Showing posts with label newspaper strips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label newspaper strips. Show all posts

Monday, January 18, 2016

Donald Duck: The Complete Daily Newspaper Comics volume 2

Donald Duck: The Complete Daily Newspaper Comics volume 2

I got the second volume of IDW’s Donald daily strip collection a few weeks ago. This book collects all daily strips from July 22, 1940 to January 2, 1943 plus the second part of David Gerstein’s essay about Al Taliaferro. I was a bit disappointed with the bonus material in the first volume, so I didn’t expect to see much of that in this book. But we got some rare publicity drawings and all Taliaferro illustrations from a 1948 children’s book. And I found the second part of the essay a lot more interesting than the first part, so no complains about the bonus material this time! If I have to nitpick something, it’s that the second part talks about several things we saw in the first volume (the license plate, Gus Goose, Bolivar…) so I think it would be better to say something about that in the first part. But it’s not a big deal.

The first volume had really good quality reprints of the strips, and from the credits it sounded like they had tracked down various sources to get the best possible quality. This volume also started with clean and good reprints, but a good deal of the 1942 strips seems to be from a less good source. Here are a few examples comparing the IDW collection (left) to the Norwegian strip collection (right).


From the August 4, 1942 strip

From the August 14, 1942 strip

Book 5 of the Norwegian collection


It might have been difficult to obtain better source material, but I hope they at least tried and not just went with the first complete run they could find. For a collection like this I’d rather wait a few extra months if it means getting better source material, or if restoration work needs to be done. There’s no need to rush these books out on the market.

I have to admit I didn’t read the second volume as thoroughly as the first one. I just went quick through it, so I don’t have that much to say about the strips (maybe there’s not that much to say either). But here are a few notes about some of the strips in volume two.

Hidden names


From the September 24, 1940 strip

The names of a lot of people from the comic department are hidden in the September 24, 1940 strip. Here’s a list of them all (I think)


Daisy Duck
 

First comic appearance of Daisy Duck
First comic appearance of Daisy Duck

The first comic appearance of Daisy Duck is in the November 4, 1940 strip. But we don’t see her name until a few days later (November 7) and her full name the next week (November 13). After that she becomes a regular character in the daily strips.



First time we see the name Daisy in the comics


First time we see the full name Daisy Duck in the comics

National Park poster


The May 19, 1941 strip

The May 19, 1941 strip was later used as a poster (probably) in National Parks. The images under is from an eBay auction, so I don’t know more about it than what you can see on the images. But the sign is changed from "Sequpia Park" (a national park in California) to "National Park", and at the bottom we have the text "U.S. Government Printing Office 1944". If anyone has more knowledge about this poster, please comment below!



National Park poster (image found on eBay)


Details from the poster (image found on eBay)

Wartime

There are a lot of wartime themed gags in this book, not that suprising as the strips are made during World War II. We also get notes with a plea for help inserted into the comic strips, as seen in the examples below.


The same logo/stamp is printed in a lot of 1942 strips. The first one say "You Help Someone You Know, When You Give to USO" and is for the United Service Organizations. The other one has the text "For Victory, Buy United States War Bounds and Stamps"

Monday, September 28, 2015

Mickey's birthday in the daily newspaper strips



Today is Mickey’s birthday, isn’t it? Well, now days the birthday is considered to be November 18, 1928, the day of the "Steamboat Willie" premiere. But according to the daily newspaper strips in 1935, September 28 is the big day!

The event starts with an ad in the newspapers a few days before:

Mickey Mouse lucky seneth birthda party, September 28th 1935

The ad is accompanied with a short article, telling us there will be a birthday party in the comic strip September 28th. And then the article goes on with a lot of bragging, so this is probably written by Disney’s publicity department. The scans below are from Sarasota Herald, September 26, 1935.

Mickey Mouse to Celebrate Seventh Birthday Saturday, Sarasota Herald
From Sarasota Herald, September 26, 1935

Mickey Mouse to Celebrate Seventh Birthday Saturday, Sarasota Herald
From Sarasota Herald, September 26, 1935

The birthday party is made as an epilog of the Gottfredson story "Race for Riches" (found in the Floyd Gottfredson Library vol.3). The story pretty much ends September 26., and the next strip takes place sometime later when Mickey & Co. is back home again. We can see Mickey hinting about his party at the end of the September 27 strip.

Mickey Mouse daily strip, September 27, 1935 - drawn by Floyd Gottfredson
Mickey Mouse daily strip, September 27, 1935 - drawn by Floyd Gottfredson

And then on September 28, we finally get the big party.

Mickey Mouse daily strip, September 28, 1935 - drawn by Floyd Gottfredson
Mickey Mouse daily strip, September 28, 1935 - drawn by Floyd Gottfredson

I’ve tried to do a little research into why they used this date. Is it a story behind, or did they just randomly choose one. Maybe it’s simply because "Race for Riches" ended at this point, and a comic strip celebration could be done in-between the next daily strip serial.

I got some clues in "A Mickey Mouse Reader", which I bought earlier this year. It’s a great collection of essays about Mickey Mouse, and highly recommended!

"A Mickey Mouse Reader" (2014), edited by Garry Apgar
"A Mickey Mouse Reader" (2014), edited by Garry Apgar

On pg.4 we can read "Animation on Steamboat Willie was completed by late August 1928. The soundtrack was recorded on September 30th. Which is why, throughout the 1930s, the studio fĂȘted Mickey’s birthday on or about October 1st. In the 1970s, The Walt Disney Company began celebrating the event on November 18th, since it was on that date in 1928 that Willie premiered […]"

On pg.128 in the same book, there’s a transcript from an article by Cholly Wood titled "Mickey Mouse is 7 Years Old Today". It was originally printed in Bridgeport Sunday Herald, September 29, 1935. I.e. the day after the birthday comic strip. 


About Mickey Mouse, the article say "The earth-spanning sprite was born—a few bold, humorous strokes on a sheet of clean paper—out of the imagination of Walt Disney, on Sept. 28, 1929"

I don’t know if 1929 is a typo in the transcript or in the original article, but it should probably be 1928. Or Mickey would be 6 years and not 7 as the title says. But still, we know that this is not true. Work on Plane Crazy (with Mickey) was done in the early 1928, and according to various Walt Disney biographies, he got the idea for Mickey during a train ride in 1927. And who actually did the character design for Mickey Mouse has been the subject for debate, some sources suggest it was mostly Ub Iwerks. But I’m not going to go more into that here. It would be interesting to know what source Cholly Wood had for the date "September 28" though. But I suspect it's just from a 1935 press release similar to the piece that was printed in Sarasota Herald.

Also, while doing some searching in online newspaper archives I found this article in The Ledger, September 10, 1978. Up to this date Nevada Library had been celebrating the birthday on September 19th.

From "The Ledger", Sep. 10, 1978
From "The Ledger", September 10, 1978

If anyone know more about this, or can point me to sources for information about the celebration of Mickey’s birthday, please make a comment!

Update October 4, 2015

Mickey's 7th birthday was not only celebrated in the USA and in the newspaper strip. The British magazine Person's Weekly had a two page article about Mickey's birtdhay in the October 5, 1935 issue.


Person's Weekly No.2358, October 5, 1935
Person's Weekly No.2358, October 5, 1935
Person's Weekly No.2358, October 5, 1935

The most interesting part is the introduction:

The most famous mouse in the world celebrates his seventh birthday on September 28. In this country it is being held on October 1st. Mickey programmes will be shown in many cinemas; several firms selling Mickey Mouse products are conducting campaigns; and the B.B.C. is broadcasting a Mickey programme.

So it sounds like a big celebration was held in the U.K. October 1st, 1935. I wonder if a surviving recording of the BBC program exists, that would be fun to hear!



(click to enlarge)

(click to enlarge)