Scared-Stiff Sam is
one of my favourite WHOOPEE! strips. I vividly remember the impression Mike
Lacey’s artwork made on my 10-year old self when my English pen pal sent me a
copy of an early issue of the comic all those years ago.
|
Announcement in
WHOOPEE! issue No. 3 |
Scared-Stiff Sam
debuted in the fourth issue of the comic cover-dated 30th March 1974
and was given two full pages from the very start:
The premise was simple and effective – Sam was a big and muscular grown-up lad who was scared-stiff
of… everything. The clumsy great goon who was over six feet tall and weighed
about 25 stones lived at No. 19 on an unknown street in a generic English town,
sharing the house with his loving Mum Hilda who was never seen without perm
rods in her hair which she covered with a polka-dotted headscarf when going
out. Sam’s Dad featured in one of the early episodes, albeit only in Mum’s
recollections of Sam’s childhood. In the
“present” of the strip she was a single mother, and there was no evidence of a
man other than Sammikins in the house.
Sam’s phobias extended
way beyond spiders, creepy-crawlies, mice, bullies, darkness, heights and other
“common” aversions. Innocent triggers often
set off Sam’s imagination and led to him conceiving disastrous situations that
might ensue:
His fantasies tipped him into panic and provoked an uncontrollable
urge to hide and do mad things to avoid imaginary dangers. The jelly-kneed
jollop was scared-stiff of making decisions, becoming famous, getting rich, going
on holiday, talking too much, having his photo taken, taking a short-cut
through the park, his own strength, TV programmes, Mum’s birthday, some soppy
girl who might try to kiss him underneath the mistletoe, even fridge light...
Given the long run of the strip, the list goes on and on. It must have been
challenging for the script writer to come up with a new idea every week...
Mum sometimes got
tired of her useless son and tried to toughen him up by making Sam get a job or
do grown-up things, or even seeking the assistance of a hypnotist. Needless to
say, nothing worked and Sam only felt at ease in the safety of their house,
eating jelly beans and reading his WHOOPEE! (as long as Mum removed the “scary”
Shiver section). Here’s what Sam’s
bedroom looked like:
…and that’s his
private bathroom:
Sam had a range of
special gadgets to protect him against dangers:
Check out his special
wardrobe:
…and his shoe shelves:
Occasionally Sam was
seen wearing crazy protective costumes of his own design that became a
recurring fun ingredient of the strip. It started in the very first episode
where Sam was seen dressed like this:
Check out a few more
of those amusing outfits:
The one below is a bit
difficult to decipher, but it is from an episode in which a store manager gave Sam
the job of Santa in the toy department after the big pudden squashed the real
one:
This bright pull-out
poster in WHOOPEE! Christmas issue of 1975 is probably the most memorable
example of Sam’s outfit buffoonery:
In the issue
cover-dated 23rd November 1974 Sam is scarred-stiff of burglars, so
Mum comes up with an idea of getting a big fearless guard dog. The owners of
the kennels fool them into taking old Fury – a dog that is just as scared as
Sam:
Fury became Sam’s
companion in his weekly fear-filled antics and appeared in more than 20
episodes. At one point Mum even had an idea to move to a bigger place because their
house was too small for her and the two scared-stiff hippos… Here’s a sample
episode featuring Fury:
A weekly episode
usually told a complete story, but there were three adventures that spanned several weeks. All were devoted to summer holidays – a nightmare
time of the year for Sam’s Mum because in addition to being scared to leave home, Sam was
also frightened of every possible means of transport.
The first summer
holiday story can be found in WHOOPEE! issues from 13th July till 3rd
August 1974. It is an account of their holiday at Shrimpton-on-Sea:
After previous year’s miserable
experience, in the second summer holiday story (8 episodes in WHOOPEE! issues
from 21st June till 9th August, 1975) Mum decides to travel
alone and leave Sam on his own. She has a change of heart in the last moment:
In the next 4
episodes they explore different holiday ideas: Mum comes up with a new one
every week (rambling holiday, camping, going to the countryside to stay on a
farm, a week’s fruit-picking adventure), while Sam keeps putting forward childish
arguments why they are all a bad idea:
In the end, they
settle on a holiday camp, but Sam spoils it again, and Mum improvises a seaside
holiday for herself in the back yard:
The third and final
holiday saga can be found in the issues cover-dated from 28th August till
25th September, 1976. This time Mum comes up with a clever plan and tricks
Sam into going to Spain:
Here’s one of the
episodes from the Spanish holiday series:
In the end Sam declares
he will stay there forever:
…Faced with the
inevitability of international travel, he refuses to go by ship or plane and chooses
his usual preferred mode of travel:
Young readers loved
the concept of a grown-up man whose absurd fears were so much bigger than their
own. Sam received his fair share of fan mail, some of it was printed in the
LETTERS page of the paper:
The successful formula
guaranteed the feature a long run of 331 episodes in WHOOPEE! weeklies from 30th March 1974 till 25th October 1980. Sam only missed two issues - 8th
July, 1978 and 9th February, 1980. He surely was one of the big WHOOPEE!
stars. Sam made guest appearances in other strips: Frankie Stein (WHOOPEE!
cover dated 5th April, 1975):
... Scream Inn (WHOOPEE! cover-dated 2nd August 1975):
... and Fun Fear (WHOOPEE! cover-dated 12th February, 1977):
He appeared in advertisements where he was frightened of WHOOPEE!
being sold out and advised readers to reserve their weekly copies with their
newsagent. The nervous Ninny made a couple of X-mas issue front-cover appearances, was seen in
the crowd of WHOOPEE! characters greeting newcomers from sister comics in the announcements
of “Funtastic News” about WHOOPEE! joining forces with SHIVER AND SHAKE in 1974
and CHEEKY WEEKLY in 1980, got his own 8-page mini pull-out book in WHOOPEE!
cover-dated 11th November 1978:
and another full-size colour poster
in the issue of 10th November, 1979:
He featured in pull-out calendars and other fun
cut-outs, such as this Christmas card offered in WHOOPEE! cover-dated 25th November, 1978:
... and the cut-out Xmas label in the issue cover-dated 15th
December, 1979:
In WHOOPEE! cover-dated 26th February, 1977 Sam
was invited to the WHOOPEE! awards ceremony and received the prize for being
the Worlds Biggest … and Funniest Cowardy
Custard! Check out the awards
episode below and see how many WHOOPEE! stars you can spot :):
The final weekly episode
appeared in WHOOPEE! cover-dated 25th October,
1980; this is how Sam bid farewell to the readers in the last panel:
Initially Scared-Stiff
Sam occupied two pages and continued in this format for nearly four years. Starting
from 12th August, 1978 the strip was cut down to one page. The issue
cover-dated 7th October, 1978 was the first one in which it was
printed in full colour; the arrangement didn’t become permanent, but coloured
episodes continued to appear now and then and totaled to 32. Here’s the first
one:
Starting from 9th
February, 1980 (the first combined issue of WHOOPEE! and CHEEKY WEEKLY) Scared-Stiff Sam
got the black, white and red slot, which he retained until the end of its run. Check
out the first three-colour episode below:
During its run Scared
Stiff Sam never reverted to reprints and all 331 episodes were new. The
illustrator was the brilliant Mike Lacey whose style developed quite notably during
the 7 years that he drew Sam. Like many IPC artists of the early- and mid-70s,
Mike Lacey developed a simplified and less detailed style as years went by,
which I find less appealing compared to his sumptuous early sets. Les
Barton drew 4 early episodes (in the issues cover dated from 20th July till
10th August, 1974); the episode in the 29th January, 1977
issue of WHOOPEE! may have been drawn by,
or with the assistance of, Frank McDiarmid. Below are sample panels from the
episodes drawn by artists other than Mike Lacey.
|
Art by Les Barton |
|
Art possibly by Frank McDiarmid |
In my next post I will
take a look at Sam’s appearances in WHOOPEE! Holiday Specials and Annuals.
Characters
are © Rebellion Publishing Ltd
Click on the POWER PACK banner
in the right-hand column and get your copy of the POWER PACK OF KEN REID
- the deluxe two-volume set of Ken’s strips in WHAM!, SMASH! and POW! comics of
the ‘60s.
Great you are doing a feature on Whoopee characters...hope you share it online...otherwise will do myself...love your detailed post and so many great things to read... love Whoopee comic my favourite of Fleetway.. DC Thomson has to be The Beano..
ReplyDeleteI've looked at that 1977 strip several times now - I think it's definitely Mike and not Frank at all. Lettering, face shapes etc are all Mike.
ReplyDeleteI have my doubts too, but some of those panels do suggest Frank may have been involved, although the rest of the strip definitely looks like Mike's work... Maybe I was too eager to find an example of an episode by Frank - he always came up with an interesting version whenever he was asked to step in for a strip's regular artist.
DeleteIn the mid-70s IPC used to print guest strips in other comics and Frank McDiarmid drew quite a few of those. My Whizzer and Chips collection is incomplete, and I wonder if there were any guest appearances of Scream Inn, Frankie Stein and Scared-Stiff Sam in Whizzer and Chips issues published in the second half of 1974, starting from the first issue of July?
DeleteThere can be no question that Hilda was inspired by Hilda Ogden - google for yourself to see an unforgettable part of British popular culture!
ReplyDeletelook forward to part 2..annuals and specials..when you have time..
ReplyDelete