The 1977
Sh&Sh Holiday Special cost 30 p. It sported a busy cover by Mike Lacey and
was 64 pages thick. Here’s what was inside: Shiver by Terry Bave, Horrornation
Street by Tom Williams, The Hand by Les Barton, Mirth
Shakers gags (two 2-pagers, some gags signed by Crocker), The
Ghost’s Revenge, Grimly Feendish (2 sets, a two-pager
signed by Paul Ailey and one reprint from Smash!),
Desert
Fox (by someone else rather than Terry Bave), The Shake
Squad (2 sets, reprints of The Lion Lot by Leo Baxendale from Lion comic), Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub
(reprints from COR!! comic, two in full colour and two in b/w, all by Reg Parlet), Wizard
Prang and Demon Druid (2 reprints from Smash!/Pow! by Mike Brown); Memory Game puzzle by
Terry Bave featuring different Shiver
and Shake characters, The Duke’s Spook, Sports
School by Jim Watson, Scatty Bat (2 reprints from Whizzer and Chips), Lolly
Pop by Sid Burgon, Beach Baffler spot-the-difference
puzzle by Tom Williams featuring Horrornation Street characters and
more, Webster by Terry Bave; Sweeny Toddler centresperead in full
colour by Tom Paterson, Spot the Difference puzzle, Toby’s
Timepiece (adventure tale, 5 pages), Moana Lisa, Ghouldilocks, Frankie Stein in “Air Crafty”
(4-pager), Fixer, Mirth-Shaking Inventions, Tough
Nutt and Softy Centre (a three-pager by Norman Mansbridge), Shake
by Terry Bave.
There was a
number of small surprises in the magazine. Paul Ailey illustrated and signed
one episode of Grimly Feendish and did quite a good job drawing it, IMHO:
As many as
three strips – Moana Lisa, Ghouldilocks and Fixer
(six pages all together) were drawn by a new artist whose style I haven’t seen
in Shiver and Shake before. Was
it Barrie Appleby?
|
Moana Lisa |
|
Ghouldilocks |
|
Fixer |
The 4-page
set of Frankie Stein (in which Professor Cube tried to sneak off for
his holiday while Frankie played with model planes) is by an artist whose name
I don’t know:
This
Holiday Special includes the second story of Toby’s Timepiece – the
adventure tale about a boy who owned an amazing watch which held the secret of
time travel. The crazy story of how he came to possess the timepiece had
appeared half-a-year ago in 1977 Shiver
and Shake annual and I covered it in detail in my previous post HERE. In
this one Toby’s class go on a treasure hunt arranged by their teacher but Toby
suddenly finds himself in the past and runs into some serious pirates and a
real treasure. The trouble with the timepiece is that Toby appears to have no
clue how it works – this time its magical powers are activated by an accidental
jolt against a rock. One gets an impression that once the magical powers are at work, they can transport Toby anywhere they want in time and
space, the clueless boy has no control over them whatsoever. On the other hand,
he can easily return to the place and time where he left from. Anything can
happen in the bizarrely illogical world of poorly-written children’s mystery
adventure comics…
Both
instalments of The Shake Squad were reprints from Lion where the single-panel full-pagers were drawn by Leo
Baxendale. I haven’t seen originals in Lion
but I doubt if they were in colour. They do look very nice in this Holiday
Special. I showed one last year in my London Olympics series HERE, and here is
the other one:
I will
finish this post about 1977 Shiver and
Shake Holiday Special with the Memory Game puzzle. Terry Bave drew
this large panel with lots of different Shiver
and Shake characters. See how many you can recognise:
As an
off-topic post scriptum, I will mention that the recently closed Compal
auctions offered one Shiver and Shake-related
item - the original of the cover illustration for the issue dated 14th
September, 1974 (No. 76). Indian ink on
cartridge paper. 17 x 16 ins. ONCE AGAIN, it was incorrectly described as
something that Bob Nixon drew for WHOOPEE! in the early 80s. The buyer paid £72 and I happen to be the
unhappy underbidder… Here is the artwork and its printed version:
Yes, Barrie Appleby did draw those three strips. No idea re Frankie!
ReplyDeleteSorry you lost out to that Frankie Stein gem..
ReplyDelete