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MICHAEL H. PRICE: Alley Oop’s Stagebound Texas Homecoming

MICHAEL H. PRICE: Alley Oop’s Stagebound Texas Homecoming

 

He’s got a chauffeur that’s a genuine dinosaur…

And he can knuckle yo’ head before you count to four.

– Dallas Frazier

“Alley Oop” (1960)

 

The formidable dinosaur-replica standing guard at the entrance to the Museum of Science & History in Fort Worth, Texas is a native Southwesterner in more ways than one. The creature goes by the academic name of Acrocanthosaurus atokensis, and as such it was not discovered until around 1950.

But a Fort Worth cartoonist named Vincent T. Hamlin had in fact discovered that unknown monster in the fertile substrata of his imagination – almost a generation’s span before the first Real World unearthing of any fossil remains. Hamlin called the creature by less of a mouthful of a name, and he made Dinny the Dinosaur a prominent player in a rip-snorting comic strip called Alley Oop, about a prehistoric Everyman. Dinny’s resemblance to the Acrocanthosaurus, or high-spined lizard, is uncannily prophetic.

This tidbit of provincial history took on a manifold relevance a couple of years ago with a smart accident of timing. No sooner had the Museum of Science & History opened its epic-caliber Lone Star Dinosaurs gallery, than Fort Worth’s Hip Pocket Theatre launched a stage adaptation of Alley Oop, in August of 2005. The bold juxtaposition of provocative science-fact with adventurous science-fantasy is one of those nowhere-but-Texas coincidences that would leave Vince Hamlin beaming with pride. If he were still around to do any beaming, that is.

In the interest of B.F.D. (Belated Full Disclosure), I should mention that I hold a stake in all these developments. I composed the musical score for Hip Pocket’s Alley Oop. My own book of prehistorical lore, a restoration of the late George E. Turner’s 1950s dinosaur comic strip The Ancient Southwest (TCU Press), had its rollout at the Science & History Museum. And V.T. Hamlin (1900-1993) was my first major-league mentor in the cartooning profession. Sooner or later, everything comes full-circle.

After all, it was the West Texas landscape, with its outcroppings of prehistoric remains and its air of primeval antiquity, that had given the Iowa-born Hamlin an inspiration for Alley Oop, ’way back during the 1920s. He was working as a newsroom cartoonist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram at the time, producing a comics-panel series called The Panther Kitten, a chronicle of the ups and downs of a tenacious baseball team called the Fort Worth Cats. And Hamlin’s nearness to the natural history of West Texas became a springboard to Alley Oop.

“Y’know, I really created the blueprint for Alley Oop there at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram,” Hamlin told me in 1990. The occasion involved Frank Stack’s and my efforts to compile and annotate a set of Alley Oop reprints at Kitchen Sink Press. Hamlin added: “Well, I suppose I had been drawing the guy who would become Oop ever since I was a kid.

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System of a down

System of a down

Even if you have a pretty new computer these days, you might be out of luck when it comes to new diversions.

A brand-new web-only science fiction series called Sanctuary has debuted, and I couldn’t even get the preview to play on my new Macbook without it freezing and reloading four times in two minutes.  And that’s with the most updated version of Flash.

And Blizzard has just announced StarCraft II — which also freezes up the machine when we try to play the trailer.

Heck, I can’t even grab any artwork to show you, it’s all Flash and fancy stuff.  If you think your machine can take it, you now have the links.

Have I mentioned there are tons of computer users (like my mom) still on dial-up?

Glyph winners announced

Glyph winners announced

He may be a bad, bad man, but he’s a good, good comic.

Derek McCulloch and Shepherd Hendrix’s Stagger Lee garnered four trophies at last night’s Glyph Comic Awards, which signalled the opening of the East Coast Black Age of Comics Convention (ECBACC) in Philadelphia.

The list of nominees is here; the winners appear below.  Congratulations to everyone!

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The Big ComicMix Broadcast watches the tube

The Big ComicMix Broadcast watches the tube

The Big ComicMix Broadcast slides into the weekend with a wrap up of the big week of TV News, the scoop on a few new variant covers to hunt down, more things to watch on the web and the return of two popular indy comics. Plus we sit down with former DC superstar DAN MISHKIN and get the story on a new line of young reader books done by some very familiar comic pros.

And if that wasn’t enough, The Big ComicMix Broadcast digs up – Tony Danza! All you have to do is (all together now) PRESS THE BUTTON!

Bowdlerized Clip from Tex Avery’s Droopy

Bowdlerized Clip from Tex Avery’s Droopy

It’s been a while since I’ve seen truly interesting Saturday morning cartoons, so when I came across this, I thought I’d share it with you. This is a clip from Tex Avery’s Droopy’s Good Deed and is prefaced with a WARNING: NOT SAFE FOR WORK.

l can understand why this was cut from the versions of the cartoons I was raised on as a kid (cut right after the explosion) but it amazes me that it took me this long to even know that this existed.

We’re including the full cartoon after the jump, which has a few other snippets that seem unfamiliar to me. Enjoy.

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MARTHA THOMASES: Hey, Kids! Comics!

MARTHA THOMASES: Hey, Kids! Comics!

Once a week, I volunteer in the pediatric department of a local hospital. I teach knitting to kids and caregivers. I’d like to say I do this because I’m a spiritual person, more evolved than you – better, in fact – but that’s not true. I do it because it’s the best part of my week, and whatever problems I might have in my adult life disappear when I spend a few hours with these kids. It gives me a chance to talk about color and texture and sheep instead of war and money and politics.

Because I go to the hospital on Wednesdays, I stop on the way at the local comic book near the subway for my weekly fix. The subway ride is long enough to read at least one book, and sometimes I get uptown early enough to sit in a playground and read more, weather permitting.

For the past few months, when I’ve bought a Simpsons comic or the Jonny DC Legion series, I’ve given them away at the hospital. Again, this isn’t altruism, but efficiency. There are enough comics in my apartment without adding any extras.

I’d give them all away, but most comics are too serialized to give away at random, and it is not my wish to see these kids in the hospital every week. It would be better for them to get better and go home. And I’m not giving a kid Garth’s Wormwood, no matter what.

This may surprise you, but children are excited to get comics. They like them. Even in a room filled with computers and video games and flat screen televisions (and flowers and get well cards and relatives), kids put down what they’re doing and start leafing through the pages, looking at the colorful pictures.

For more than twenty years, those of us who love comics have insisted that the medium is one that can support great literature and complex ideas. We’re right. We’ve said “Comics aren’t just for kids,” and that’s true. Just as prose can be written for different audiences, graphic storytelling can reach many different audiences and tastes.

And yet, for some reason, a lot of people think that comics shouldn’t be for kids. I’m not just talking about the arts police, the ones who think every kind of entertainment needs a rating and a warning sticker. When I worked at a major comics publisher, my boss (who was a vice-president of marketing) once explained to me how the company would make plenty of money if no kid ever bought another comic, and our audience was exclusively males in the prized 18-to-25 demographic.

Even those who aren’t in it for the money often think that comics for kids aren’t necessary. In the early days of the direct market, when there were suddenly all kinds of comics for all kinds of niche tastes (“The Good Old Days”), I would often go to a local store with my toddler son. I’d buy a variety of comics, including a fair number of independents, but the emphasis for me has always been super-heroes. The clerk would sneer at me as he added up the prices on the colorful covers. “I don’t read this crap,” he would say. “I prefer the more challenging literature. Like Love and Rockets.”

No disrespect meant to Los Bros Hernandez, whose work I admire greatly, but I don’t find them to be the ultimate literary expression available to humanity (nor do they, I suspect). And why should I feel defensive about my purchases? It’s no surprise to me that this store is no longer in business. The stores that survive in the competitive Manhattan market are the ones that understand that all kinds of customers enjoy all kinds of comics.

Even these good comic book stores have relatively few comics for kids. American publishers aren’t publishing them. Manga is great, but there’s an awful lot of it, with lots of extended stories, and it’s hard for a newbie to jump in without a guide.

Comics may not be just for kids anymore, but do we have to shut them out?

Writer and creator of Marvel Comics’ Dakota North and contributor to their Epic Illustrated, Martha Thomases also has toiled for such publishers as DC Comics and NBM before becoming Media Queen of ComicMix.com.

Doohan, Cooper found at last

Doohan, Cooper found at last

The ashes of astronaut Gordon Cooper and Star Trek actor James "Scotty" Doohan were recovered today in New Mexico in the designated recovery zone, 20 days after they were shot into space for their brief post-mortum flight. Generally speaking, UP Aerospace of Connecticut doesn’t have such a hard time finding the payload, but, generally speaking, the payload is rarely this ironic. It’s not quite like losing the car keys.

Nonetheless, it’s good to have these two heroes back on Earth.

 

 

Glyphs kicking off ECBACC

Glyphs kicking off ECBACC

This weekend Temple University in Philadelphia, PA is hosting the annual East Coast Black Age of Comics Convention, but itf you look at the poster you’ll note that the first event, the Glyph Comic Awards recognizing "the best in comics made by, for, and about people of color from the preceding calendar year," is actually taking place at the African American Museum on 701 Arch Street.

While ECBACC is still fairly new, their online presence could use a bit of beefing up — nowhere in the website is there a schedule of events or panels, even though there are some intriguing teasers about workshops.  Nor does the AAMP even have the Glyphs listed on their calendar of events; I only found out the start time (7PM) from Mikhaela Reid’s blog (her fiance Makesha Wood is up for the Rising Star award). 

But from what I’ve heard of ECBACC, they more than make up for the lack of online detail with their in-person organizational presence.  ComicMix looks forward to hearing about all the details from our intrepid correspondents!

 

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New film festival set for Abu Dhabi

New film festival set for Abu Dhabi

Hot on the heels of announcements that Marvel and Nickelodeon will develop theme parks in Dubai, Variety reports that Abu Dhabi, another member of the United Arab Emirates, will host a film festival in October this year.  The announcement was made by several officials, including Sheik Sultan bin Tahnoon al Nahyan, a member of the royal family.  The crown prince, Sheik Mohammed bin Zayed al Nahyan, approved the event.

Dubai already has Dubai Studio City, set up as a filmmaking hub.  The first soundstages are scheduled to open in December when, coincidentally, the Dubai Film Festival takes place.

Ben Turpin gawks at Hillbilly Loves Slaves

Ben Turpin gawks at Hillbilly Loves Slaves

If you’ve been wondering what happened to the visage of late comedian Ben Turpin, who briefly graced our Big ComicMix Broadcast announcements, well, it turns out he’s got a new job.

ComicMix columnist (and writer of the forthcoming horror graphic novel Fishhead) Michael H. Price has sent along what has got to be the greatest record album cover since the Mothers of Invention’s Weasels Ripped My Flesh.  Michael says:

Saltlick, Texas’ most notorious bluegrass band strikes again. Yes, and I knew I must have a good reason for hanging on to all those he-man adventure magazines my Dad had accumulated." Hillbilly Love Slaves of the Fourth Reich is a followup to the band’s big debut, Face Only A Mother Could Love.