Showing posts with label almalgamated press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label almalgamated press. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Friday, January 18, 2013
English Comics Diversion: Tobruk Original Art Boards
The Lion Summer Spectacular Epic Holiday Special featured comic and prose adaptions of films from the late sixties. Batman, James Bond: You Only Live Twice, Thunderbirds, and more were featured along with an Oliver Passingham (1925-2003) adaption of the Arthur Hiller film, TOBRUK. Passingham's career started on newspaper strips such as Lesley Shane, Rick Martin, Jane Fortune and Sally Marsh during the fifties. Reprints of his Lesley Shane newspaper strips by Amalgamated Press led to work on Rick Random, School Friend and other Amalgamated titles. In the sixties Passingham commenced work with DC Thomson where he would freelance for a further 33 years. During the seventies Passingham traveled, living in the Canaries, on the French Riviera, Monte Carlo and a year in Sydney, Australia during 1980, eventually returning to London in 1990. During this time he continued producing work for DC Thomson until his retirement in 1993.
Click for larger view
The original board of the first page of Passingham's TOBRUK adaption is comprised of a photostat reproduction of the Tobruk movie poster as a header, a moody night scene depicted in inky washes, and two panels showing frogmen sabotaging a french freighter, depicted with ink line drawings and white paint highlights. Upon examining the art-board I found Passingham had originally depicted the entire scene in washes as shown below with the bottom two panels still visible under the pasted on replacement.
Click for larger view
My presumption for the redrawn panels is that Passingham may have been compelled by editorial to redraw the characters to resemble their movie counterparts. He certainly nails the likeness of star George Peppard in the bottom panel close up. In those days of no video or internet reference Passingham did a fine job of capturing the scale of the movie and compressing it into the limits of a comic anthology.
Click for larger view
Trailer for TOBRUK starring Rock Hudson, George Peppard and Nigel Green.
Sources: Lion Summer Spectacular: Epic cover - http://www.comicpriceguide.co.uk/uk_comic.php?tc=lionsum , Oliver Passingham biographical notes - http://petergraycartoonsandcomics.blogspot.com.au/2009/05/oliver-passingham-exhibition-at-arundel.html (Written by Peter Hansen © 2005)
Monday, May 28, 2012
John Joseph McNamara
John McNamara self portrait showing travel
between Woking (England) and Wellington (New Zealand) 1969
John McNamara was born 18th April 1918 and began his illustration career in his teens drawing caricatures of film, sporting and local personalities for numerous magazines including Paramount Theatre of Stars (1935), Standard (1936), Radio Record, New Zealand Sporting Life and Referee, Junior for NZ, Boys and Girls (1937-38), Clarion (1938), Cappicade (1937-39) and Katipo (1940). McNamara was a member of the New Zealand Cartoonist's Association which appears to have only existed for several years prior to World War Two.
Life among the Japanese at Featherston. The New Zealand Listener, 11 January 1944.
After the War McNamara was Prinicipal cartoonist for Wellington morning daily The Southern Cross (1956 - 1951). McNamara's cheeky little Maori character was a recurring feature of the paper.
McNamara moved to England in 1950 and found
work in British newspapers. The full extent of McNamara's work in England is unknown. McNamara worked for Amalgamated
Press drawing issues of Thriller Comics, ranging from adaptations of Westward Ho!, The Red Badge of Courage and Hopalong Cassidy to the adventures of Dick Turpin and Robin Hood. Two other early
strips possibly published in the Daily Mail featured
"Bats" Belfry, which had a horse racing background and involved bet
setting and detective work, and an adaption of C. S. Forester's
character Horatio Hornblower.
From the mid fifties to the early seventies Mcnamara illustrated the newspaper strip Paul Temple based on the popular BBC radio serial. McNamara died in Surrey in February 2001, aged 82.
Original art featured in Southern Cross newspaper (1946-1951)
Caricature of radio broadcaster Colin Scrimgeour 1937
One of the most popular crime series of the 1950s and 1960s was Francis
Durbridge's Paul Temple. Featured in the London Evening News since 1951, originally drawn by Alfred Sindall and subsequently by Bill Bailey with McNamara assuming illustration duties from
1954 until 1971. In the final years of the strip McNamara adjusted the look of his lead character to resemble Francis Matthews, who portrayed Temple in the Paul Temple BBC
TV series (1969-71).
Steve Holland has serialised two Paul Temple adventures by John McNamara and Francis Durbridge on his Bear Alley Blog.
McNamara's work on Paul Temple is not generally available in print although many of his stories can be purchased from the All Devon Comic Collectors Club. A Society dedicated to preserving the sadly neglected English newspaper strips, The ADCCC are authorised to sell booklet reprints of Paul Temple and other strips exclusively to their membership. Details are available from The Newspaper Comic Strip Library website.
Sources: http://illustrationartgallery.blogspot.com.au/2010/11/john-mcnamara.html , http://tapuhi.natlib.govt.nz/ , Peter Hartung , Bear Alley Blog. The Unauthorised Version A Cartoon History of New Zealand 1840 - 1987 2nd edition - Ian F. Grant.
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