It's amazing the changes in the comics pages over the years. The hottest comics out there didn't exist in our childhood. And, as cartoonists inevitably age, strips either continue with new authorship, or die with the creator.
Peanuts had such a wealth of material, and it was material that had no connection with the world's events when it was new, that it continues to run as a very successful daily despite the death of Charles Schulz. On the other hand, strips like the depicted Lil Abner were very in tune politically, so even though it is available today as repeats, it's not a big hit.
I was always a huge fan of the comics. Even today, it's the first part of the Sunday Paper that I read.
I will now try to recreate the Sunday funnies that I read circa 1968.
On the front cover are some familiar faces. Blondie, Snuffy Smith, and Beetle Bailey. Mort Walker is still drawing the venerable soldier, but the other two have been passed on to successors.
Opening to page two, there's Freckles and His Friends. It was popular in the 60's, sort of an alternate Archie.
Next down is Our Boarding House, otherwise known as Major Hoople. The perennially angry fez-wearing senior citizen's favorite saying was "Fap!"
Then there was Pogo. I never dug Pogo, its humor was over an eight-year-old kid's head.
Dondi was a daily strip about an orphan. I don't remember seeing it in Sunday's paper.
They'll Do It Every Time taught us a history lesson in a whimsical way. It was generally a large single panel with lots going on. You could have fun learning about real events from the past with Hatlo's History.
Out Our Way was a single panel strip on weekdays, I don't remember what its Sunday incarnation was. It had two looks that varied from day to day, I guess from different artists who took turns, I'm not sure. It was adventures within a family called the Willets.
B.C. is another that has been around since the 60's, and Johnny Hart shows no sign of slowing down. His Wizard of Id that he co-writes continues to be widely popular.
Little Orphan Annie and Dick Tracy were hugely popular old time comics that passed on to new artists, but who failed to keep the mystique going. I haven't seen either of them in years.
Many serial comics were featured in the Sunday funnies of the 60's. Steve Canyon, Prince Valiant, Terry and the Pirates, Rex Morgan, M.D., Alley Oop, Gasoline Alley, and Joe Palooka were some I remember.
There were also multi-activity strips. Today's Slylock Fox was preceded by Cappy Dick, as well as a couple of others that escape my memory at the moment. If I think of them, I'll get them added.
Priscilla's Pop, Nancy, and the strangely mouthless Henry close out the back page.
We have some brilliant cartoonists today. IMHO, there is no humor as cutting edge as Dilbert's Scott Adams. Pearls Before Swine rocks, as does Overboard. And geniuses who shined for but a short time, Gary Larson and Bill Watterson, set new standards of greatness.
But I still have fond memories of those glorious Tulsa World Sunday funnies and those long vanished strips.
Comments (7)
Greetings,
Reading AL CAPP's name here reminded me when he corrected my cartoon lessons thru a Famous Cartoonist Exchange home study course taken in Canada - very long time ago.
The era you mentioned has gone, readers point of view on cartoons is totally different now. It was so important then - that readers actually wanted or needed to beleive what they read.
They were desparate to follow the daily cartoon strip or the daily editor's cartoon page - and then read the relavant article.
Do I miss those days! Where news (added with a cartoon)was important to everyone, now news or cartoons are selective.
Thanks for reminding me of those wonderfull days.
Posted by Frank Bowman | January 25, 2007 9:49 AM
Posted on January 25, 2007 09:49
to the cartoonist, change your world, the cartoons now are so pc, we need just some fun stuff, jerry, clyde, texas
Posted by jerry jonas | February 6, 2007 10:18 PM
Posted on February 6, 2007 22:18
sunday funnies...and comic books, too! remember "classics illustrated"? got me through a lot of book report assignments in jr hi...
Posted by bob | May 12, 2007 12:39 AM
Posted on May 12, 2007 00:39
Henry, perhaps the strangest character ever...he was rainman like, almost an idiot savant..or, better, Forest Gump-ish, in being everywhere at once. Zelig-like.....
Zippy was another sad-sack strange character.. a little humorless nebish that constantly got no respect, but hung in there regardless....How
about the advertising in sunday funnies and comic books in the guise of cartoons, to blend in? Actually, the sweet color of the cartoons AND advertising was the most beautiful part of the paper, aesthetically, and really gave the four-color press of its day a work-out...now much of the paper is color, but the funnies still rule!
Posted by scott | July 21, 2007 6:59 AM
Posted on July 21, 2007 06:59
Hmmmmm! I remember fondly: Hi and Lois, Dennis the Menance, Alley Opp, Blondie, Beetle Baily, Wizard of I'd, Mutt and Jeff and so many of the others listed in original post! One of my all time favorites was Family Circus! Does anyone still get multi color comics in the paper anymore? Not only did we get the Sunday comics, we also got the newly Kids page. I am glad to see some of the old comics still surviving, but I can't tell you when I last saw Mut and Jeff! Remember the romance and doctor comics? I remember the Sunday comic section in color was about six pages deep!
Posted by Rivers End | May 29, 2009 9:55 PM
Posted on May 29, 2009 21:55
Hi and Lois? Mark Trail? Andy Capp? I can not recall too many. I think these vary a little more by region and Portland ME probably had its own unique collection. Boston papers had a few different options, some of which Ron mentions.
Posted by Scott Irv | June 1, 2009 1:16 AM
Posted on June 1, 2009 01:16
winnie winkle, brenda starr,dondi i saw on sunday's,terry and the pirates
Posted by vera | February 1, 2010 8:50 AM
Posted on February 1, 2010 08:50