The first inside pages of SHAKE section were reserved for Lolly Pop, a strip named after one of the two main characters – billionaire owner of countless factories and businesses of all kinds, forever anxious to make more ‘brass’. Pop was the perfect miser and penny-pincher as far as other people were concerned and he’d never spare a penny for the modest needs of his lad Archie. Judging by his own words, Pop had lived a rough childhood of deprivation and was reluctant to share his wealth with anyone, not even his son.
Weekly
episodes usually followed the same basic pattern: Archie would ask Lolly Pop to
buy him something he desperately needed (like a pair of new shoes so that he
could go to a friend’s party because his old pair leaked) but skinflint Pop
would refuse, telling him that he’d never had the luxury when he was a lad.
Archie would then try to do without the goods or secretly help himself to tiny
bits of Pop’s wealth but would inevitably find himself in situations that resulted
in disproportionate damages to Pop. The damages could have been easily avoided,
had the meanie forked out at the very start. In the end Pop usually bought Archie
a lot more than he had initially asked for, in hope to avoid trouble in the future. |
Lolly Pop belonged to the category of class warfare strips that were so common in IPC comics of the 70s. The feature occupied the first two inside pages of SHAKE section (except in issues 53-56 when the regular order was upset by Frankie Stein Mini pull-out booklet and Lolly Pop suddenly found itself in SHIVER section towards the end of the paper), so presumably the editors had high expectations for the strip. They proved to be correct: Lolly Pop continued throughout the run of SHIVER AND SHAKE and migrated to the combined WHOOPEE! AND SHIVER & SHAKE where it appeared regularly until 1985 when WHOOPEE was absorbed by WHIZZER AND CHIPS which then became its third home, although I don’t know for how long.
I will sign off with a couple of oddities from the SHIVER AND SHAKE run
of Lolly
Pop. The lovely set from issue 71 is unusual because Archie proves to
have inherited some of Pop’s entrepreneurial skills:
The title banner was drawn by Reg Parlett - so he didn't draw any of the actual strips?
ReplyDeleteDick Millington took over from Sid in 1983 when Wow joined up with Whoopee. The theme changed, as Mr Braithwaite, whose name I had never seen in the strip had given up being a businessman and just hoarded his money - he obviously decided to cut his losses!
I'm afraid I am not really good at distinguishing Reg Parlett's style from that of his imitators in the 70s but to my eye both the logo and the strips look as if they aren't by Reg...
DeleteReg did draw some Lolly Pop he drew the first one for example...its in the comic art of Reg parlett book with the first pages as an example..maybe you could put it up..
ReplyDeleteI seem to be suffering from Reg Parlet's artwork blindness - I just can't tell him from his imitators during that period... I will check that book tomorrow.
DeleteThe Art of Reg Parlett indeed confirms that the first episode was by Reg. The index of his work in the Winter 1979 issue of Golden Fun also says he drew Lolly Pop in 1973, so perhaps it wasn't Arthur Martin but Reg all along, including the episode that I have shown on the blogpost?..
ReplyDeleteYes the first one is by Reg...change the label of Arthur Martin to Reg Parlett on this post..
ReplyDeleteWhat about the later episodes? The one I have shown, for example? Is it Parlett's or Martin's work?
DeleteI mean't to write the first picture shown on your blog is by Reg Parlett..
ReplyDelete