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.



Monday, July 14, 2014

WHOOPEE! BOOK OF FRANKIE STEIN 1976



The first WHOOPEE! BOOK OF FRANKIE STEIN was chronologically the second Frankie Stein publication and came out for the Christmas of 1975. The advert in MONSTER FUN COMIC dated 27th September, 1975 announced it was due to go on sale on 1st October. The softcover book had 128 pages and cost 75 p. Apart from bright front and back covers it was all b/w, printed on coarse pulp paper prone to heavy browning (hence the weird colour of the majority of images included in this post – the result of my efforts to make them look better…).

WHOOPEE! BOOK OF FRANKIE STEIN 1976 followed the pattern set in the first FS Summer Special: some content was Frankie Stein-related and some wasn’t. I have counted 61 pages of the former variety – that’s less than a half of the book. This is a Frankie Stein publication so let’s deal with that part of the content first. Less than one third was puzzles, mazes, gags or other features named after Frankie (e.g. Frankie’s Personal Disaster Diary):


Just like in the first FS Summer Special, both spot-the-difference puzzles were in fact pieces of Bob Nixon’s artwork taken from Shiver and Shake weekly comics (Seeing Double was the front cover of Shiver and Shake No. 61 (4th May, 1974) and Double Trouble with Frankie swinging a tank holding it by the gun was a panel from the episode in Shiver and Shake No. 53 (9th March, 1974)).



One thing that I find interesting about those Frankie Stein publications is that artists who’d never had anything to do with the friendly monster were often asked to draw something for the specials or books. We’ll see a lot of this in later publications. In WHOOPEE! BOOK OF FRANKIE STEIN 1976 it was two pages of Frankie's Funspots by Jim Crocker and this contribution of Cliff Brown:


Enough about puzzles, let’s look at Frankie Stein strips which occupied 39 pages (42 if we count both covers and the “this book belongs to” page). There were four brand new Frankie Stein tales, all drawn by Bob Nixon, and Frankie Stein in Funtastic Voyage (6 pages) is first in line. Contrary to what the title suggests, it was not Frankie but Prof. Cube who went on that voyage. He accidentally swallowed some shrinking pills which he had hoped to use on Frankie, and Frankie ate him up with his bun. That’s how Prof. Cube found himself inside Frankie’s body. Looking at these panels I can’t help thinking about Ken Reid’s The Nervs in SMASH!:






T.V. Frankie Stein was a two-pager in which Frankie went through a lot of trouble to visit the girl of his dreams but got bitterly disappointed in the end. Quite an unusual set, IMHO:



Frankie Stein Time Traveller was the third new tale (an 8-pager) in which Prof. Cube persuaded his troublesome creation to try out a time machine in hope that he’d get lost in time. Frankie’s first stop was in the Wild West where he accepted Sheriff’s position and rid the town of some nasty red Indians and then Black Jake the robber:


His second stop was in the times of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table where he took part in a tournament and jousted against the evil knight Sir Vile before making it home safely.

1976 Winter Olympics were near so a Frankie Stein winter sports story was an appropriate proposition. Frankie Stein in Winter Sports was a 6-pager in which Prof. Cube came up with an idea that entering Frankie in the Olympics might be a good way to get rid of him for good:





Bob Nixon redrew the last panel of the second page shown above for the back cover of this book:


There were three pages of Freaky Frankie – a strip without speech balloons by an unknown artist whose drawing style I don’t find very appealing:


There were also 12 pages of reprints of Frankie Stein episodes by Ken Reid from WHAM!, but I’ll discuss them further down in this post.

Frank McDiarmid contributed one new Frankie Stein tale - Professor Cube – Inventor! (a 6-pager) in which Frankie Stein played a minor part opposite Dad. It was a story about Prof. Cube’s inventing misadventures in his pre-Frankie days:




…which of course were now over and long-forgotten:


Mr. McDiarmid was also the only contributor of new non-Frankie-Stein strip content in this book. Weird Wolf was a tale about a ghost wolf whose most favourite pastime was howling at the Moon, much to the annoyance of the population of the town of Dullton who tried different schemes to get rid of the pest. Two episodes (a three-pager and a two-pager) were included in this book. Here's a taste:


The second new non-Frankie-Stein strip by Mr. McDiarmid was The Movie Makers, two 4-page episodes can be found in this book. It is about daft International Film Studios who had no clue how to make movies. Their first one was so horrible that it became a blockbuster as the ‘World’s Most Horrific Film’ and made them believe they could do more of the kind:


The rest of non-Frankie-Stein comic strip content was reprints. The strips they chose to reprint were already familiar to readers of the first FS Summer Special: Ghost Ship (3 episodes, originally from SMASH!), The Haunts of Headless Harry (3 episodes, originally from SMASH! as well), Crabbe’s Crusaders (adventure tale, one episode spanning 8 pages, originally from BUSTER) and best of all - Mervyn’s Monsters. Drawn by Leo Baxendale, the strip originally appeared in BUSTER in the late 60s and was a tale of the epic struggle between two opposing secret services – M.U.M. (Mervyn’s Undercover Monsters) and C.R.U.S.H (Crafty Rascals’ Union of Saboteurs and Hoodlums, headed by Oscar Mush). The original run consisted of a number of serialised stories, and the 18-pager reprinted in this book was Mervyn’s Monsters Starring in the Incredible Abominable Snowmen Adventure that started in Buster AND GIGGLE dated 16th March, 1968 (note that this is not the first episode of the original series). Check out the opening pages in Buster and WHOOPEE! BOOK OF FRANKIE STEIN 1976:



Getting back to Frankie Stein but keeping on the subject of reprints, the book contains quite a few  episodes by Ken Reid. Originally they are from WHAM! Nos. 43, 46, 54, 47, 75, 68 (listed here in the order of appearance of reprints in the Book). As always, the original one-pagers were tampered with and converted into two-pagers, therefore the total page count of Ken Reid artwork comes to 12. Check out an example from WHAM! and compare it with the doctored version in the Book. They certainly took liberties with the original…

From WHAM! No. 68, 2nd October, 1965


Reprint in Whoopee! Book of Frankie Stein 1976


WHOOPEE! BOOK OF FRANKIE STEIN 1976 also had a fair amount of ‘monster’ and ‘horror’ non-comic strip features that weren’t related to Frankie Stein, e.g. Man Made Monsters (photos of giant machines and structures with some factual details), Screen Scream (screenshots from horror movies with humorous speech balloons), Spot the Star (mugshots of contemporary stars with Frankenstein forehead, hairdo and neck-bolts attached) and Monsters of the Screen (screenshots of monsters from various films). As you can see, this book was very much in the horror comedy genre so it was a suitable substitute for MONSTER FUN COMIC annual 1976 which IPC didn’t have time to put together in the first year of MFC. It is probably not by coincidence that IPC ran a series of adverts in MFC weeklies, and Frankie mentioned the book on a number of occasions in his letters section.




Wednesday, July 9, 2014

FRANKIE STEIN SUMMER SPECIAL 1975



The first Frankie Stein Summer Special came out in the summer of 1975, it was 80 pages thick and cost 25 p. As could be expected, Frankie Stein was the star of the magazine and featured on both covers, 36 inside pages and the pull-out colour poster – that’s 40 pages, or exactly one half of the paper. Less than three quarters of the Frankie Stein stuff was new material while the rest was reprints. There were 9 pages of old school Frankie Stein drawn by Ken Reid for WHAM! issues 71, 79, 155 and 61. As was the custom at IPC, Mr. Reid’s original one-pagers were cut up and rearranged to spread over two or even three pages with resized and often heavily doctored frames and weird alterations of text. Interestingly, they didn’t bother to white Micky out. Here are some examples of original frames in WHAM! and the matching 'enhanced’ ones in this Frankie Stein Summer Special side-by-side:

WHAM! original
"Processed' version in the Summer Special


WHAM! original
"Processed' version in the Summer Special


WHAM! original
'Processed' version in the Summer Special

The scene by Bob Nixon used on the bright pull-out poster of Frankie diving in the sea was originally drawn for the cover of SHIVER AND SHAKE dated 27th April, 1974 (No. 60):

Pull-out poster in the Summer Special

Both spot-the-difference puzzles (Trouble in Store and High Street Havoc) were also reprints from SHIVER AND SHAKE: the former was in fact Bob Nixon’s drawing for the cover of Shiver and Shake dated 11th May, 1974 (No. 62), while the latter was borrowed from the episode of Frankie Stein which first appeared in Shiver and Shake dated 9th March, 1974 (No. 53).



Let’s leave reprints alone for a while (more will be mentioned later) and look at the new material included in this first Frankie Stein Summer Special.

Robert Nixon was the biggest contributor. He drew two Frankie Stein stories – a 4-pager and a 5-pager. In the first one Prof. Cube and Frankie go on holidays and Prof. Cube makes two unsophisticated and predictably unsuccessful attempts to rid himself of ‘the big lunk’ – first by encouraging Frankie to surf on a dangerous rocky beach and then by plotting to use him as shark bait. Here is a frame from the story which is a simpler version of the lavish front cover artwork:


The story is also interesting because in it Mr. Nixon used the-evil-conscience-vs-the-good-conscience technique which Ken Reid exploited so well in his Dare-A-Day Davy strips in POW! in the late 60s.


In the second Frankie Stein story Prof. Cube tries to get rid of Frankie by sending him off to an army summer camp which looks a lot like a Konzentrationslager but ends up at the receiving end of discipline:


Frank McDiarmid’s contribution was a nice six-page story of Prof. Cube and his Ancestors which I showed in its entirety not so long ago, you can view it HERE. I have included it into the page count of Frankie Stein strips because the friendly monster features in the strip opposite Dad.

Jim Crocker illustrated a simple one-page Frankie Stein story on the back page:


Five sets of the feature called Frankie’s Travels drawn by Sid Burgon were a nice addition to the package. They were Frankie’s postcards sent from different tourist spots around the Globe. Here is an example:


The remaining Frankie Stein-related pages which qualify as new material were puzzles and gags. Artie Jackson illustrated two pages of Frankie’s Fun Break jokes while Les Barton drew two pages of Frankie Stein’s Holiday Fun which look similar to Ticklish Allsorts in the then-current MONSTER FUN COMIC:



The other half of this Frankie Stein Summer Special was filled with reprints of non-Frankie Stein material. There are 24 pages of Mervyn’s Monsters – a strip which enjoyed a relatively brief run in BUSTER in 1968 and was illustrated by Leo Baxendale. Mervyn was a loopy lad who controlled a bunch of squelchy thingies known as the super spies of M.U.M. – Mervyn’s Undercover Monsters, and reported to Major Rhode at London H.Q. Their enemy was Mush – chief of the hostile organization known as C.R.U.S.H. (no explanation of what the abbreviation stood for was offered) and his cronies such as the potty professor Pottz and Abdul the Mighty. Both sides had an endless arsenal of electronic spying devices, disguised weapons and all kinds of crazy super-modern secret agent gadgets.


The Haunts of Headless Harry and Ghost Ship were borrowed from the SMASH! of the early 70s. They were represented in the Summer Special with 4 one-pagers each, some were coloured in. I am not sure who the artists were:



In the mid-70s the holiday specials of IPC children’s comics still had adventure serials in them. In the first edition of Frankie Stein Summer Special it was 8 pages of Crabbe's Crusaders drawn by Carlos Cruz. The original run of the strip appeared in BUSTER where it started in January 1969 and continued for more than a year. The story was about four orphaned lads who were shipwrecked on an island and met Professor Pankhurst Crabbe, the nuclear scientist who had escaped 'the war-mongering fools of the world' and set up the Headquarters for the Furtherance of Peace on the island.  Professor Crabbe has means to watch every trouble spot on Earth and the four youths become his crusaders for peace with the mission to combat this strife… In the story which is reprinted in the first FRANKIE STEIN HOLIDAY SPECIAL Crabbe’s Crusaders go on their first assignment and help the people of the Pacific island of Cortago overthrow a cruel dictator.


All in all, the Special was on the heavy side of reprints – a bit unusual for a first edition. I have counted 53 pages of reprints and only 27 pages of new material!

Sunday, July 6, 2014

FRANKIE STEIN TURNS 50!!!




This week marks 50 years since the first appearance of Frankie Stein, one of the greatest characters in UK children’s humour comics. Ken Reid’s first creation after his departure from D.C.Thomson debuted in the 4th issue of WHAM! cover-dated 11th July, 1964 which went on sale this week exactly half-a-century ago. In this post I try to uncover the 'origins' of FS so let's start from the beginning:


Those of you who followed my account of Shiver and Shake comic last year may remember the posts in which I looked at Frankie’s second incarnation. You can revisit them HERE and HERE. The Editor introduced the character in Shiver and Shake without bothering to explain where he came from but popularity of the friendly monster must have prompted the idea to tell fans the story of Frankie’s creation. Here is the second reinvented version of Frankie’s birth. Drawn by Robert Nixon, it is from the first combined issue of WHOOPEE! AND SHIVER & SHAKE dated 12th October, 1974.


A year later Frank McDiarmid drew a 6-page story Professor Cube – Inventor! for the 1976 Whoopee! Book oF Frankie Stein in which he captured the flash of the creator’s inspiration:


… and copied the panel showing the exciting moments before that dramatic streak of lightning which brought Frankie to life. Here are Bob Nixon’s and Frank McDiarmid’s panels side-by-side for those of you who are fond of spot-the-difference puzzles:


To celebrate this landmark anniversary, I will take a break from Monster Fun Comic and do a series of posts dedicated to the friendly monster (who, by coincidence, held a honorary position at Monster Fun). The Ken Reid version of Frankie Stein is my favourite one but the peak of the character’s glory was in the mid-70s and the early 80s when he was big enough for two editions of his own Whoopee! Book of Frankie Stein:


… and as many as eight Frankie Stein Holiday Specials:


Brace yourselves for ten special friendly monster posts coming up!