Showing posts with label Eddie Campbell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eddie Campbell. Show all posts

Sunday, April 29, 2018

Eddie Campbell’s The Goat Getters

     
“Goat getting” long has been a favorite stunt of many great ring-men. But I’ve never practiced the art. I’ve never tried by one ruse or another, by trickery or subterfuge, to take the nerve or the confidence out of my opponent. I felt it wasn’t necessary … This “goat getting” is supposed to get a man so excited and so frothy that he loses control of his poise and his calmness, and in his own furious anger swings wildly, and is always off balance because of frantic eagerness to deliver a killing punch. Gene Tunney, heavyweight boxing champion,  March 10, 1927
     
by John Adcock

MAJOR THESIS. Comic artist Eddie Campbell’s latest book — elaborately titled inside as, THE GOAT GETTERS: A new angle on the beginnings of comics casting a bright spotlight on THE FIGHT OF THE CENTURY. And Reserving a Few Mellow Sidelights for The San Francisco Graft Trials, Harry Thaw’s Murderous Crime Of Passion, The Story of the Lemon. ARTISTS: JIMMY SWINNERTON!! TAD DORGAN!! ROBERT EDGREN!! BUD FISHER!! RUBE GOLDBERG!! GEORGE HERRIMAN!! written and designed by Eddie Campbell — is not yet available but already causing some conversation over its major thesis; that the early sporting cartoon, as practiced by men like Tad Dorgan, George Herriman and Rube Goldberg, is the “missing link” in histories detailing the origin of the daily black & white newspaper comic strip.

BIRTHPLACE SAN FRANCISCO. The Amazon blurb (where the reader can sample a chapter or two) in similar fashion presents the book as “a new take on the origin of the comic strip,” while Eddie Campbell claims that the sporting page was the venue for the invention of the daily comic strip, and that San Francisco was its birthplace. Is it a coincidence that the best of these cartoonists, Tad Dorgan, George Herriman, Rube Goldberg, and Milt Gross (once Tad’s office-boy) carried their slang-heavy verbal and artistic slapstick into the most successful of the daily newspaper comic strips? I think not — and each and all of them drew their verbal inspiration from Tad Dorgan.

SPORTING LANGUAGE. Critics like myself do not have to agree with Campbell’s conclusions to enjoy this splendid book, a sprawling epic which aims and succeeds in providing “a reconstruction of the whole picture,” with a focus on boxing, counting the days when the sporting pages — modeled on the British sporting newspapers like Pierce Egan’s Life in London and Sporting Guide (1824) and Bell’s Life in London (1827) — gave several sporting cartoonists ample column space to experiment with vivid language and pictures. The language was the language of the sporting underworld; rich in slang, celebrating the gambler, the pug, the bum, the gangster, and the rube. This was during a period when boxing was illegal in most states and fights were staged on barges, in farmer’s fields, and in sweltering boomtowns in the desert. Ears were torn, eyes were gouged, and tons of blood were spilled. Most of the sporting cartoonists of this era (approximately 1894-1913) not only celebrated this preoccupation with the lag’s life — they lived it. To them it was the most significant and fondly remembered time of their lives.

FIRST TIME. The Goat Getters is the first time an author has attempted to chronicle the entire early days of the sporting cartoon and my hat is off to Eddie Campbell for his superb work in hunting down, cleaning up, and collecting together over 500 illustrations from those far off golden days. Campbell is a marvelous writer too. He brings the natural insight of a cartoonist and a humorist to his observations. Among the many artists covered are Homer Davenport, Jimmy Swinnerton, Tad Dorgan, Robert Edgren, Bud Fisher, Harry Warren, Rube Goldberg, George Herriman, Kate Carew, Fay King, Clare Briggs, Harry Hershfield, A.D. Condo, Nell Brinkley, Dan Leno, Hype Igoe, Robert Ripley, Sid Smith, Pete Llanuza, and a large number of other comickers both famed and forgotten. And oh yes, there are goats, plenty of goats — fifty on the last 4 pages alone.




Front cover title: 
THE GOAT GETTERS. Jack Johnson, the FIGHT of the CENTURY, and How a Bunch of Raucous Cartoonists Reinvented Comics, by Eddie Campbell, IDW Publishing/Ohio State University Press (The Library of American Comics), Hardcover, 320 pp., ISBN 978-1684051380 — available May 1, 2018

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Charlie Peace – His Amazing Life and Astounding Legend


IT IS A CURIOUS FACT that, though crime is not unusually rife with us, we have been more inclined than other nations to make pets of interesting criminals. ‘Popular Heroes’ in Chambers’s Journal, October 24, 1863
     
 CRIME  English connoisseurs of crime may be proud of having had among them so great an artist as Charles Peace, the eccentric rubber-faced burglar, inventor, and cop-killer. Once Peace had been launched into eternity by the hangman Marwood the pockets of the penny-a-liners were emptied. From that point on the journalistic fraternity referred to him as the “late lamented” Charlie Peace. “In the hagiology of house-breaking,” wrote Judge Parry in Drama and the Law, “the sainted figure of Charles Peace stands in solitary grandeur — clear and illumined in the golden pinnacles of crime … that he was a really great man I cannot doubt.”
 DRAMA  Nottingham dramatist MICHAEL EATON tells how following the sensational trial and death of Charles Peace his life became the stuff of legend and myth. The myth was formed by broadsheets, children’s songs, songs set to popular tunes and hymns, penny literature, waxworks, articles in illustrated police newspapers, melodramatic stage thrillers, silent films, and British comics. Eaton — known for his stage plays and BBC radio dramas — writes in an engaging personal style from a humorous perspective.
 POLICE NEWS  The book begins with a brief outline of the criminal career of Charles Peace followed by several excerpts and sensational front-page illustrations drawn from the complete reportage in George Purkess Jr’s Illustrated Police News (subtitle: ‘Law Courts and Weekly Record’). Also included is the complete text of “THE WORST NEWSPAPER IN ENGLAND,” an Interview with the Proprietor of the “POLICE NEWS,” which was published in the Pall Mall Gazette on 23 Nov 1886. Also reproduced is an interview with the hangman.
 PENNY PAPERS  On March 1, 1879 Purkess issued Charles Peace; or, the Adventures of a Notorious Burglar by a Popular Author which ended early in 1881 after 100 penny weekly numbers. Eaton’s section on this periodical, “The Legend is Formed,” has commentary, excerpts and numerous illustrations. The most fascinating section of the book is “Stage-Struck Charlie” where Eaton has dug up texts to numerous obscure blood and thunder melodramas based on the life and crimes of Peace. Again, he provides ample excerpts from the plays.
 MOVIES  Next is a large section on Charles Peace in the movies, illustrated with a few dozen stills. Although the book is rather small-sized the copious illustrations are sharp and clear, all taken from the original sources. The reproductions from the daffy Valiant comic The Astounding Adventures of Charlie Peace are in clear resolution with easily readable text.
 COVERED…  The cover is by graphic artist EDDIE CAMPBELL (‘From Hell’); and part of an illustration that originally advertised Michael Eaton’s 2013 melodrama with a similar title (see HERE). This book on Charlie Peace has to be one of the year’s highlights in the true-crime genre – graphic, obsessive, funny and essential. Published on 23 June 2017 it is available worldwide on Amazon, and from the book’s publisher Five Leaves Publications HERE.


Charlie Peace – His Amazing Life and Astounding Legend, A kaleidoscope of true and not-so-true crime, paperback: 300 pages, size 15.8 x 1.8 x 23.4 cm, ISBN-10: 1910170305, ISBN-13: 978-1910170304, 




Sunday, March 10, 2013

Charlie Peace at the Nottingham Playhouse

    
Opening Night early October 2013!
If you happen to be in Nottingham in October keep your eyes open for the melodrama Charlie Peace – His Amazing Life and Astounding Legend (HERE). Michael Eaton is the dramatist, celebrated graphic artist Eddie Campbell (‘From Hell’) worked on the set designs by Barney George, and the director is Giles Croft. If this property ever gets optioned as a film might I suggest hiring Daniel Day-Lewis for the title role?