Sunday, March 13, 2022

Warbears grapic novel gets animated

 A Vancouver studio has Warbears been optioned by a media company for an animated TV series

http://cbc.ca/1.5160558

Margaret Atwood & Ken Steacy

Oursonette, a fictional Nazi-fighting superheroine, is created at the peak of World War II by comic book creator Al Zurakowski who dreams of making it big in the early world of comics publishing.

A story that follows the early days of comics in Toronto, a brutal war that greatly strains Al personally and professionally, and how the rise of post-war American comics puts an end to his dreams. (From Dark Horse)

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

Mr. December


Doug Snyed

His Lambiek entry says 

"Doug Snyed is a freelance cartoonist from Orillia, Ontario. He has been a cartoonist for Playboy magazine since 1964. His cartoons have also appeared in daily newspapers across North America for nearly twenty years.
He also drew a political strip called 'Scoops' (1978-82).
In 1993, he wrote, produced and directed 'Black-eyed Susan', an educational movie-drama about spousal abuse, for the Ontario government. He was a founding member of the Canadian Society of Book Illustrators and has been a member of the National Cartoonists' Society and the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists."

www.dougsneyd.com 



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Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Joke Comics and gag cartoons


I know a man with a wooden leg named Smith
What's the name of his other leg?

These type of gags and routines from Vaudeville, like Mighty Casey at the bat, were featured in Bell's Joke Comics.


John O'Henly had pages of these in the first 3 issues of Joke Comics as well as three other Bell titles.
Besides creating Mike & Spike, which was renamed Spike & Mike when Ross Saakel took over the feature, O'Henly's work before enlisting in the Service will be found in:

Dime Comics v1 #1 Feb. 1942, Dime Comics #3, #4, #6.


Active Comics #1 February 1942, Active Comics #2, 3, 4, 6.

and when Hillborough Studios and Triumph-Adventure Comics folded Adrian Dingle brought the title over to Bell O'Henly work was in:


Triumph Comics #7 #10.


 

Saturday, October 30, 2021

J. O’Henly created Spike&Mike for the comics

John O’Henly grew up in in the east end of Toronto and went to school at Danforth Tech. When he entered the world of Canadian comics it was at the Toronto company Commercial Signs of Canada at 165 York St. (later called Bell Features) in the downtown area. 

 
He created the two hobos, the Knights of the Open Road, and in the first comic they were named Mike and Spike but that soon changed.

John O'Henly enlisted in the service in September 1942 and always kept drawing when he was overseas.

 
 After V.E. day in '45 he settled in Ontario.
 
 "He returned to Canada a few months later, and decided to go back to school, choosing the Ontario College of Art, which led him to a career as a high school art teacher in London, Ontario.  Along the way he married and raised a family, falling into the rhythms of postwar Canadian life like so many of the soldiers returned from the war.  John O’Henly was interviewed by Scott Masters (see Crestwood) via Zoom, during the pandemic of summer 2020."
 
A longer more detailed bio of J. O'Henly is available at:
www.crestwood.on.ca/ohp/ohenly-john/ 
 

 


Friday, October 29, 2021

Doug Wright comic strip


Doug Wright made some great cartoons for years. He was born in England, and immigrated to Canada in his teens in 1938. A  proud Canadian citizen, this was often reflected in the modest, suburban Ontario life depicted in his comic strips Nipper and Doug Wright's Family (begun in 1967).   It's been reported that "His cartooning career really began when he landed a job as editorial cartoonist for the Montreal Standard.  In 1948 he took over the reins of Jimmy Frise’s Birdseye Center, retitled Juniper Junction. Signing the strip “DAW”, he continued with it until its end in September, 1968.  Wright created Nipper, a mostly silent comic strip, for the Standard in 1949."

(11 August 1917, England - 3 January 1983, Canada)

 

Friday, May 21, 2021

Giants of the North award to Fred Kelly

 In 2021 a Giants of the North, one of the Doug Wright awards, has inducted Fred Kelly into their Hall of Fame.

Fred Kelly was the Canadian creator of Doc Stearne who became a super monster hunter called Mr. Monster.


Frederick George "Fred" Kelly (September 8, 1921 in Toronto – September 14, 2005 in Owen Sound) was a comic book writer and artist known for his contributions to the "Canadian Whites" era during the Second World War. He worked on some stories for the Canadian Heroes comic before joining Bell Features.

The origin of Doc Stearne as Mr. Monster in the Canadian comics was rediscovered in Triumph Comics #31 ( and reprinted in the first issue of Micheal T. Gilbert's run for Dark Horse Comics)

Fred's last work in comic books looks to be a story called the Beachcomber in Superior Comics.




Friday, December 18, 2020

Grand Chef Pierre greetings for Christmas

 Brian Frey's Chef Pierre and a Merry Christmas cartoon.

The main characters were Chef Pierre, (who never spoke) the waitress Lola, and the head waiter Basil.


Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Spring as per Lou Skuce

Lou Skuce cartoon on Spring season as Mr. Fan begins his run in the Toronto World newspaper.


An very good look at Lou and his art appear in issue of Taddlecreek magazine.

www.taddlecreekmag.com/canadas-greatest-cartoonist

Lou would go on to work on some of the Canadian whites comics in Toronto's Bell Features comic books.

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Mr. Fan is on his way

Watch for Mr. Fan, he's on his way to the newspapers.


Notorious Boodlers, apparently a political grafter. Hmm, maybe this phrase should be revived?