My previous post ended with a page-count of strips
illustrated by Tom Williams and Barrie Appleby whom the editor kept really busy
when preparing this 1979 MONSTER FUN Annual. Barrie Appleby was the unchallenged
champion because out of the 19 pages by the runner up Tom Williams, two were most probably
reprints (Ghost Town from WHIZZER AND CHIPS), and three formed part of
2-page spot-the-difference puzzles. Here is one pair, if you feel like playing
the game (click on the image to enlarge):
Mr. Williams also drew both episodes of X-Ray Specs. In the first Ray is in the mood of playing dirty tricks on other
kids and his X-ray specs come very handy until Mummy of the Mummy’s Boy strip puts an end to his antics. It is a nice example of characters
from different strips crossing-over:
In the second episode Ray takes a boring job at the
packing department of a big store during the Christmas rush. He amuses himself
by using his X-ray specs to see what’s inside the parcels and exposes a fraudster who steals gifts from the boxes.
It is good to see the return of Creature Teacher after a
break in the previous MF Annual. In this
story Class3X give Teach some nasty Christmas presents. He gets his own back on
them by treating Class3X to cardboard sandwiches, plaster cakes and wax fruits
from the drama cupboard before inviting them for a real Christmas meal in the
dining room:
… an episode of Major Jump in which Major Jump and
Cosmo scheme to catch the Wild Jorkonorkus. What they don’t realise is that the
mission hardly calls for human cunning because the monster is all in for mince
pies, jellies and telly that they offer at the monster menagerie but his
eagerness to fall into the various traps set by Major Jump and his assistant
backfire on the pair. The 4-page story is a sequence of four short episodes,
the last one ending with the willing captive getting happily captured. Here is
one:
Barrie Appleby was also the man behind the episode of Terror TV which proudly presented everybody’s favourite talent-show Horror-Tunity Shocks starring Hughie Goran.
In the first part of the show the first two sponsors
introduce the Wobbles and the Baskervilles, and here is Part Two:
Last
but not least of Mr. Appleby’s contributions in this 1979 MONSTER FUN Annual is
this 6-page story of Tom Thumbscrew (or rather two 3-page
stories presented in a sequence):
All Images 2014 © Egmont UK
Ltd. All rights reserved. Used with
permission.
Barry Appleby must've been standing a few rounds in his local around about this time, what with all the work he had here. I've heard that artists usually tried to avoid the Annuals because the page rate was lower (although so was the panel count), but I've never been able to ascertain if it was true or not. Obviously, if things were a bit slow elsewhere, Annuals at least provided a bit of work. Do you know what Barry's usual output in the weekly comics was at this time, Irmantas?
ReplyDeleteI don't, Kid.
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