, but it's actually a Wacky story that's the basis for the cover. Ulysses and Supersnipe team up to tunnel to the center of the Earth. Guess what they find...

Supersnipe covers by George Marcoux (1943-46)