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.



Friday, June 15, 2012

FOOTBALL THEME IN BRITISH HUMOUR COMICS TO CELEBRATE EURO 2012 (DAY 8)


Here are two takes on football in the Medieval times. The episode of Match of the Week by Mike Lacey is from Shiver and Shake with the cover date of 13th October 1973 (No. 32) and General Nitt and his Barmy Army by Leo Baxendale is from Wham! No. 63 (28th August, 1965).




Thursday, June 14, 2012

FOOTBALL THEME IN BRITISH HUMOUR COMICS TO CELEBRATE EURO 2012 (DAY 7)


Sparky issue No. 16 had football theme on both covers to mark the 1965 FA Cup Final which took place on 1st May 1965 at Wembley and was contested between Liverpool and Leeds United. The back cover of that issue had a nice Moonsters episode by Bill Ritchie with lots of characters and action. But of course no one did those crowded sets better than Leo Baxendale. The Eagle Spy Doomsday School episode with Grimly Feendish is from WHAM! issue No. 37 (27th February, 1965). Isn’t it beautiful? 



A LOOK AT COR!! STRIPS: DANGER MOUSE


The next COR!! strip in the row is again in the reprint territory. Danger Mouse was a traditional cat and mouse slapstick action feature with a superhero/secret agent twist. It was reprinted from SMASH! (Odhams series) where it appeared under the same name. Sometimes a half-pager and sometimes a one-pager, it gives an impression of a space-filler and its semi-regular appearances make the impression even stronger: the first episode was in issue with the cover date of 8th May, 1971 (No. 49) and the last in the one dated 8th April, 1972 (No. 97) but the total number of episodes was only 23. Artist unknown.

From COR!! issue dated 29th January, 1972 (No. 87)
From COR!! issue dated 8th April, 1972 (No. 97)

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

FOOTBALL THEME IN BRITISH HUMOUR COMICS TO CELEBRATE EURO 2012 (DAY 6)


Just one football strip today and it is an episode of Scared-Stiff Sam from an early issue of Whoopee! (7th December, 1974). I happen to have both pages of Mike Lacey's original artwork for this set so make sure you scroll down for some close-up scans.







Tuesday, June 12, 2012

FOOTBALL THEME IN BRITISH HUMOUR COMICS TO CELEBRATE EURO 2012 (DAY 5)


Yesterday’s match between England and France in the Ukraine ended in a draw but France didn’t get so lucky when Mudchester United challenged them for the European Cup in this episode of Manager Matt from Scorcher by Ken Reid. Mudchester United also tackled two or three other teams during their 1971 tour of Europe but I’ll save those episodes for later – perhaps the teams will meet in EURO 2012 later in the tournament...

From Scorcher cover dated 19th June, 1971

Here’s another Beano with a football-themed cover that I managed to find:


I just love those scrumptious BUSTER football covers by Nadal and there’s enough of them to last until the end of the month!


A LOOK AT COR!! STRIPS: THE CHUMPIONS


The Chumpions. Two boys and a girl meet a Tibetan Lama and give him a fruit and a nut. He rewards them with great powers: the girl (Dot) can now stretch like a piece of string and access objects that otherwise can’t be reached, the tall lean boy (Lofty) has magnetic powers – handy for removing metal objects (e.g. guns) from other people’s possession, and the fat boy (Tubby) can turn into a rubber ball and become a means of travelling long and short distances or crossing obstacles. They are now the Chupmions whose mission is to help other people in trouble. They take all sorts of missions – from saving an absent-minded Einstein look-alike professor from evil machinegun-wielding crooks to mowing a football pitch when the mower is broken. They would defeat a gang of evil spies speaking with a German accent in one episode and go looking for a little girl’s missing kitten in the next. 

The Chumpions meet the loopy Lama in every single episode (or he sometimes contacts them via telepathic television) and he is always lost looking for his way to Tibet. He is lost in more ways than one: he sometimes wonders if he did right in making them the Chumpions. The monk's favourite treat are yak-butter sandwiches and doesn’t fail to mention this in each episode. 

From COR!! issue dated 20th February, 1971 (No. 38)

Apparently, the strip wasn’t faring well with the readers because it got quite a lot of negative feedback in the Postbag section. Nonetheless, the black and white strip occupied two full pages and enjoyed quite a long run from 9th January to 25th December, 1971 (issue Nos. 32 - 82). 

In the last episode members of a mountain climbing expedition invite the Lama to travel to Tibet as their guide. Before leaving, the Lama takes away the children’s powers because they are fed up with chumpioning and yearn to be ordinary kids again. Illustrated by an artist whom I can’t identify. Any ideas please?

From COR!! issue dated 5th June, 1971 (No. 53)