Showing posts with label POPULAR COMICS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label POPULAR COMICS. Show all posts

Monday, February 2, 2026

DR. HORMONE!



Happy Monday and welcome to Weird Comics Week!

It doesn't get much weirder than this, folks. Of course, back in the 1940s, stories like these were considered a little more serious than we look at them now.

Enter Dr. Hormone! Created by a fellow by the name of Robert "Bob" Bugg and drawn by Bugg and Ralph Carlson, Dr. Hormone was introduced in Dell's POPULAR COMICS #54 (August 1940) and the series ran for seven issues until February 1941.

Bob Bugg at his drawing table. [Image source: Lambiek.net].

Bugg began his career as a writer, magazine illustrator and cartoonist, producing work for slicks such as COSMOPOLITAN and COLLIER'S, as well as various sports magazines. His commercial art included jobs for Camel and Winston cigarettes. He also worked on comics strips and spent a stint as Hank "Dennis the Menace" Ketcham's assistant. He found his way into comics and, along with Dell, wrote and drew for Fiction House, Centaur and Western Publishing.

Ralph Carlson took over the art chores from Bugg later in the series. Carlson worked for Ace Magazines, Fawcett, Western Publishing and Charlton.

The story presented today is from POPULAR COMICS #59 (January 1941) and is the next to the last story in the series.

Dr. Homorne's nemesis was a group called the Nazians. This untitled episode starts off normal enough, but suddenly takes a bizarre turn when he finds out the Nazians are being helped out by the Ku Klux Klan. All manner of craziness ensues. Co-authors Roy Thomas and Kurt Mitchell claim the KKK still exerted their influence in high places, which might explain Dr. Hormone's sudden cancellation after issue #60.

We'll no doubt see a remastered collection of Dr. Hormone by Fantagraphics or another publisher at some point. In the meantime, here's a sample of one of the most bizarre super-heroes that ever wielded a test tube.







Saturday, August 29, 2020

BORIS KARLOFF AS MR. WONG


I am positive that certain groups operating today would have the Boris Karloff Mr. Wong series banned from the eyes of humankind. But, during the time of vintage Hollywood (and even later) many "oriental" characters were played by white actors. Warner Oland (Swedish-American) as Charlie Chan immediately comes to mind. Paul Muni (an Austro-Humgarian Jew) and Luise Rainer (a German Jew) in THE GOOD EARTH are two others. Asian actors such as Keye Luke, were generally relegated to subordinate roles.

Mr. Wong was the creation of Hugh Wiley, who wrote his adventures as short stories for COLLIER'S. Many of them were collected in the book, MURDER BY THE DOZEN in 1951. Along the way, Karloff was contracted by Monogram Pictures to star in a series about the Chinese-American sleuth. In the sixth film, Keye Luke was handed the lead roll and it would be the first time in an American sound film that an Asian would play an Asian Detective. Luke signed on for four more Mr. Wong movies, but after Karloff had left, the bloom was off the rose, and Luke's contract was cancelled signalling the end of the Wong series.

Following are two pages from FILM BULLETIN (March 25, 1939) depicting Karloff in THE MYSTERY OF MR. WONG, the second in his five films as the detective.



In 1939, MR. WONG, DETECTIVE and THE MYSTERY OF MR. WONG  were adapted in six parts (one issue was a preview of the second story) in the Dell comic book, POPULAR COMICS. The series ran in issues #40 through #46. It was written by an unknown scripter, but the artist is credited as Jim Gary.

POPULAR COMICS #40





POPULAR COMICS #41





POPULAR COMICS #42





POPULAR COMICS #43


POPULAR COMICS #44





POPULAR COMICS #45







POPULAR COMICS #46