Showing posts with label Dud Dudley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dud Dudley. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 04, 2012

Dave Davely

Tuesday Comic Strip Day.

David Gantz was a classmate of Al Jaffee in the forties. For a long time he worked in comics. He even joined up with a guy called Brown to do realistic work, but nothing really stuck. In 1959 Al Jaffee got a newspaper strip Tall Tales)  at the Herald Tribune Syndicate. At that point, Gantz was also trying to sell comic strip ideas. One of them was called Moxy and was a reworking of a Pogo-like strip he had done for Zek Zekeley's Family Comics, a line of 'Sunday' comics done especially as give-aways for a chain of grocery stores in California. When he failed to sell Moxy, he tried again with a more bland subject, the story of a man and his dog. The dog was called Dudley D., which I take it stands for Dudley Dog. Zek Zekeley (who himself had done a newspaper strip called Dud Dudley) must have been an inlfuence on the name. The dog could not talk, but we did see his very human thoughts. Th strip ran from 1961 to 1964 before it fizzled out, like many Herald Tribune strips before it. Maybe the blandness of the strip itself was to blame, but the Herald Tribune Syndicate had a very poor record of selling it's strips and a couple of years later a very similar  strip, drawn in a similar style about a  Basset Hound and his boss, called Fred Basset became a world wide succes which is still running to this day. Fred Basset was created by the Scottish cartoonist Alex Graham in 1963, although I am in no way mplying he might have seen Dudley D. I am just wondering why that strip took off and this one didn't.

I have shown other samples of this strip before, both in color and black and white. The balck and white Sunday from december 196 is from a short period when the color engravers on the Herald Tribune were on strike. All of the other strips mentioned have been shown as well. Except for Fred Basset, which you'll have to find on your own.





















Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Flopley Flop

Tuesday Comic Strip Day.

Emil (Zek) Zekley assisted George McManus almost form the earliest years of Bringing Up Father. Some sources say that towards the end he may have done whole dailies on his own. Still, when McManus died in 1954, Zekley did not get to continue the strip. The syndicate gave that job to veteran Vernon Greene. In 1955 Zekley came with his own comic strip, Dud Dudley. It turned out to be, well... a dud. As we can see from the 1956 newspaper clipping, Mcmanus did provide for Zekley in his will, although he apparently had to sue for it to get paid.