1976 COR!! Comic
Annual cost 95 p. and was 160 pages
thick. It was the last COR!! annual with Gus Gorilla on the front cover. One
more thing that it had in common with early COR!! annuals was that newly
drawn strips still made up quite a large portion of the contents. Speaking of
early COR!! annuals, those of you who have been reading the blog since the very
start may remember that I didn’t cover the annuals of 1973 and 1974 when
writing the respective yearly reviews because I didn’t have copies then. Well, now I
have filled the gaps and included details about the two books. You can read
about 1973 COR!! annual here. Click here for the post with details of 1974
COR!! annual.
Here is a summary of the contents of 1976 COR!! Comic Annual: Willy Worry (4 episodes, one in full colour),
Whacky (in full colour), Tricky Dicky (2 episodes, one in full colour),
Gus Gorilla (4 episodes, two in full colour),
Stowaway Steve (5 episodes, one in
full colour), The Slimms (3 episodes,
one in full colour), Aqua Lad (4 episodes), Jack Pott (3 episodes),
Ivor Lott and Tony Broke (3 episodes),
Jelly Baby (3 episodes), Val’s Vanishing Cream (3 episodes), Give A Dog A Bone (4 episodes), Andy’s Ants (3
episodes), Hire A Horror (3 episodes,
one in full colour), Fiends and
Neighbours (by ghost artist), Teacher’s
Pet (2 episodes, one in full colour),
Tease Break feature (3 instalments),
Jasper the Grasper (2 episodes, one
by Trevor Metcalfe and one by Alf Saporito), Night Mare (4 episodes, one by Tom Paterson), The Gasworks Gang (2 new episodes and one reprint), Big Bad Butch, Soldier Spoon (3 episodes), Tomboy (3 episodes), Super Spook (8 pages), Peril in Pantoland (8 pages), What do You Know feature
(by Alf Saporito), Jest For A Laugh
feature (by Alf Saporito).
One offs: Big Bad Butch – a cowboy comedy
feature set in the Wild West. I am not quite sure but it looks like the work of
Alf Saporito to me:
Peril in Pantoland. The story was about young Dick Whittington and his sister Jill
who went looking for their cat and found themselves in the weird world of
mechanical fairy-tale monsters manufactured by the crazy scientist Demon-King.
The kids encountered Caliph of Baghdad and his rubber servants, Long John
Silver and a shark, Aladdin’s wicked uncle, Mummy and a giant before the police
came to their rescue. I wonder who the illustrator was?
Robert Nixon did an excellent job on all of his sets in the annual
(Hire a Horror and Ivor Lott and Tony Broke). Hire a Horror instalments were paricularly scrumptious:
Frank McDiarmid contributed two new
episodes of The Gasworks Gang. Here is one in its 4-page entirety:
Alf Saporito drew quite a few pages for the
annual: Gus Gorilla (all new sets as far as I can tell), a 4-pager of Jasper
the Grasper and two features – What Do
You Know and Jest For A Laugh. I believe he was also responsible for the Big Bad Butch set. Here is a panel from Jasper the Grasper:
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