Showing posts with label Daily Strips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daily Strips. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 October 2021

Joe Palooka - Daily Strips 1930 - 1952 - Ham Fisher




Joe Palooka was an American comic strip about a heavyweight boxing champion, created by cartoonist Ham Fisher in 1921. The strip debuted in 1930 and was carried at its peak by 900 newspapers.

The strip was adapted to a short-lived 15-minute CBS radio series, 12 feature-length films (chiefly from Monogram Pictures), nine Vitaphone film shorts, a 1954 syndicated television series (The Joe Palooka Story), comic books and merchandise, including a 1940s board game, a 1947 New Haven Clock & Watch Company wristwatch, a 1948 metal lunchbox featuring depictions of Joe, Humphrey and Little Max, and a 1946 Wheaties cereal box cut-out mask. In 1980, a mountain in Pennsylvania was named for the character. 


In his home town of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, Fisher devised the character in 1921 after he met a boxer, Pete Latzo, outside a poolroom. As Fisher explained in an article in Collier’s:

“ Here, made to order, was the comic strip character I had been looking for—a big, good-natured prize fighter who didn’t like to fight; a defender of little guys; a gentle knight. I ran back to the office, drew a set of strips and rushed to the newspaper syndicates. ”

However, many rejections followed before Fisher’s strip was finally syndicated by the McNaught Syndicate after Fisher, while employed as a McNaught salesman, sold it to over 20 newspapers. It debuted April 19, 1930, and by 1948, it was ranked as one of the five most popular newspaper comic strips.

Fisher originally changed the appearance of Palooka to fit each reigning real-life champ — until the coming of African-American Joe Louis in the 1930s, at which time the image of the cowlicked blond Palooka remained unchanged. Though his adventures were mostly low-key, he was pumped up by a supporting cast led by girlfriend Ann Howe, boxing manager Knobby Walsh, his mute orphan sidekick Little Max, Smokey, his black valet and later sparring partner and lovable giant Humphrey Pennyworth, a smiling blacksmith who wielded a 100-pound (45 kg) maul. Like Ozark Ike McBatt in baseball, Joe Palooka was intended to exemplify the sports hero in an age when uprightness of character was supposed to matter most. The character was part of an effort among top newspaper cartoonists to sell WWII-era Series E bonds to the public as a wartime financing initiative.

The strip garnered much publicity when cheese heiress Ann Howe and Joe were married on June 24, 1949. The engraved invitations for the event, sent to a select list of celebrities, read: “Mr. Ham Fisher requests the honour of your presence at the marriage of Ann Howe to Mr. Joe Palooka on the afternoon of June 24th in your favorite newspaper.” Fisher received formal acceptances from Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson, General Omar Bradley and Attorney General Tom C. Clark. At the time, the strip was carried in 665 American newspapers and 125 foreign papers.
After Fisher committed suicide in 1955, his assistant Moe Leff drew the strip for four years. Lank Leonard recommended Tony DiPreta, who stepped in to illustrate Morris Weiss’ scripts. DiPreta stayed with the strip for 25 years until it ended its run November 24, 1984, when it had dropped to only 182 newspapers. DiPreta then moved on to draw Rex Morgan, M.D..



Daily Strips 1930 - 1952 

19 /04 /1930   -  03 /01 1953



Link 👇👇

Thursday, 26 August 2021

Buz Sawyer 101 - 150 [ Daily Story ] - Roy Crane


 Buz Sawyer is a comic strip created by Roy Crane.Distributed by King Features Syndicate
it had a run from November 1, 1943 to October 7, 1989.
The last strip signed by Crane was dated 21 April 1979.

 Buz Sawyer

Daily Stories [ 101 - 150 ]  by  Roy Crane 

June 14, 1971  to  September 11, 1982






Link 👇👇

Monday, 31 May 2021

Johnny Hazard 100 - 140 (Daily Strips) - Frank Robbins

 Johnny Hazard was an action-adventure comic strip created by cartoonist Frank Robbins
 for King Features Syndicate. It was published from June 5, 1944 until August 20, 1977  
with separate storylines for the daily strip and the Sunday strip...

DAILIES

D51  101 Nov 1959  -  D140  26 Feb 1977








THE END


Thursday, 6 May 2021

Johnny Hazard 51 - 100 (Daily Strips) - Frank Robbins

 

Johnny Hazard was an action-adventure comic strip created by cartoonist Frank Robbins for King Features Syndicate. It was published from June 5, 1944 until August 20, 1977  
with separate storylines for the daily strip and the Sunday strip...

DAILIES

D51  06 Jul 1959  -  D100  10 Oct 1959










Link 👇

Thursday, 15 April 2021

Brick Bradford [D081-D141] - Daily strips by Paul Norris

Authors: William Ritt (1933–1948)
Clarence Gray (1948–1956)
Paul Norris (1956–1987)

Illustrator: Clarence Gray (1933–1956)
Paul Norris (1952–1987)

Current status/schedule Concluded daily & Sunday strip

Launch date August 21, 1933
End date April 25, 1987
Syndicates: Central Press Association / King Features Syndicate
Publisher: David McKay Publications
Genres: science fiction, adventure

Daily strips by Paul Norris



  • D081 Galileo's Ghost (05/05/1969 – 07/26/1969) 72 strips
  • D082 Revenge (07/28/1969 – 10/04/1969) 60 strips
  • D083 Tabby's Tantrums (10/06/1969 – 12/13/1969) 60 strips
  • D084 Return to Gwaymus (12/15/1969 – 03/14/1970) 78 strips
  • D085 The Treasure of Tarabagara (03/16/1970 – 05/23/1970) 60 strips
  • D086 Purple Pintar (05/25/1970 – 08/29/1970) 84 strips
  • D087 Search for Urubu (08/31/1970 – 10/31/1970) 54 strips
  • D088 Time and Trouble (11/02/1970 – 01/30/1971) 78 strips
  • D089 Tenacious Tempo (02/01/1971 – 04/03/1971) 54 strips
  • D090 Hoppy's Re-Migration (04/05/1971 – 06/12/1971) 60 strips
  • D091 Tardy Tempo (06/14/1971 – 09/04/1971) 72 strips
  • D092 Double Trouble (09/06/1971 – 11/13/1971) 60 strips
  • D093 Stranded (11/15/1971 – 01/08/1972) 48 strips
  • D094 Phoenix Fever (01/10/1972 – 04/08/1972) 78 strips
  • D095 Going Home (04/10/1972 – 07/08/1972) 78 strips
  • D096 Then There Were Two (07/10/1972 – 09/23/1972) 66 strips
  • D097 Trail of the Tonabera (09/25/1972 – 12/02/1972) 60 strips
  • D098 Polar Poltergeist (12/04/1972 – 03/03/1973) 78 strips
  • D099 Long Way Home (03/05/1973 – 06/23/1973) 96 strips
  • D100 A Change of Plans (06/25/1973 – 10/20/1973) 102 strips
  • D101 A Flight of Ghosts (10/22/1973 – 12/08/1973) 42 strips
  • D102 Old Masters (12/10/1973 – 02/16/1974) 60 strips
  • D103 Cygnus Two (02/18/1974 – 04/27/1974) 60 strips
  • D104 Lore (04/29/1974 – 08/03/1974) 84 strips
  • D105 Search for Succor (08/05/1974 – 10/05/1974) 54 strips
  • D106 Rescue (10/07/1974 – 12/28/1974) 72 strips
  • D107 Stronger Force (12/30/1974 – 02/22/1975) 48 strips
  • D108 Holiday on Hokuku! (02/24/1975 – 05/31/1975) 84 strips
  • D109 Sea of Secrets (06/02/1975 – 08/16/1975) 66 strips
  • D110 The Folly of Petro Leur (08/18/1975 – 12/27/1975) 114 strips
  • D111 Lore Revisited (12/29/1975 – 02/14/1976) 42 strips
  • D112 Beyond Bucala (02/16/1976 – 05/29/1976) 90 strips
  • D113 The Way Home (05/31/1976 – 10/09/1976) 114 strips
  • D114 Eye Spy (10/11/1976 – 01/29/1977) 96 strips
  • D115 Rescue (01/31/1977 – 04/23/1977) 72 strips
  • D116 Dead End (04/25/1977 – 08/27/1977) 108 strips
  • D117 Lost (08/29/1977 – 01/07/1978) 114 strips
  • D118 Dolphins of Dahgara (01/09/1978 – 04/22/1978) 90 strips
  • D119 Wild Wet World (04/24/1978 – 08/05/1978) 90 strips
  • D120 Space Trace (08/07/1978 – 12/16/1978) 114 strips
  • D121 Emigres’ Reversion (12/18/1978 – 04/07/1979) 96 strips
  • D122 Web of Life (04/09/1979 – 09/22/1979) 144 strips
  • D123 Two, Too Many (09/24/1979 – 01/19/1980) 102 strips
  • D124 Runagate (01/21/1980 – 06/07/1980) 120 strips
  • D125 Loose Ends (06/09/1980 – 10/25/1980) 120 strips
  • D126 Iona Incursion (10/27/1980 – 01/17/1981) 72 strips
  • D127 Solar Power Play (01/19/1981 – 04/18/1981) 78 strips
  • D128 Time Trials (04/20/1981 – 07/25/1981) 84 strips
  • D129 The Realm of Ram (07/27/1981 – 01/02/1982) 138 strips
  • D130 Jeopardy (01/04/1982 – 04/17/1982) 90 strips
  • D131 Search for Saturn Sadie (04/19/1982 – 09/18/1982) 132 strips
  • D132 Prekarius Plot (09/20/1982 – 04/16/1983) 180 strips
  • D133 Topaz (04/18/1983 – 09/17/1983) 132 strips
  • D134 Beyond the Limits (09/19/1983 – 12/31/1983) 90 strips
  • D135 The Penny Black (01/02/1984 – 05/19/1984) 120 strips
  • D136 Burawa Bondage (05/21/1984 – 08/03/1985) 378 strips
  • D137 Aggression at Agwon (08/05/1985 – 12/21/1985) 120 strips
  • D138 The Save of Saturn Sadie (12/23/1985 – 04/26/1986) 108 strips
  • D139 What Next? (04/28/1986 – 07/26/1986) 78 strips
  • D140 Mind Over Matter (07/28/1986 – 12/20/1986) 126 strips
  • D141 Flight Tests (12/22/1986 – 04/25/1987) 108 strips









THE END


Monday, 12 April 2021

Buz Sawyer 01 - 25 [ Daily Story ] - Roy Crane

 

Buz Sawyer is a comic strip created by Roy Crane.Distributed by King Features Syndicate, it had a run from November 1, 1943 to October 7, 1989.The last strip signed by Crane was dated 21 April 1979.


Characters and story

During World War II, the adventurous John Singer Sawyer, nicknamed Buz Sawyer, became a Naval Aviator and flew as an ace Navy fighter and dive bomber pilot in the Pacific Theater where he had numerous adventures with his sidekick Sweeney.[1] As a civilian in the post-World War II years, Buz became an oil company troubleshooter, traveling to far-flung locales. He married Christy Jameson on 13 December 1948, and their son Pepper was born in 1951. Buz rejoined the Navy in the 1950s and flew carrier-based reconnaissance attack jets over Vietnam during the 1960s.

Roy Crane was one of the innovators of the adventure comic strip. Wash Tubbs began in 1924 as a humorous story about the romantic adventures of Washington Tubbs, but increasingly Tubbs became involved in exciting adventures in exotic places. With the creation of the popular soldier of fortune Captain Easy in 1929, the strip became, along with Tarzan of the Apes and Buck Rogers, one of the first adventure strips. However, Crane was an employee of the Newspaper Enterprise Association syndicate, which owned the rights to the Tubbs and Easy characters. Crane approached King Features with an idea for a new strip, and when they offered him ownership, he abandoned Wash Tubbs and Captain Easy in 1943, giving full concentration to launching Buz Sawyer. 
Crane remembered the events this way:

I drew Wash Tubbs until 1943, when I started drawing Buz Sawyer. It was during World War II, so I decided to make Buz a Navy pilot. It promised lots of action, and I also felt that I would be making a contribution to the war effort. Before actually starting the strip, and to insure authenticity, I did a great deal of research. I’ve always loved to travel, so I went to many different places in search of information that I could use in the strip; I even spent some time aboard an aircraft carrier. In addition, I gathered together a very large collection of Navy photographs to use as background material. Rosco Sweeney, who is now featured on the entire Sunday page, was Buz’s wartime buddy. He was also the gunner on the Navy bomber which Buz flew. After the war, I had Sweeney start an orange grove in Florida… the same as I did. I have no plans for bringing Buz into the Sunday page. Action is one of the most important elements in a strip. In fact, I feel that graphic pictorialization is the essence of the comic strip medium and that is what makes it a unique art form. When newspapers cut the size of the comic strip until there is no room left for anything but dialogue, then that will be the end of comics. Buz is conceived four weeks in advance. My collaborator, Hank Schlensker, finishes the layouts from my rough drawings. He works approximately one week behind me. I am also assisted by Al Wenzel and Edwin Granberry. I own the rights to the strip. The rendering of Buz Sawyer is done with Craftint; a technique pioneered in this strip as well as in Wash Tubbs. I have always been interested in trying new techniques, and I especially try to capture a three-dimensional quality in the strip.

Daily strip

Granberry began writing Buz Sawyer during the 1940s, continuing as the strip's scripter until 1983. In 1946, 31-year-old Henry G. Schlensker, who had created Biff Baker with Ernest Lynn (1941–45), settled in Orlando, where he became Crane's art assistant. An ulcer resulted in Crane's retirement from the strip in the 1960s, but he continued to work closely with Granberry and Schlensker. After Crane's death in 1977, Schlensker began signing the strip. The duo continued as a team until 1983. When they retired, John Celardo drew the daily until it was discontinued on 7 October 1989. Schlensker, who fought with the Army Air Corps in East Asia during World War II, died in 1997 at the age of 82. 
"He loved to draw, and he loved action. That strip was his whole life,"
 said his wife, Virginia Schlensker.


Sunday Strip -- Roscoe Sweeney

Rosco Sweeney, who was Sawyer's comic-relief sidekick, was the lead character of the Buz Sawyer Sunday strip. The Sunday comic was titled Buzz Sawyer Featuring His Pal Roscoe Sweeney, and was about Roscoe and his sister Lucille, living and working on a Florida farm, which included a citrus grove. At times Roscoe remembered his war years with Buzz, and set out on adventures, but he always returned to the farm.



Sweeney largely disappeared from the dailies after World War II. Beginning in the late 1940s, Crane assigned the writing and drawing chores for the Sunday strip to cartoonist Clark Haas, who was a pioneer jet pilot. Later, Al Wenzel did the Sunday strip, which Crane brough
 to a conclusion on 19 May 1974.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buz_Sawyer


 Buz Sawyer. Daily Stories [ 01 - 25 ]  by  Roy Crane 

November 1, 1943 to August 21 , 1951








Link 👇👇

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