Friday 26 July 2019

GUEST POST BY BARRY PEARL: THE FIRST ORIGINAL COMIC BOOK!

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I promised you a post by the mighty BARRY PEARL, and as a promise made is a debt unpaid, here it is!  Thanks to Barry for all his hard work.

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I know this sounds contradictory, but there are no "firsts" in comics!

Many concepts thought to be original when used by the major publishers, may have first appeared earlier in the more obscure publications, not available on the local newsstands.  Also, comics were published internationally and American historians tend to not to consider them.  Many publishers did not widely distribute the comics. Treasure Chest comics distributed in parochial schools in the U.S. from 1946 to 1972.  March of Comics and Buster Brown comics were distributed free to retail customers.  So someone is often able to find an exception to any "declaration" about "comics".


My favourite story about this is Stan Lee telling an audience at the New York Comic Con in 2003 that he had just produced the first Hispanic super-hero!!!!  He got thunderous applause.  Except he forgot that Marvel did that in 1974 in "Sons of the Tiger" (In Deadly Hands of Kung Fu) and Latin American countries had produced Hispanic super-heroes for decades!


But is it a comic?

Funnies on Parade (1933) is regarded as one of the first publication to feature comics.  In this case they were reprints of comic strips.  Funnies on Parade was not a comic book, but a big newspaper size page folded down to eight pages.  It was used as a promotion for Proctor and Gamble products.  Previously, Dell Publishing in 1929 had produced a 16-page publication entitled the The Funnies which was a tabloid insert.  Neither was available on newsstands.

Famous Funnies (1933) is often called the first comic book.  It was available on the newsstands and  featured reprints of comic strips.  It really was not a comic "book" but a "magazine."  But ever since then we have called "comic magazines" "comic books."  (Or as Stan called them, "comicbooks" - one word.)


Before Famous Funnies, Couples & Leon, beginning in 1903, produced several small books with cardboard covers, featuring reprints of over 100 comic strips including The Katzenjammer Kids, Alphonse and Gaston and Happy Hooligan.  Most famously, they went on to reprint Little Orphan Annie, among other titles.  Technically, I guess, they were really the first comicbooks!

In 1934, Major Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson, owner of National Allied Publications, published New Fun #1 (Feb. 1935).  It is often described as the first comic book containing all-original material - but was it?


Enter: Dan Dunn, Secret Operative 48.

Dick Tracy and the crime genre had become popular in both the pulp magazines and comic strips of the times.  Dan Dunn was, obviously, influenced by Dick Tracy. Dunn made his grand entrance in the story, "The White Cat Murder", a 32 page ORIGINAL story that appeared in the short lived Humor Publications.  Like the Couples and Leon books, this story appeared in a book featuring cardboard covers and newsprint interiors.  In was a true comic BOOK, but not a magazine.  It was only a one-shot appearance but its creator, Norman Marsh, retooled it for a comic strip that began on September 23, 1933.  It was slightly retitled: Dan Dunn, Secret Operative 48.


So you can debate among yourselves exactly what a comic book is and, therefore, what came first. I think Dunn did it.

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Thanks once again to Barry for taking the time and trouble to grace this humble blog with the fruits of his labour.  Don't be shy now, Criv-ites - leave a comment and show him that you appreciate his efforts.

6 comments:

Lionel Hancock said...

Very good article.. I agree totally with him about comic books and comic strips. Katzenjammer and Annie's always appeared in newspaper strips but Dan Dunn as he said was a 32 page comic book.. But is it a comic or is it a short story classed as a comic... Good article though...

Kid said...

It's very generous of Barry to supply me with articles, LH, because he could publish them on his own blog - which he sometimes does, but not until he's let me publish them first. It's good to know that readers appreciate them.

Incidentally, I don't know if you read the message I left you on the relevant post about Smash!, but I dug through my cupboard and discovered that I don't have loose copies of the issues you're looking for. I've got them in my bound Odhams volumes, but I can't open them wide enough to scan without damaging them. Looks like it'll have to be that disc on ebay.

Lionel Hancock said...

Thanks for looking I appreciate it....

Kid said...

Nae bother, LH. I'll have to try and acquire loose copies of those issues one day, so that I can include them on the blog.

Terranova47 said...

The US Sunday Newspapers ran their comic strips in a colour section. During the week the paper would print the strip as b/w.

The size of the colour section page ment that the same press could reprint the 'funnies' as a comic if the pages were positioned four up on a sheet so that when folded the quarter page size became the comic we know. This was a way to reuse existing stories and at the same time keep the colour presses in use.

When the brilliant Will Eisner produced The Spirit it was published as a Sunday Colour Comic Section that the reader would have to fold into quarters and cut apart to form a 8 or 16 page comic.

Kid said...

Also, some newspapers published some syndicated strips without the top tier of panels (when there were three tiers), although, obviously, those particular strips had to be written in such a way that the top tier wouldn't be missed. (Yogi Bear, Flintstones, etc.) This was because some papers devoted less space to comic strips than others, so this had to be allowed for when the strips were being written and drawn.



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