Showing posts with label Howie Post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Howie Post. Show all posts

09 February 2020

Spin The Wheel Of Animals...

I've mentioned previously how it seems like some of the old Funny Animal comics were created by spinning a wheel or drawing animal names out of a hat to pair them up. How else can one explain titles like The Dodo And The Frog?

For some Sunday Morning Funnies, let's pair that up with an old fave around these parts - Howie Post

Howie spins the wheel and we get...


We got 3 issues of The Monkey And The Bear back in 1953-4 -
 


Let's take a look inside the covers, shall we...?
 




Of course, there were also a few supporting characters in back-up strips, like Funny Bunny...
 

...more monkeys in Jungle Fun...
 

...and a Coo-Coo Cat...
 

Yeah, i can dig on ol' Coo-Coo. I used to paint and draw in parks and public places every now and again. He just showed you why i stopped doing that years ago.

So, before we wrap for today, let's have another peek at Coo-Coo Cat...
 

Ah...   the Classics.

page art by Howie Post from The Monkey And The Bear #s 1-3 (1953, 1954)


01 February 2020

SMF It Ain't

I'm in the mood for some Sunday Morning Funnies, but it's only Saturday afternoon. What to do...?

Well, if it's not quite Sunday, we'll do some funnies that are "not quite" to fit right in, starting with a bit of Howie Post's doppelcomix of Al Capp's classic...


...and some 'Chester Gould' from Bill Elder...


...and to complete our typical trio, here's Joe Maneely's riff on Hank Ketchum's strip...


Like Stan said - "We have to end this somewhere..."

page art from Riot #s 3 & 6 and Panic #5 (1954)

17 July 2019

A Gen-u-ine Pin-Up Duck

Despite that title, there'll be nary a sign of Howard The Duck in this post. He's busy with the Guardians Of The Galaxy this season; also he doesn't fit our Old Friends Week theme.

Today we'll be talking about another duck, one from Howie Post. We've got a question leading into this one...

When is a Funny Animal not a Funny Animal?

Doodles Duck may be listed in the 1940s Funny Animalphabet, but he and his friends are a grey area. A brightly coloured grey area, but nonetheless...  Are they really Funny Animals if they're toys? 

Folks have been doing toys-come-alive stories long before the Toy Story movies, and Howie was doing it back in 1947 with a series he launched in Leading Comics, starting in #23. They were short, just 5 pages each, so here are the first three stories to introduce Doodles and his Toyland Playmates to you...




A couple issues later, Post decided he could take things further. If toys can come to life for the stories, why not pictures in books?
 

Howie had fun in Toyland for a few years with Doodles, and when he headed off to other strips, Sheldon Mayer took over for for several more years. But, if you go looking, it can be a bit tricky to follow. The strip bounced around between different comics. Besides Leading Comics (and Leading Screen Comics), Doodles also appeared in Comic Cavalcade, Funny Folks (and Hollywood Funny Folks), Funny Stuff, Movietown's Animal Antics, The Raccoon Kids, Nutsy Squirrel, Real Screen Comics, Peter Porkchops, and The Dodo and The Frog.

So...  Happy Hunting!

page art by Howie Post from Leading Comics #s 23-25 & 27 (1947)