Showing posts with label Walter Gibson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walter Gibson. Show all posts

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Friday, December 26, 2014

Playing The Gibson

Friday Arrow Day 2.

I accidentally did the third date twice, so here's the good one.

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Straight Shootin'

Thursday Arrow Day 1.

A couple of years ago I showed all pages from a special newspaper section I ha called The Arrow. It was produced completely by Loyd Lacquet and Walter Gibson, with Gibson apparently writing most of the strips (though only signing one). As I said then, Alan Holtz was preparing an article about this elusive section for Hogan's Alley. As far as I can see, the article has not yet appeared. One reason may be that it has been hard for Allan to get a complete set of 'issues'.

Recently I came across a site that had microfiche copies of the prepepared weekly, from a New York area newspaper. Since some of the strips are numbered I am sure I have the frst one. By that reckoning the fifth one is missing (but just happens to be the one I have in color) and the whole things stops after eight issues, one week short of Christmas. If tere were more in other papers i Dont' know. But over the next few days I will share what I have, for Alan Holtz, for walter Gibson fans everywhere and for those of you who want to see a continuation of Bruce Gentry two years after the fact by a completely different team.

I left out Debbie Dean because I don't care for it. But that seems silly now, so I may have to ad at a later stage.

Thursday, June 03, 2010

Scappy Trails

Thursday Story Strip Day.

So here I was, looking for more material for a post or a series of posts about Bruce Gentry, Ray Bailey's imitation Steve Canyon strip, which started running a year before Steve Canyon did. As I have written here before, Bailey was Caniff's assistant in the mid-fifties and is reported to have worked on Miss Lace, amongst other things. Not happy with having signed away his rights on Terry and the Pirates, after the war Caniff signed a deal to start a new strip with another syndicate. He took an unprecedented whole year to prepare that new strip, while finishing off his run on Terry. I don't know if Bailey was an assistant on Terry at that time, but if he was, he must surely have seen this new strip, soon to be called Steve Canyon, in development. Which makes it the more strange that he created his own strip, Bruce Gentry about a similar character in a similar situation having similar adventures. Was Bruce Gentry a Caniff-assisted try-out for Steve Canyon or was it a blatant rip-off by an assistant. I can hardly think it was the latter, seeing how Bailey returned to assist Caniff in the fifties on his Steve Canyon comic books.

In the end it didn't matter, because Steve Canyon was a run-away succes and Bruce Gentry wasn't. A major reason for that, in my opinion, is the fact that Bruce Gentry seens to have been marketed as a also-ran from the start. Nu big campaign, no big impressive Sunday page, no big detailed dailies, just a solidly drawn and slightly dull strip in the Caniff style. Bruce Gentry ran until the early fifties, when Bailey switched strips and took on Tom Corbett, which we have seen here. This time thing were promoted a bit better and the art was given a bit more attention... and still it didn't work. Don't ask me why, I think it is a gorgeous and unjustly forgotten strip. Maybe it just fell out of favor when the early fifties kid astronaut fad faded.

Anyway, since most of my samples for Bruce Gentry are unimpressive copies from NewspaperArchive, I wanted to find a run of the strip that could surround the one color Sunday I have and had scanned. But, going through my collection I found I had another Bruce Gentry Sunday all along. The reason I had not remembered it, is because it was not by Ray Bailey and not from the period he drew the strip!

My sample came from a 1953 newspaper called The Arrow, which contained mostly obscure or unknow strips. All quite poor as well, which explais why I hadn't remembered it. But what did it mean? how did a 1953 revival of Bruce Gentry, drawn in a similar style to Bailey, but not nearly as accomplished come to be?

Help came from Alan Holtz, whose complete Strippers Guide is eagerly awaited with all collectors. It is going to have all starting and ending dates of all strips and more. Anyway, I asked Alan and he told me he was in the proces of writing an aricle for Hogan's Alley #18 about The Arrow, a pre-prepared Sunday comic paper, which ran for a short time in 1953 in a selected number of papers. It is considered a rarity and he had only ever seen a few. It turned out that my copy was from a paper and a town not known to have carried this insert before, so I hope I gave him a lead to find more copies and maybe secure some more dates for it.

I am reproducing all eight pages of my copy here for Alan and everyone to see. I will leave it to Alan to write about it in length, but here is what I found out.

A couple of the strips in this paper were written by pulp writer Walter Gibson. Captain Galaxy is the only one aknowledging that, as it has the byline that it is copyrighted by Gibson-Jaquet. Lloyd Jacquet ran the Funnies Inc. comic strip studio in the forties. In most biographies I have seen, he stopped his 'shop' in the late forties, but apparently he was still at it in ome way in the early fifties. Jerry Bails' Who's Who credits Gibson with Debbie Dean as well, although it is mentioned as Dicky Dean there. Debbie Dean, like Bruce Gentry, Bronc Saddler and Straight Arrow, was a strip that was discontinued earlier, but somehow the rights were recovered by someone (Jacquet) to be restarted in this Sunday insert with a new artist and writer.

I hope Alan's upcoming article will shed some light on this mysterious project. I also hope he will identify the artist for Bruce Gentry, signing Scap. I for myself ran across a cheapo horror story in Mr. Mystery #15 inked by a man signing with the same name and signature, which I am adding here as well.

My last loose bit of information is the fact that Bruce Gentry also was a succesfull action serial around this tie, which makes it a mit more logical for him to be revived. I still have to check if the original Bruce was a redhead or if the hero of this version looks like the movie hero.