Jul 7, 2009

Is This Cole? (WWII Cartoon, circa 1945)

On the inside front cover of a crude, crappy digest-sized one-shot publication we have an unsigned 1-panel gag cartoon (above) that I think could very well be the work of Jack Cole. What do you think?






First, let's look at the historical facts. The book, which was published by the Remington Morse Company, has a statement inside (shown above) that it was created and produced by the Harry "A" Chesler Jr. shop. Chesler ran a small group of comic book creatives and produced whole books that were then sold to other publishers. he was the first to create this arrangement, which was quickly replicated by others, including Will Eisner, Joe Simon, and Jack Kirby.

Cole's first comic book work when he moved to New York city with his new bride in 1936 was with the Chesler shop. It was through Chesler that Cole worked on Silver Streak, as well as numerous other short pieces and one-pagers. So there's a strong connection.

The book itself, The Adventures of Riggin' Bill #1, has no publication date. A page on the inside includes the phrase "remember Pearl Harbor!" so we can assume it was published between December, 1941 (when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and started a war with the United States) and 1945 (when the war ended).

During this time, Cole worked primarily for Quality Comics, having moved on from the Chesler shop. From 1942-44, Harry Chesler joined the American military and his output of comic books ground to a halt. He did, however, create several ten cent digest-sized books, such as this one, intended primarily for a military audience. After all, it was well-known the "A" in Harry "A" Chesler stood for "Anything."

Did Chesler call up Cole and ask him for a gag panel for a wartime book he was creating?

If not Chesler, perhaps it was Gaspano "Gus" Ricca, art director at Remington Morse that bought the cartoon from Cole. Ricca, a comic artist himself, created a fine series of bizarre and macabre covers for Chesler books such as Dynamic, Scoop, and Punch.

Take a look at the one-panel gag cartoon at the top of this posting. The lovely girl model is addressing the painter, a "Mr. Ricca," who can only be the art director, Gus Ricca. We know that Ricca became an art director at Remington Morse, and the Chesler shop around 1945, so it's likely the date of this cartoon is circa 1945.

However, Chesler is famous for creating new titles stocked with material he had previously published. I wonder if perhaps this cartoon was either published somewhere else earlier, or if maybe it was a "warm-up" Cole did one day while working in the Chesler shop, only intended as amusement for the office, but nonetheless collected and saved by the shrewd Chesler. We'll never know for sure, but it's fun to speculate.

It makes sense for Cole to have drawn a sexy gag panel, as he regularly supplemented his comic book income with beautiful ink wash one-panels he wrote and drew for various men's magazines, including the digest-sized Humorama line.

So much for the historical evidence supporting Cole's authorship of this swell gag cartoon.

Now, let's consider the art itself. There are a couple of tip-offs that this could be Cole.

First off is the sexy woman. Cole could draw alluring females better than almost any other cartoonist of his time. The woman in this panel stikes me as being exactly the type of female Cole did so well. Plus, there's something about the way the woman's hair is drawn here, that seems particularly Cole-like.
Also, Cole often used simple patterns as an art element in his art. Consider the striking use of the black-and-white striped prison uniforms in his DEATH PATROL series in Military Comics. In this cartoon, the painter is wearing boldly striped pants.

Cole's work often distorted shapes. Especially squares and rectangles. Here. in the shapes of the window and the drawing board, we see the artist has distorted them, making them seem more visually interesting, and comical.

Lastly, Cole was quite fond of drawing the bottoms of his character's shoes. In this cartoon, instead of drawing the painter's feet on the ground, as most would do, the artist has drawn the feet sitting askew, so we see the bottoms of his shoes, which is a far more lively and interesting pose.We also get to see the bottoms of the upturned model's sexy high heels, too. Maybe Cole had a shoe/foot fetish.

All in all, if you'll pardon the pun, it's not a, ahem, stretcher to say this is a previously uncredited (as far as I know) gag cartoon by Jack Cole! What do YOU think?
Late-Breaking News!
We just recieved an email that sheds more light on this Jack Cole mystery from Ger Apeldoorn, TV writer and comic book historian. Be sure to check out Der's incredible blog, The Fabuleous Fifties.

Here's Ger's email:
"I can't seem to comment on your excellent blog. Here's my comment to your latest post:
I have several more cartoons in this style and from this period from a similar Chesler produced book on my blog. My guess is Chesler tried to syndicate war related cartoon material to (army) newspapers and got Cole to do a few as well."

Here's a link to Der's excellent posting: http://allthingsger.blogspot.com/search?q=chesler
In this post, Ger provides some great information and 3 more one-panel gags that he attributes to Cole, from Myrth of a Nation, another Chesler-produced digest magazine aimed at a military audience, including this beauty, which is very similar to the gag cartoon at the top of this posting:

And here's a color cartoon from the interior of the book. Note that "Jake" was also one of the pen names Cole used for his pin-up cartoons for the Humorama line.


There's one more gem from the Cole mine waiting for you at Ger's wonderful blog here. With these additional finds by Ger that are cetainly Cole's work, I think we can safely say the cartoon at the top of this posting is, indeed a Jack Cole cartoon! Thanks, Ger!

Jul 3, 2009

Jack Cole Bonanza at Fabuleous Fifties Blog!


Dutch television writer and comic book collector and historian, Ger Apeldoorn, has a wonderful blog on the great old comics called The Fabuleous Fifties. Currently, Ger offers 8 valuable, vicariously vertigo-inducing postings on Jack Cole here.

Just in case you're hesitating to jump over to a new blog, let me give you a Cole-like SHOVE in this direction. Ger has posted beautiful scans of a wonderful MIDNIGHT story, 10 pages of Cole's WINDY BREEZE 1-pagers from National Comics, and some of his late-career horror stories from Web of Evil.

As if that weren't enough, he also shares from his own collection 3 rare color Sundays of BETSY AND ME that were not included in the recent Fantagraphics reprint book of Cole's newspaper comic strip and last major work (as well as an informed review of the book).

You'll find lots of great comics and insightful articles there. Be sure to check out the 40+ postings on one of my favorite little-known guys, Quality comics writer/artist and editor Gill Fox, who was a friend of Jack Cole.

What are you doing still reading this... get on over there!

Jun 23, 2009

Gold Thirsty Dogs (Blue Ribbon #3, Jan 1940)


Story presented in this post:
Blue Ribbon Comics #3 (Archie, Jan 1940) Crime on The Run (Story and art by Jack Cole)

In his second and last CRIME ON THE RUN story, Jack Cole delivered a wholly engrossing and exciting story. This time, the setting is in 1932 Los Angeles. As with the first story, Cole has made an effort to capture a few period details, as shown in the 1932 LA Times photo below of an LAPD policeman and plainclothes homicide detectives. Cole got the 3-piece suit right, although he gave his policemen jackets, which appears to be incorrect, based on this photo. One of his detectives has a pencil thin mustache, just like the detective in this photo.

Crime stories were already a big part of American movies and radio by 1939. The famous gangster film, Scarface, came out in 1932, and a chain gang of gangster films followed in its bloody footsteps. Lucky Strike cigarettes sponsored a popular nationwide radio program in ther 1930's dramatizing true life FBI cases. Cole was perhaps a bit ahead of his time by bringing the winning combination of moralism and graphic violence to comic books. Generally, the popular wave of American crime comics is considered to have begun in 1942, with the start of Charles Biro's Crime Does Not Pay series. (By the way, Biro drew the cover of Blue Ribbon Comics #3, a superhero scene, from which this story is taken).

As you might expect from Jack Cole, this story has a few quirky details. In the opening pages, the criminals are particularly sadistic. There's some great dialogue, including a detective referring to the criminals as "gold thirsty dogs," which I think would make a great title for a crime novel. On page 3, one of the criminal gang is revealed to be a black man, who is immediately shot to death and referred to as "the negro." Check out the cool drawing at the top of page 6 in which we get an aerial view of the climactic car chase. It was drawings like this that set Jack Cole above most of his peers. Cole was completely committed to the story.

The story delivers quite a bang when one of the victims of a bank robbery becomes so enraged, he grabs a gun, kills two of the criminals and chases the rest down the street. Look at how in this sequence (on page 3), Cole expands the panels out and pulls the camera back to sweeping long shots to emphasize the drama of the action. Cole would return to the true crime venue in 1947, designing and editing True Crime Comics (Magazine Village), in which his own stories would stand out as highlights of comic book history. In this January 1940 story, Jack Cole's gift is starting to accelerate and crime is literally on the run!









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