Tuesday, February 19, 2008

 

Obscurity of the Day: Rufus McGoofus


Joe Cunningham was a journeyman cartoonist who spent most of his career kicking around at the Philadelphia papers. His earliest comic strip series were at the North American, but his most successful, Rufus McGoofus, came after he switched over to the Ledger.

Joe may not have learned cartooning at the Landon school, but you'd never know it from his style. It was prototypical Landon and never really got much better over his long career. Cunningham did a lot of sports cartooning, and any minor flash of brilliance, or at least pushing the envelope of basic competence, came in that venue. Rufus McGoofus (also various titled Rufus M'Goofus for no particular reason) started as a mascot of sorts in Cunningham's sports cartoons before getting a berth in his own comic strip. The feature was, as can be seen in this better than average example, hastily drawn with gags that rarely rose above jokebook level.

Cunningham drew the strip first as a daily starting November 6 1922 in the Evening Ledger. A Sunday strip was added on January 28 1923; it appeared in the Public Ledger (the morning and Sunday issued paper). The daily ran for nearly three years, ending on May 16 1925, while the Sunday soldiered on a little longer, ending September 6 of that year.

Rufus came out of retirement a few years later as the second banana in a short-lived revival, but we'll cover that in another post one of these days.

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Comments:
Hello, Allan---RUFUS M'GOOFUS moved over to the Public Ledger's brand-new tabloid "The Illustrated Sun" on it's second day, May 18, 1925. Cunningham's knee-slapper ran there until Sept.11, 1925. --Cole Johnson.
 
Thanks Cole! I was missing out on nearly 4 months of hilarity!

--Allan
 
I came across a Joe Cunninham who worked for AP in 1946. Could it be the same?
 
My Grandfather is on IMDB was a successful movie treatment writer, Actor, original Friers club pannelist,
daily Radio show "Hey Joe, what do you know?", coined by Edward G. Robinson in the movie Kid Galahad 1937.
 
Multitalent runs in the family,
Humor is our cornerstone,
Art is so others can see inside our imagination,
Words are to be poetic, enticing and Instill the feeling of being there...
I wish I could have known him and I keep the family traits alive -love
 
Joe Cunningham was the father of my cousin's husband Jack. I'm looking for Lois and Jack's children. Can you help?
 
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