Showing posts with label green suits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green suits. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Today in Comics History, April 30: Happy birthday, Burton C. Mossman!

This is an expanded and updated version of a post originally published April 30, 2022.

Born on this day in 1867: Burton C. Mossman, legendary American lawman (and cattleman, but we won't hold that against him).


"Arizona Ranger" in Detective Comics #139 (DC, September 1948), script and art by Stookie Allen (?)

And from that point on there was never any troubles in Arizona ever again. EVER AGAIN.



Monday, April 29, 2024

Today in Comics History, April 29: Happy birthday, Duke Ellington!

Born on this day in 1899, making him one of the original geniuses on the twentieth century: jazz pianist, composer, and bandleader Duke Ellington ("Take the "A" Train," "In a Sentimental Mood," "Prelude to a Kiss," "The Mooche," "I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)," "Mood Indigo," "In a Sentimental Mood," "Rockin' in Rhythm," and many, many more jazz classics you know in your head and heart)!



from Juke Box Comics #5 (Eastern Color, November 1948), creator unidentified and unknown




Thursday, April 25, 2024

Today in Comics History, April 25: Happy birthday, Ella Fitzgerald!

Born on this day in 1917: the Queen of Jazz Ella Fitzgerald! One of my favorite vocalists, her jazz vocalizations and scat rhythm singing provide us with a large library of popular and entertaining recordings across six decades. And yes, she even got her own comic book feature! And without the usual racist, stereotypical portrayals of Black persons in comics (Bravo, Alex Toth!).


from "Ella Fitzgerald: The Cinderella of Song" in Juke Box Comics #3 (Eastern Color, July 1948), pencils by Alex Toth, inks by Alex Toth (?) or Frank Giacoia (?)




Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Today in Comics History, January 30: Happy birthday, Bill Vigoda!

Born on this day in 1920: comics artist (primarily for the M.L.J./Archie comics lines) Bill Vigoda (Hangman Comics, Black Hood Comics, Laugh Comics, Archie Comics, Archie's Pal Jughead, Pep Comics, Wilbur Comics and many more)! He's the brother of actor Abe Vigoda, but Abe already got his birthday wishes on February 24, so this one's for you, Bill!

And yes, Bill actually appears in the comics, in this fourth-wall bustin' adventure of Dusty, the Boy Who Would Not Clean His Apartment! Note that Bill appears only silhouetted against the startling background of Crisis on Infinite Earths, with the visual anonymity that comics usually reserve for the President or God. Also, he appears to be crouching or perhaps frightened of the top of the panel.


from "[Bill Vigoda Unfair To Villains!]" in Black Hood Comics #10 (Archie/MLJ, Spring 1944), pencils and inks by Bill Vigoda




Saturday, October 14, 2023

Today in Comics History, October 14: Happy birthday, Roger Moore!

Born on this day in 1927: cinema's only James Bond, Sir Roger Moore (picture, below, hanging out with his good pal Ben Grimm).


house ad from Fantastic! #45 (IPC UK, 23 December 1967)




Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Today in Comics History, September 12: Happy birthday, Johnny Long!

Johnny Long! Sounds like a forgotten hero from a third-tier Golden Age comic book, doesn't he? Johnny Long: the Man Who Can Stand Thirteen Feet Tall! But I tell a lie. Johnny Long (born today in 1914) is actually an American violinist, bandleader, and actor, also as "The Man Who's Long on Music"...clever, Johnny, clever! A rare right-handed violinist with an origin that rivals Spider-Man: he learned violin at the age of six, but injured two fingers on his left hand when he was bitten by a pig. He then learned to use his right hand to play the violin.


from Juke Box Comics #5 (Eastern Color, November 1948), by Phil Berube

Johnny also received his own short feature story in comics...


from "Johnny Long" in Juke Box Comics #3 (Eastern Color, July 1948), pencils and inks by Ruth Atkinson

...which riffed on the fact that Johnny got no respect. No respect at all.




A very happy birthday to you, Mister Johnny Long! I'd shake your hand, but I can't reach up that far.


"A Shanty in Old Shanty Town" by Johnny Long and His Orchestra (Decca, 1946), by Ira Schuster and Jack Little with lyrics by Joe Young

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Today in Comics History, July 12: Happy birthday, Louis B. Meyer (A Cautionary Tale)

Born on this day in 1882 or 1884 or maybe 1885, what do I know: Louis B. Mayer, film producer and co-founder of Roaring Lion Studios aka Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, one of the biggest and most influential movie companies of the twentieth century until Kirk Kevorkian Kerkorian basically put it out of its failing miseries in the 1970s. Although MGM has survived into this day, it was never quite the same juggernaut it was.

Yeah, Louis, you were a bigwig during the age of the Silver Screen, overseeing such iconic pictures as Gone with the Wind, The Wizard of Oz, Meet Me in St. Louis, Singin' in the Rain, An American in Paris, Gigi, Ben-Hur and more. But were you ever in a comic book? How can somebody be called a figurehead when they aren't in a comic book? Wait, look, it this an appearance of the Big Man in the four color medium?


from "I Loved and Lost!" in Hollywood Confessions #1 (St. John, October 1949), script by Robert Bernstein, pencils and inks by Hy Rosen and Joe Kubert

No! that is not Louis B. Mayer! Notice the different spelling of his last name, and his first his first name is Ludwig. Why, this is just a fake Louis B. Maher. And say, whatddaya know, here's another bogus bigwig, also named "Maher":


from "Crimson Madness" in Black Cat Comics (1946 series) #6 (Harvey, June 1947), script by Blanche Carlin (?) or Beverly Suser (?), pencils and inks by Lee Elias, letters by Ben Oda

To end it on a kinda pathetic note, here's the only "actual" appearance of Louis B. Mayer I could find in actual comicky-type books, and it's just a one-page, non-speaking cameo. And he's in a green suit! Where'd you get that suit, LB? Eh, I guess when you're Mayer...anywhere.


from "Caruso Lives Again!" in Famous Stars #5 (Ziff-Davis, Winter 1951), pencils and inks by Paul Parker

So my point (and I do have one) is that you may be the biggest man in Hollywood (not lookin' at you Orson Welles) and yet you may still never get a satisfactory appearance in a comic book story! This is the "cautionary tale" alluded to in the title of this post! Hollywood executives and bigwigs...pfui! I don't care what you do to retaliate against WGA members and writers in the entertainment field, but they shall never falter and will win in the end! I siuppooirt their strike! THUS SAYETH BULLY! Happy birthday and a snort of derision to ya, Louis B. Mayer, ya load!

PS: Please do not examine this metaphor too closely because I have just realized that Hollywood writers do not make appearances in comic books. I'm so sorry. So very very sorry.

Friday, June 23, 2023

Today in Comics History, June 23, 1944: The real baffling mystery is how Heath's suit turned green

Oh no! Heath is a lowly yeller-bellied war deserter coward. Why, I've half a mind to stop eating his delicious toffee covered with chocolate candy bars!


from Baffling Mysteries #11 (Ace, November 1952), pencils and inks by Gene Colan, with Leroy mechanical lettering

I think it would have been funnier in that last panel above if it had been Death saying "That's what you think!" instead.

Oh no! Years later, the comrades he deserted finally catch up with him! But what's the worst they can do? Oh no...aieeeeee! He's going to have to pick up the tab for everybody because the dead don't carry American Express!


Moral of the story: don't do that there thing.

This post was suggested by faithful reader and frequent commenter Blam, who's provided a lot of date references in comics that I'll spotlight throughout 2023 in this series. Thanks, Blam!

Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Today in Comics History, May 31: Happy birthday, Bert Christman!

Born on this day in 1915: Bert Christman, comic book writer and illustrator as well as WWII naval aviator. Christman was writer and artist on the popular newspaper strip Scorchy Smith, of which many adventures were reprinted in Easter Color's Famous Funnies comic book, plus work on the Three Aces feature in Action Comics, Funny Picture Stories, and Adventure Comics. That last one's pretty important, because t'was in the pages of Adventure that Bert created, along with Gardner Fox, Wesley Dodds — the Golden Sandman. Yes, the Sandman Mystery Theatre version. Here's his first appearance!


from "[The Tarantula Strikes]" in Adventure Comics #40 (DC, July 1939), script by Gardner Fox as Larry Dean, pencils and inks by Bert Christman; shown here in a recolored reprint from Justice League of America #94 (DC/National, November 1971)




Saturday, May 20, 2023

Today in Comics History, May 20: Where ever you get 'em, those green suits'll drive you crazy


from Crime Does Not Pay #37 (Lev Gleason, January 1945), script by Dick Wood, pencils and inks by Alan Mandel

Friday, May 12, 2023

Today in Comics History, May 12: Happy birthday, Yogi Berra!

Born on this day in 1925: Yogi Berra, champion baseball player and manager, malapropist, and cartoon bear.


from Yogi Berra one-shot (Fawcett, 1951), script by Charles Dexter, pencils and inks by Kurt Schaffenberger




Friday, April 28, 2023

Today in Comics History, April 28: Happy birthday, Dick Ayers!

Born on this day in 1924: Dick Ayers, comics penciller/inker (Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commanders, Two-Gun Kid, Strange Tales, Rawhide Kid, Tales to Astonish, Journey into Mystery,The X-Men, The Avengers, etc.) and co-creator of the Golden Age Ghost Rider (Magazine Enterprises), Asbestos Man, Plantman, Red Raven, the Leatherneck Raiders, and Sharon Carter, and more!


from (L) Marvel Tales Annual #1 (Marvel, September 1964),
(R) Fantastic Four Annual #7 (Marvel, November 1969)




Tuesday, January 24, 2023

Today in Comics History, January 24, 1917: Red Baron Pizza delivery turns deadly


from "Red Knight!" in Two-Fisted Tales (1950 series) #29 (EC, September 1952), script by Harvey Kurtzman, pencils and inks by John Severin, colors by Marie Severin, letters by Ben Oda

Friday, January 06, 2023

Today in Comics History, January 6, 1935: Frankie settles the age-old question of whether it's called a carport or a carhole


from "Frankie the Pug" in Gangsters Can't Win v.1 #4 (D.S. Publishing, August 1948), creators uncredited and unknown

Monday, December 12, 2022

Today in Comics History, December 12, 1941: Churchill flees war-torn England to, I dunno, kick some Zulus, maybe?


from All-Star Squadron #7 (DC, March 1982), script by Roy Thomas, pencils by Adrian Gonzales, inks by Jerry Ordway, colors by Carl Gafford, letters by John Costanza

Sunday, November 27, 2022

Today in Comics History, November 27: Happy birthday, Ted Husing!

Born on this day in 1901: sportscaster and radio/movie announcer Ted Husing!

Say, where'd ya get the green suit, Ted?


from "Ace Sportscaster" in Real Fact Comics #6 (DC, January 1947), pencils and inks by Jack Lehti




Thursday, November 03, 2022

Today in Comics History, November 3, 1954: First Joel vs. Mike article is published


from "Across All Barriers!" in Forbidden Worlds #51 (ACG, February 1957), script by Richard Hughes (?), pencils by Dick Beck, inks by Pete Costanza

Sunday, October 23, 2022

Today in Comics History, October 23, 1945: Jackie Robinson joins the League of Multi-Colored Suits


from Jackie Robinson #1 (Fawcett, Summer 1949), script by Charles Dexter, pencils by Clem Weisbecker, inks by John Jordan

Tuesday, October 11, 2022

Today in Comics History, October 11: Happy birthday, Joe Simon!

Born on this day in 1913: comics legend (writer, artist, editor, publisher) Joe Simon, co-creator of Captain America and Bucky, the Newsboy Legion and Boy Commandos, Boys' Ranch, Prez, Brother Power the Geek...


from Boys' Ranch #1 (Harvey, October 1950)




Friday, October 07, 2022

Today in Comics History, October 7: Happy birthday, Vaughn Monroe!

Born on this day in 1911: actor/singer Vaughn Monroe ("Mule Train," "Cool Water," "Riders in the Sky" and many more). And comic book star? You betcha!


from "Vaughn Monroe: Racing with the Moon" in Juke Box Comics #3 (Eastern Color, July 1948), pencils and inks by Sid Greene