1980 SHIVER
AND SHAKE Holiday Special was the last Sh&Sh Holiday special, it cost 45 p.
and had 64 pages.
CONTENTS: Horrornation Street (a
4-pager by Tom Williams), The Chumpions (3 reprints from COR!!, art by Peter Davidson), Lolly Pop (most likely a reprint,
artwork by Sid Burgon), Sweeny Toddler (looks like a reprint, art
by Leo Baxendale), Percy the Peacemaker (2 reprints), Wizard Prang and Demon Druid in
Wiz War (new, a 4-pager, possibly by Martin Baxendale), Sports
School (by Jim Watson in full colour, signed), Shiver (by Terry Bave), Shake
(by Terry Bave), Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub (4 reprints from COR!!, including
one in full colour on the back page, art by Reg Parlett), Frankie Stein (a 6-pager
by Jogn Geering and a 4-pager by Brian Walker), Mirth-Shakes (2 pages of
gags), A Fright Seeing Tour of London full-colour poster by Ken Reid, Blunder
Puss (by Jim Crocker), Ghoul Getters Ltd (by Russel Brooke,
signed), Toby’s Timepiece (a 5-pager), Monstermind puzzles, Ghouldilocks
(by Tom Williams in full colour), The Duke’s Spook (by Tom Williams), The
Desert Fox (by Terry Bave), Grimly Feendish (2 ½ pages by Paul
Ailey and two shorts, possibly reprints), What’s Your Line?
(a strip without speech balloons)‘Orrible Hole (by Jim Crocker).
If you get a feeling that you’ve seen the cover of this Holiday Special on another comic,
that’s because the idea is borrowed from an old SHIVER AND SHAKE weekly. At
least it is not a lazy reprint, besides, Mike Lacey has given it a new seaside
holidays twist. Here is the old comic:
Tom Williams illustrated as many as three different strips in this
edition. He drew Ghouldilocks
...and The Duke’s Spook,
... and that's in addition to his
usual Horrornation Street, in which instead of going to the beach, residents
of Horrornation Street have Hoodoo Voodoo (not Yoodoo…) arrange for the beach and the
sea to come to them:
I think it is the first time that a new episode of Wizard Prang and Demon Druid
was commissioned after long years of reprints. Would I be right in saying that Mike Brown who was the strip's regular illustrator in POW! and SMASH! is the artist? Here is the first page of the set:
There were two episodes of Frankie Stein in this Holiday
Special, each by a different artist. In the set illustrated by John Geering
Prof. Cube enters Frankie in the round-the-world yacht race, hoping that he
will perish in a storm. It looks like seamen haven’t seen anything as monstrous
as Frankie since the days when the Beano’s
Jonah roamed the seas twenty years ago... Frankie sets his own boat on fire
when he tries to fry himself some sausages, then he scares the crew off a posh
yacht and finds himself in the zone of naval war games, sinks an indestructible
destroyer, petrifies a vicious-looking killer whale, navigates it to the finish
and wins the race. Too bad Prof. Cube has to pay all the damages and they both
are sent to jail:
Frankie and Prof. Cube do some extreme driving on their way to the wedding... |
In the second story, the first in a Shiver
and Shake Holiday Special or Annual to be illustrated by Brian Walker,
Prof. Cube gets an idea to get rid of Frankie by having him marry and move away
so he builds a monster bride to suit Frankie’s taste. Prof. Cube runs into a
problem when he realizes that she doesn’t fancy Frankie. He adjusts a few
screws in her head and programs her to fall in love with the first face she
sees. As Prof. Cube’s luck goes, Frankie shows up with a copy of the Evening Post that has a large photo of
Prof. Cube on the front page. We’ll never know how the unfortunate inventor got
out of this scrape…
Ghoul Getters Ltd. are called to take
care of a ghostly knight who has nabbed a donkey and trampled all the sandcastles
on the beach. The two-pager is illustrated and signed by Russel Brooke whose
style I find very appealing. Can anyone tell me where I can find more of his
art? A quick Google search returned nothing but he is very much my kind of
artist…
In Toby’s Timepiece Toby finds himself in the future where he
meets a loony scientist and his robot assistants. The scientist believes that
his robot medical team will make human doctors out of date because each of his mechanical
creations has the knowledge of fifty surgeons built into their circuits. He
tries to prove his genius to the authorities by sending his robots to help the
crew of a crash-landed spacecraft but it turns out that the robots only care
about other robots, not humans. At first the scientist appears to be the usual
obsessed villain but surprisingly he goes straight and admits his mistakes. He
even gives Toby a new pair of roller skates as an apology and a sign of
gratitude for helping him see his erroneous ways.
In the Grimly Feendish episode by Paul Ailey Grimly accidentally finds
out that all policemen are on a cop shop outing at the beach and realizes that
with no cops in town, he has free hands to commit all the crimes he wants. He
uses air balloons in hope to escape abroad with a carful of loot but seagulls
disrupt the plan and he lands in the middle of the cop shop outing… The other
two Grimly Feendish episodes have the format of a newspaper strip and may be
reprints:
To me, the biggest treat is A Fright Seeing Tour of London full
colour poster by Ken Reid featuring some of his very best World-Wide Weirdies
from the famous series in WHOOPEE! By
the time the 1980 SHIVER AND SHAKE special came out, the series had already
ended, so this is the last non-reprint set of World-Wide Weirdies by Ken Reid. In
the Autumn of 2007 the original artwork was offered by Compal Auctions (Indian
ink on cartridge paper. 19 x 12 ins), with the winner paying £611.
This is where I’ll close the last chapter of SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday
Specials. You can go through the whole SHIVER AND SHAKE specials sequence by
clicking HERE or by choosing the SHIVER AND SHAKE Holiday Specials label in the
column on the right.
Shiver and Shake series will continue because there is still a good supply of Annuals
left :)
Wizard Prang and Demon Druid is drawn by Keith Reynolds. Compare his work on the Beano Comic Libraries, especially the side jokes, a speciality of his.
ReplyDeleteI think the Grimly mini-strips are by Stan McMurtry.
I’d always thought Cube’s first name was Cuthbert – hadn’t we all? But according to Whoopee for 23/5/81 it was Oswald Xerxes Oliver – or Oxo for short!
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