welcome and enjoy!

Hi and welcome to my blog about comics from other people’s childhood! It is dedicated primarily to British humour comics of the 60s and 70s. The reason they are not from my childhood is simply because I didn’t live in the UK back then (nor do I live there now). I knew next to nothing about them until fairly recently but since then I’ve developed a strong liking for the medium and amassed a large collection, including a number of complete or near complete sets. My intention is to use this blog as a channel for sharing my humble knowledge about different titles, favourite characters and creators as I slowly research my collection.

QUICK TIP: this blog is a sequence of posts covering one particular comic at a time. The sequence follows a certain logic, so for maximum results it is recommended that the blog is read from the oldest post up.

Copyright of all images and quotations used here is with their respective owners. Any such copyrighted material is used exclusively for educational purposes and will be removed at first notice. All other text copyright Irmantas P.



Showing posts with label Tom Paterson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Paterson. Show all posts

Saturday, September 7, 2013

1976 SHIVER & SHAKE ANNUAL



1976 SHIVER AND SHAKE Annual cost 95 p. and was 144 pages thick. Here is the list of strips and features included in the book. Red indicates the strip that wasn’t familiar to readers of Sh&Sh weeklies or earlier annuals and specials.

Spooks and Ladders game; Webster by Terry Bave, (3 episodes, two in full colour), Horrornation Street by Tom Williams (3 episodes, one in full colour); Demon Differences (Spot the difference puzzle featuring the Scream Inn); The Hand (2 episodes by the regular Sh&Sh artist), Grimly Feendish by Tom Paterson (5 episodes); Frankie Stein (a 4-pager by Robert Nixon and one Ken Reid reprint from WHAM!); Ghouldilocks; The Duke’s Spook (4 episodes); Wizard Prang and Demon Druid by Mike Brown (4 reprints from Smash!/Pow!); Scatty Bat (2 reprints from WHIZZER AND CHIPS); The Shiver Givers (two 2-pagers my Mike Lacey); Creepy Car (4 episodes, including two by Frank McDiarmid); Scream Inn (a 4-pager by Brian Walker);  Shake (6 episodes: two in full colour (including a 2-pager) and three in b/w by Mike Lacey, one in b/w by Terry Bave); Moana Lisa (3 episodes, one in full colour and two in b/w by Peter Davidson); The Desert Fox by Terry Bave (4 episodes, two in full colour); Sports School by Jim Watson (4 episodes, two in full colour); Tin Tramp and Tinker (4 episodes, including two in full colour);  Sweeny Toddler by Leo Baxendale (2 episodes); Mirth Shakers gags (2 instalments); Tough Nutt and Softy Centre by Norman Mansbridge; Blunder Puss by Jim Crocker (3 episodes); Lolly Pop by Sid Burgon (2 episodes); The Forest Legion (6 pages in b/w); Astro-Nut (in full colour, by The Forest Legion artist); The Ghost’s Revenge; Ghoul Getters by Bob Nixon (3 pages in full colour); Frankie Stein’s A-Maze-ing Brain maze by Robert Nixon.

The book followed the structure of the weeklies, i.e. SHAKE was inside SHIVER, framed by blocks of colour pages on both ends. Both sections featured their regular strips, just like in the not-so-distant old days when the comic was up and running. When the Annual came out, the weekly had already bit the dust and any survivors migrated to Whoopee! Check out this panel from the Annual in which Shake fights with some dude over a copy of his new favourite comic: 


1976 SHIVER AND SHAKE was the only Sh&Sh annual with Frankie Stein as the cover star. To me, it is one of the most (if not the most) scrumptious IPC annual covers ever. Frankie Stein also features prominently inside the book: Bob Nixon contributed a 4-page set and Frankie Stein’s A-Maze-ing Brain maze; as a bonus, the annual contains a reprint of one old Frankie Stein episode by Ken Reid from WHAM! No. 81 cover-dated 1st January, 1966. As was the custom, the original one-pager was cropped and re-arranged to fill two pages in the Annual and Micky’s presence was removed (this time it was an easy job because he only appeared in a single panel in the original). Check out the old episode from WHAM! and the reprint from the Annual below and see if you can spot more differences:

From WHAM! No. 81, 1st January, 1966

From SHIVER AND SHAKE 1976 Annual


In the new Frankie Stein episode by Robert Nixon, Prof. Cube tried (and failed) to get rid of his dreaded son by shrinking him to a safe size with a ray-gun. Mr. Nixon also illustrated the episode of Ghoul Getters Ltd. in the Annual. By a strange coincidence, plan “S” that Dad and his lad Arnold put into action this time involved the use of a special monster-shrinking ray gun to shrink the giant polar bear down to normal size. The shrinking ray-gun thing is a bit too repetitive, don’t you think?



The book offers a nice collection of familiar strips by the regular artists from Shiver and Shake weeklies as well as earlier Annuals and Holiday Specials. Terry Bave contributed as many as 15 pages of Webster, The Desert Fox and Shake artw0rk; Mike Lacey drew 10 pages of Shake and The Shiver Givers; Tom Williams’ input was 10 pages of Horrornation Street, Jim Watson illustrated 8 pages of Sports School, Jim Crocker, Peter Davidson and Sid Burgon contributed 6 pages of their regular strips each.

The Forest Legion foiled Boss’ and Butch’s cunning plot once again in a 6-pager illustrated by an artist whose style looks a tiny bit like Alf Saporito's to me, but it's hardly him. Here are two last pages of the set:


Astro-Nut was the only strip in this Annual that readers of Sh&Sh weeklies, specials and annuals hadn’t seen before. Readers of this blog pointed out that Astro-Nut was a reprint of Milkiway from the early years of BUSTER (later reprinted as Monty Muddle in SMASH!). BUSTER index says art was by Nadal / Juan Rafart.


The Shiver Givers appeared twice in the Annual. Below is the masthead of the first set (in which Squelch plays a new disc by Freddie Fang and the Werevolves (remember the character from COR!!?) and the stomping staff members crash through the floor plastering Shiver artists working below), and the last panel of the second one (in which Scream Inn’s Cooky rids the offices of mice with 500 year old Gorganzola), both by Mike Lacey:


Another strip that is well-worth mentioning is Creepy Car, particularly the two nice episodes by the excellent Frank McDiarmid. Here is one:


There are as many as five new Grimly Feendish episodes in the Annual, all are lovely new 2-pagers by Tom Paterson. Here is one:


A Shiver and Shake annual wouldn’t be complete without Scream Inn. In this one Scream Inn features in the Demon Differences puzzle (it is in fact the last panel of the set from the final issue of Shiver and Shake weekly - the French Onion Seller episode, with speech balloons removed):

 

…plus a 4-pager in which an unscrupulous bloke gate-crashes the New Year party at Scream Inn and faces the consequences. As always, Brian Walker’s artwork is a treat to the eye:


Saturday, June 29, 2013

TOM PATERSON'S CARTOON WORK IN SHIVER & SHAKE



The previous post on Grimly Feendish contained a number of examples of early work by Tom Paterson. In addition to the weekly strip about Grimly, Tom contributed illustrations to a few reader participation features, namely Cackles from the Cave, Mirth Shakers and Jokes section of Shake’s ‘editorial’ page. Since I am on the subject of Tom Paterson, it is a good excuse to say a few words about the features and show a few more examples of Tom’s early IPC work.

Cackles from the Cave started in the first issue of the paper as a half-pager in which Shiver promoted the reader participation features of his section and where some of readers’ jokes and other contributions were printed with illustrations by the paper’s artists. I am unsure about the name of the artist who was there from the first week (possibly Alf Saporito), and another one who joined in towards the end, but Tom Paterson started doing these illustrations from issue 24 (August 18, 1973), a few weeks before the appearance of his first Grimly Feendish set, and continued drawing them more or less regularly until the end of the paper’s run. This is the first installment of Cackles from the Cave with Tom's drawings:


Time for change came in the beginning of the 1974; in issue 48 (February 2, 1974) the feature was renamed Cackles Corner, but only for one week; starting from issue 49 and right up to the end of the run Cackles shared a page with Creations Runners Up, at first on a fifty-fifty basis, later as the dominant feature (in terms of space). Here are some examples:





The 'editorial’ page of SHAKE had as many as three columns crammed into it and jokes sent in by Shake fans was one of the elements. Some of them were text jokes, others were gag cartoons. Tom Paterson started drawing them in issue 25 (August 25, 1973) and continued pretty much regularly until the end:






Last but not least, Tom Paterson’s cartoons can be found in Mirth Shakers feature that appeared in full colour on the back cover of Shake section during 4 weeks in issues 28 to 31 (September 15 – October 6, 1973) and then in black and white from issue 63 (May 18, 1974) until the very end of the run. Here are some examples: