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.



Showing posts sorted by relevance for query whacky. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query whacky. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, March 30, 2012

A LOOK AT COR!! STRIPS: EDDIE and WHACKY


Now it’s time to take a look at all the strips in COR!! – nearly 70 of them all in all. I plan to cover them in the order in which they appeared in the weeklies so I’ll start with Eddie and Whacky that occupied pages two and three of the first issue.

EDDIE

Eddie – Yawn! I’m bored! (later Eddie – He’s Always Bored). The subtitle explains it all – Eddie was a kid who was always looking for ways to keep himself from being bored.  Usually his attempts resulted in trouble for him or his unfortunate parent. Illustrated beautifully by Graham Allen who contributed a lot of strips in COR!!, Eddie enjoyed a healthy run of 137 episodes from the first issue to issue dated 13th January, 1973 (Nos. 1 – 137).

The page on the right was the last episode of Eddie in COR!! weeklies

 WHACKY

Whacky – He’s Always Getting Whacked! Little to add here – the subtitle says it all once again. But for poor Whacky punishment wasn’t limited to just the old slipper or cane from his sadistic teacher Mr. Thwackery. The boy also suffered from a whole arsenal of mechanical gadgets: he got it from a spinning turnstile at the stadium entrance and from tennis balls fired from a tennis-ball cannon; he was whacked with windshield wipers while being stuck between car grill and bumper. There were more exotic ways of whacking too – like getting it from an elephant while being stuck in a kangaroo’s sack with only his arse sticking out... Teacher Thwackery also got a fair share of whacking from the headmaster, the odd bloke or even Whacky himself.

The episode on the left is the first full-page set from issue
dated 12th September, 1970 (No. 15)

Whacky’s sufferings continued from the first issue until 29th September, 1973 (Nos. 1 – 174). At first the strip occupied 2/3 of a page. Starting from the issue of 12th September, 1970 (No. 15) it was promoted to a full-page feature. Several episodes were in full colour and there was one front-page appearance in the issue dated 30th June, 1973. The series was given a proper ending of sorts: Mr. Thwackery announced his retirement. The class presented him with an inscribed cane and Whacky thought his misery was over but he immediately got into trouble with his new neighbour who proved to be no one other than old Mr. Thwackery… Illustrated by Mike Lacey.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

1973: A LOOK AT THE FOURTH YEAR OF COR!!



52 issues of the comic were published in 1973 (Nos. 136 – 187)

Important issues in 1973:
6th January 1973 (No. 136) – New Year + first new look cover
10th March, 1973 (No. 145) – bumper issue, 40 pages, SHIVER and SHAKE adverts
21st April, 1973 (No. 151) – Easter issue + permanent change of cover layout
15th September, 1973 (No. 172) – bumper issue, 40 pages, Football Star No. 1 adverts
6th October 1973 (No. 175) – free gift issue
13th October, 1973 (No. 176) – free gift double treat issue
20th October (No. 177) – pull-out comic No. 2
27th October, 1973 (No. 178) – Pull-out Cor-mic No. 3
3rd November, 1973 (No. 179) – Pull-out Cor-mic No. 4
8th December, 1973 (No. 184) – price increases to 4 p.
29th December 1973 (No. 187)– Christmas issue

Line-up of the first issue of 1973 (6th January, 1973 (No. 136)):
The Goodies cover
Football Madd
Tomboy
The Goodies – 2 pages
Andy’s Ants
Whacky
Shiver and Shake
Teacher’s Pet (in full colour)
Rat-Trap – 3 pages
Jelly Baby
Star Guest feature
Jack Pott
Ivor Lott and Tony Broke – 2 centre pages
The Slimms
Cor!! News Sheet feature
Wonder Worm
5 Minute Wanda
Jasper the Grasper – 1 ½ pages
Hire a Horror (in full colour)
Donovan’s Dad
Chalky
Eddie
The Gasworks Gang
Tricky Dicky
Swopper Stan
Gus Gorilla in full colour on back page

1973 New Year issue - the first one with a
new cover layout since the
premiere issue in 1970
To give COR!! a New Year boost, the Editor introduced two new fun features: The Goodies and Five Minute Wanda. Zoo Sue and Helpful Hettie were axed to make room for the new arrivals. The television fame of the Goodies was a good enough reason to change the layout of the front cover for the first time since issue one, with the three comedians proudly pedalling their three-man bicycle on the front cover. Gus Gorilla had to content himself with the back page that week. A week later things came back to normal.

Nothing much happened in terms of new developments for a few months – Whacky was receiving his regular thrashings, the Goodies kept doing anything anytime, Patsy kept trying (and failing) to become her teacher’s pet, Micky Madd kept doing keepie-up, Jack Lott never missed an opportunity to gamble, Dr. Rat kept rasping at readers who never got tired of designing ingenious traps to round him up, Ma and Pa Slimms kept trying to stuff themselves silly with grub, Ivor Lott kept getting himself into trouble because he was such a mean rotter, Chalky kept drawing, miserly meanie Jasper the Grasper kept penny-pinching and hoarding, horrors from Hire a Horror kept scaring, Donovan’s Dad still couldn’t control his strength, Tomboy kept upsetting her Mum, Jelly Baby kept stretching her limbs, the Gasworks Gang was as dangerous as ever, Swopper Stan kept swopping stuff and of course you still couldn’t make a monkey out of Gus.

The smooth pace was upset slightly in the issue dated 10th March, 1973 (No. 145) when the comic received 8 extra pages, 4 of which trumpeted about the arrival of the new super two-in-one fun comic Shiver and Shake. This also meant that now there was one more source of guests for the Star Guest feature in addition to Knockout and Whizzer and Chips.

1973 Easter issue - the first one with the
permanent change of the cover design
and a number of surprises inside
The next overhaul took place in Easter Fun edition dated 21st April, 1973 (No. 151). Firstly and perhaps most importantly, there was a change of the cover layout. Gus Gorilla feature disappeared from the front page, or to be more precise, it was re-packaged as Gus Giggles – a three-panel gag cartoon. It appeared beside a splash panel that was part of one of that week’s stories inside the paper. That said, it was common knowledge that you couldn’t make a monkey out of Gus (or drop a strip that appeared on the front cover for nearly three years); indeed, it was transferred to the inside of the comic and continued as a black-and-white feature until Cor!! folded in 1974. As for the splash panel, the characters rotated all the time: one week it was Hire a Horror, then it was The Goodies, followed by Ivor Lott and Tony Broke, and so forth. There wasn’t a single feature that didn’t appear on the front page since the new layout was introduced.


Examples of covers with the new layout

Changes weren’t limited to just the cover. Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? was a new comedy feature that debuted on page two. The issue dated 21st April, 1973 (No. 151) also saw the beginning of the Cor-Medy Choice series that was introduced to give readers a chance to select a new fun-series from ten brand new comedy ideas presented over a period of ten weeks. At the end of the series readers were given the opportunity to vote on which story should appear in COR! regularly as a complete series. The last change in the issue dated 21st April, 1973 (No. 151) was that of the title and masthead of what used to be COR!! NEWS SHEET. It became COR!! NEWS Easter Eggs-tra in the Easter issue, and then COR!! NEWS Readers’ Special from the issue dated 28th April, 1973 (No. 152). Starting from the summer months the news feature shrunk to a single page and became less cluttered with text; the Editor’s comments were becoming increasingly scarce. 


Example of COR!! News Readers' Special

Winner of the COR-MEDY CHOICE series was announced in the issue dated 1st September, 1973 (No. 170). It was Val’s Vanishing Cream; the strip joined COR!! line-up as a regular feature and fared sufficiently well to survive merger with BUSTER where it continued until the end of 1976.

The issue dated 6th October, 1973 (No. 175) marked the beginning of a series of five successive free-gift and pull-out issues. In all likelihood it was an attempt to boost declining sales. The issue dated 6th October, 1973 (No. 175) came with a free gift RATTY RAASSPER – the biggest noise in town. The gift was a tie-in with the popular reader-participation feature Rat Trap. Those who bought the third issue of the comic back in 1970 would have remembered that it was the same cardboard sleeve with a rubber band and a metal hoop inside that made a rasping sound as it spun around inside the envelope, but with Rat Trap strip going strong, the gift was quite appropriate. Three new features were introduced in the first free gift issue, they were Willy Worry, Night Mare and Professor Corn’s Daft Dictionary. The latter was another reader participation feature inviting readers to send in their Daft Dictionary Definitions and receive 50p for each definition published.



Front pages of 1973 free gift issues

Issue dated 13th October, 1973 (No. 176), the second issue in the series, offered a double treat of the Jumping Skeleton free gift and pocket COR-MIC part one (two super-surprises for all readers). Until recently COR!! wasn’t equipped to offer pull-outs because its pages were glued rather than stapled, so pulling pages out would have been problematic. COR!! became a stapled paper from the beginning of 1973 and the obstacle was removed. The COR-MIC pull-out was a nice combination of popular strips, pop/rock star photos and gags and received some very positive reader comments. COR-MIC pull-out booklet consisted of 4 parts that came with 4 consecutive issues.


COR-MIC pull out Pt. 4 in COR!! issue dated
3rd November, 1973 (No. 179)

The issue dated 20th October, 1973 (No. 177) had to be given 8 extra pages to accommodate all the goodness and 4 pages promoting Walt Disney’s GOOFY AND PLUTO Issue No. 1, while the paper’s only 3-page feature Rat Trap was reduced to two pages from that issue onwards.

Fiends and Neighbours from the pen of Graham Allen was one of the last additions to the line-up but a very strong one; it debuted without much fanfare in the issue dated 24th November, 1973 (No. 182).

In the issue of 1st December, 1973 (No. 183) the Editor informed with regrets that commencing with next week’s issue the price of Cor!! had to go up to 4p because of rising production costs. He also felt it was necessary to let his readers know that the increase had, of course, been submitted to and approved by the Prices Commission…


1973 Christmas edition

Strips that ended in 1973:
Eddie – 13th January, 1973 (No. 137)
Shiver and Shake – 3rd February, 1973 (No. 140)
Donovan’s Dad – 14th April, 1973 (No. 150)
Swopper Stan – 14th April, 1973 (No. 150)
5 Minute Wanda – 14th April, 1973 (No. 150)
Chip – 15th September, 1973 (No. 172)
Whacky – 29th September, 1973 (No. 174)
Tricky Dicky – 29th September, 1973 (No. 174)
Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf – 29th September, 1973 (No. 174)
COR-Medy Choice feature, first series – 18th August, 1973 (No. 168)
The Goodies – 29th December, 1973 (No. 187)

Strips that started in 1973:
The Goodies – 6th January, 1973 (No. 136)
5 Minute Wanda – 6th January, 1973 (No. 136)
Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf – 21st April, 1973 (No. 151)
COR-Medy Choice feature, first series – 21st April, 1973 (No. 151)
Gus Giggles front page feature – 21st April, 1973 (No. 151)
Val’s Vanishing Cream – 1st September, 1973 (No. 170)
Willy Worry – 6th October, 1973 (No. 175)
Daft Dictionary Definitions feature – 6th October, 1973 (No. 175)
Night Mare – 6th October, 1973 (No. 175)
Fiends and Neighbours – 24th November, 1973 (No. 182)



1973 COR!! Summer Special
1973 COR!! Summer Special cost 18 p. and had the usual 96 pages. Promotion in the weeklies commenced on 7th July 1973. The line-up was as follows: Whacky, Tomboy (some in colour), Wonder Worm, Chip, Hire A Horror, Helpful Hettie, Andy’s Ants, Gus Gorilla, Tease Break! feature, Well, What Do You Know??? feature, Swopper Stan, Tricky Dicky, Jim’s Genie, Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?, Jack Pott, The Gasworks Gang, Football Madd, Tales of Tollgate (adventure, 12 pages), Jelly Baby (in colour), Jasper the Grasper, Donovan’s Dad, The Bouncers (10 pages), Teacher’s Pet, Ivor Lott and Tony Broke, Gus Gorilla.

Same as in the 1972 Summer Special, the vast majority of the strips were nicely drawn by their regular artists.

This time there were as many as 3 unfamiliar entries: Jim’s Genie and The Bouncers were comedy features, while Tales of Tollgate were an adventure serial. The latter was a reprint of the strip Tales of Tollgate School from LION from the 60s (also reprinted as Adventures at Tollgate in the short-lived GIGGLE comic in 1966-1967). The Bouncers was a reprint from another old comic Swift where it was drawn by Peter Maddocks and appeared in the period 1959 – 1960. Jim’s Genie must have also been a reprint. That said, the three strips weren’t the only reprints in the 1972 Summer Special: a number of features that ran in the weeklies at that time were also reprints from older comics; they included Wonder Worm (from Buster), Chip (from POW!) and Helpful Hettie (from GIGGLE). Well, What do you know??? feature by Reg Parlett was probably also a reprint.


Tales of Tollgate from 1973 COR!! Summer Special



The Bouncers from 1973 COR!! Summer Special


Jim'e Genie from 1973 COR!! Summer Special



COR!! Annyal 1974 cover
Promotion of the 1974 COR!! Annual started in the weekly edition of COR!! dated 15th September 1973. The book was priced 70 p and had 160 pages. Here is the lineup of strips and features: Whacky (3 episodes, two in full colour), Hire A Horror (in full colour), Gus Gorilla (3 episodes, two in full colour), Fun on Four Wheels (gags), Wonder Worm (6 episodes), The Gasworks Gang (2 episodes), Ug and Tug the Peace Makers (4 episodes), Chip (4 episodes), Four Alone and the Sky Jackers (8 pages), The Slimms (2 episodes), Football Madd (2 episodes), Tomboy (2 episodes, one in full colour), Jelly Baby (2 episodes), Tricky Dicky (2 episodes), Tell-Tale Tess (2 episodes), Jasper the Grasper (2 episodes), Swopper Stan (2 episodes), Chalky (2 episodes), Zoo Sue (2 episodes), Andy’s Ants (2 episodes), Picture Crosswords feature, Ivor Lott and Tony Broke (2 episodes), Lucky Charmer (2 episodes), Teacher’s Pet, Tease Break feature (2 installments), Scene Stealers (gags), Hire A Horror, Eddie (2 episodes), The Goodies (4 pages), Helpful Hettie, Donovan’s Dad (2 episodes), 5 Minute Wanda (2 episodes), Jack Pott (2 episodes), Dr What and His Time Clock (12 pages), Fur and Feather Frolics (gags).

The book contained an original 4-page episode of the Goodies by Joe Colquhoun. It was the only appearance of the Goodies in COR!! annuals because the strip was licensed to COR!! for just one year 1973.

Opening pages of the Goodies in COR!! 1974 Annual

Dr What and His Time Clock made his second (but not the last) appearance in COR!! publications after 1972 COR!! Summer Special and will be covered in a separate blogpost later on.

Three pages of gags were a prelude to the two COR!! Books of Gags released two and three years later. The books will also be covered separately.

British annuals were always about Christmas. In the 1974 COR!! book two episodes of my favourite COR!! features ended with nice Christmas-themed ‘splash’ panels:

The Gasworks Gang splash panel by Frank McDiarmid from COR!! 1974 Annual
Jasper the Grasper splash panel from COR!! 1974 Annual


Friday, March 23, 2012

1972: A LOOK AT THE THIRD YEAR OF COR!!



53 issues of the comic were published in 1972 (Nos. 83 – 135)

Important issues in 1972:
1st January 1972 (No. 83) – New Year issue + 4 new features
1st April 1972 (No. 96) – Easter issue
22nd April 1972 (No. 99) re-shuffle of page slots
29th July 1972 (No. 113) major revamp, 5 new features
29th April, 1972 (No. 100) – 100th issue
4th November 1972 (No. 127) – Bonfire night issue
30th December 1972 (No. 135) – Christmas issue

Line-up of the first issue of 1972 (1st January 1972 (No. 83)):
Gus Gorilla – front cover
Whacky
Cor!! Comment + POSTBAG + Picture Yourself features
The Gasworks Gang – 2 pages
Hire a Horror
Tomboy
Chalky
The Slimms
Andy’s Ants
Tease Break! feature
Ivor Lott and Tony Broke – 2 pages
Tricky Dicky
Swopper Stan
Kid Chameleon – in full colour on centrespread
Nippy Nibbs
Donovan’s Dad
Tell-Tale Tess
Freddie Fang
Helpful Hettie – ½ page
Jasper the Grasper
Eddie
Football Madd
Lucky Charmer
Nutty Noticeboard
Sonny Storm
Jack Pott
Spoilsport
Teacher’s Pet – in full colour

1972 New Year number
The first issue of the year brought some positive changes to the line-up by dropping The Chumpions that weren’t faring too well and introducing as many as four new fun features, two of which – The Slimms and Jasper the Grasper – were to become a big success.

The first issue of the year also saw the last Cor!! Comment headline and page 3 became COR!! POSTBAG for a while. Holiday Fun column on the editor’s page ended in issue 84, leaving the whole page just for readers’ mail and Picture YOURSELF feature. Editorial was dropped as a regular feature and the Editor’s contributions became limited to occasional brief comments of individual letters and the odd word on special occasions such as Easter, 100th issue or introduction of a new character.

100th issue
A major reshuffle of page-slots took effect starting from the issue dated 22nd April, 1972 (No. 99) with the Kid Chameleon (that used to be on the centre pages in full colour since the very start) reaching its natural conclusion. After the tale ended in the issue dated 15th April, 1972 (No. 98), it was decided to give the centrespread to the paper’s most popular strip Ivor Lott and Tony Broke and pretend it was now in colour. According to the Editor, the upgrade was a response to readers’ requests that the set should appear in colour, but in actual fact it was now in red (or blue), black and white. The two full-colour pages that became available after Kid Chameleon ended were moved from the centre to pages 9 and 26. Hire a Horror and Tomboy became regular occupants of the new colour slots. Sometimes the pages were given to other strips, mostly Jasper the Grasper and Teacher’s Pet, but Helpful Hettie and Whacky also appeared in full colour in the course of the year.

COR!! POSTBAG was given a new style in the issue dated 13th May, 1972 (No. 102) with a new frame (fat dots instead of small stars), a new masthead and removal of the Editor’s signature. The new look didn’t last long: in the issue dated 8th July, 1972 (No. 110) the Editor announced plans to launch the comic’s own news-sheet in the near future, inviting readers to become Cor!! COR-respondents and send in school news, sports news, holiday news, views, cartoons, etc. The first COR!! News sheet appeared in Cor!! issue dated 29th July, 1972 (No. 113). COR!! news sheets were numbered and the first issue was naturally No. 1; date and most importantly – issue number of the comic were also included. Therefore it wouldn’t be accurate to claim that Cor!! issues weren’t numbered because from issue 113 they actually were, albeit not on the front cover. COR!! NEWS SHEET feature was the place where readers were offered an opportunity to see their contributions in print. The news-sheet incorporated the successful reader participation PICTURE YOURSELF feature; it also had a correspondence column and printed readers’ gags, puzzles and jokes. A cash prize of 50p was paid for every item published.

Example of COR!! News Sheet

The issue dated 29th July, 1972 (No. 113) also saw the second re-shuffle of pages in the brief space of seven months since the beginning of the year. What used to be one-page POSTBAG, now renamed into COR!! NEWS SHEET, was moved from page 3 towards the back of the comic where it was given two full pages. The old-timer Gasworks Gang lost its regular slot on pages 4-5 and was tucked away to the back of the paper (pages 28 – 29). Single-page strips were also moved around quite a bit. Nutty Noticeboard feature, Lucky Charmer, Freddie Fang, Spoilsport and The Adventures of Sonny Storm were dropped altogether (making the issue dated 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112) the issue with the most last appearances in the comic’s lifetime) to allow room for as many as 5 pages of new strips – comedy one-pagers Zoo Sue and Shiver and Shake, plus the new weird adventure story Rat-Trap featuring the fiendish Dr. Rat that occupied as many as three pages. Guest Star feature also debuted in the issue dated 29th July, 1972 (No. 113). From that issue onwards every week Cor!! readers were introduced to a favourite funster from COR’s!! companion papers KNOCKOUT and WHIZZER and CHIPS, while COR!! stars made guest appearances in those other papers. One interesting point about the feature was that the guest appearances were all new episodes, not reprints of old material from the “home” comic.

1972 Christmas issue
From that point the comic continued without further overhauls until the end of 1972. Summing up, it was quite a rough year that saw two major slot reshuffles and brought a few sorry losses (Kid Chameleon) as well as a number of additions to the line-up, some of which enjoyed a long and happy run well beyond the demise of Cor!! (The Slimms in Whizzer AND Chips). The second revamp is probably an indication that the Editors felt changes were necessary to make sure the paper continued to sell. On the other hand it looks like at that point the comic was still doing sufficiently well because no free gifts were used to win more attention. 

Strips that ended in 1972
Nippy Nibbs – 11th March, 1972 (No. 93)
Danger Mouse – 8th April, 1972 (No. 97)
Kid Chameleon – 15th April, 1972 (No. 98) (ended by reaching its natural conclusion)
Spoilsport – 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112)
Freddie Fang – 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112)
Nutty Noticeboard – 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112)
Tell-Tale Tess – 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112)
Postbag feature – 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112)
The Adventures of Sonny Storm – 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112)
Lucky Charmer – 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112)
Nutty Noticeboard feature – 22nd July, 1972 (No. 112)
Helpful Hettie – 30th December, 1972 (No. 135)
Zoo Sue – 30th December, 1972 (No. 135)

Strips that started in 1972
The Slimms – 1st January, 1972 (No. 83)
Helpful Hettie – 1st January, 1972 (No. 83)
Jasper the Grasper – 1st January, 1972 (No. 83)
Lucky Charmer – 1st January, 1972 (No. 83)
Chip – 15th April, 1972 (No. 98)
Jelly Baby – 27th May, 1972 (No. 104)
Zoo Sue – 29th July, 1972 (No. 113)
Rat-Trap – 29th July, 1972 (No. 113)
Cor!! News Sheet feature – 29th July, 1972 (No. 113)
Guest Star feature – 29th July, 1972 (No. 113)
Shiver and Shake – 29th July, 1972 (No. 113)
Well, What do you Know funny facts feature – 5th August, 1972 (No. 114)
Wonder Worm – 18th November, 1972 (No. 129)


1972 COR!! Summer Special
1972 COR!! Summer Special cost 15 p. and had 96 pages.  The first advertisement of the special appeared in the weekly COR!! of 15th July, 1972. The line-up was as follows: Ivor Lott and Tony Broke (some in colour, all by Terry Bave), Dr What and his Time Clock, Whacky, Teacher’s Pet (in colour), Chip, Tell-Tale Tess, Ug and Tug the Peace Makers, Andy’s Ants, Spoilsport, Chalky, Helpful Hettie, Nutty Notice Board, Tricky Dicky, Lucky Charmer, The Gasworks Gang, Gus Gorilla (some in colour), Picture Crosswords page, Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub, Swopper Stan, Eddie, Jasper the Grasper, Football Madd, Donovan’s Dad, Tomboy, Jack Pott, The Slimms, Teacher’s Pet, Trail-Blazer! (a western), and Hire a Horror (in colour). What distinguished this edition from the one published a year before was that the majority of its strips were drawn by the regular artists who did a really nice job on their pages and matched the quality of their art in the weeklies.

Once again, two new strips appeared alongside those familiar from the weekly comics and the 1971 Summer Special/1972 Annual. They were a comedy feature Dr What and his Time Clock (He’s the Craziest Scientist Ever!) and a western Trail-Blazer!


Dr What and His Time Clock from COR!! 1972 Summer Special


Trail-Blazer! from 1972 COR!! Summer Special

Dr What (19 pages of his antics) was a reprint from Boy’s World, a short-lived ODHAMS publication from the 60s (1963-1964). The western (a 10-page adventure) was beautifully drawn but looked a bit out of style. It was certainly a reprint but I’ve got no idea where from. 




COR!! Annual 1973
Promotion of the 1973 COR!! Annual started in the weekly edition of COR!! dated 9th September. The book was priced 65 p and had 160 pages. The annual had all the favorites from COR!! weeklies, plus what had become the usual helping of Ug and Tug the Peace Makers reprints from BUSTER. One thing that is worth-while mentioning is that the 1973 COR!! annual presented the first installment of Young MacDonald and his “Farm” – a series that only appeared in COR!! annuals and specials but not the weeklies. I intend to write a separate blogpost dedicated to Young MacDonald tales later on.

The strips included: COR!! “Mister Hire-A-Horror” Contest 1973 on pages 2 and 3 (in full colour), Whacky (in colour), Tell-Tale Tess (2 episodes, one in full colour), Gus Gorilla (3 episodes, one in full colour), Nutty Noticeboard feature (3 installments, 1 in color), Jack Pott, Chalky (3 episodes),  Ug and Tug the Peace Makers (3 episodes),  Spoilsport (2 episodes),  Danger Mouse (4 episodes, one in full colour), Eddie (3 episodes),  Four Alone and the Alpine Adventure (8 pages), Ivor Lott and Tony Broke (3 episodes), Chip (3 episodes), Swopper Stan (3 episodes), Donovan’s Dad (2 episodes), Nippy Nibbs (2 episodes),  The Gasworks Gang (2 episodes), Teacher’s Pet (2 episodes), Sonny Storm (2 episodes), Andy’s Ants (3 episodes), Follow the Dots puzzle (2 installments), Lucky Charmer (3 episodes), The Slimms (2 episodes), Freddie Fang the Werewolf Cub (2 episodes), Hire A Horror (3 episodes, one in full colour ), Tomboy (3 episodes, one in full colour), Tricky Dicky (2 episodes), Football Madd (2 episodes, one in full colour), Tease Break Feature, Jasper the Grasper, Young MacDonald and his “Farm” (8 pages).

Opening pages of the first installment of
Young MacDonald and his "Farm" in COR!! Annual 1973