1916 starts off with a seemingly all-Outcault strip, a good gag well told but the art is rather indifferent:
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1/2/1916 |
On January 9, though, Penny Ross seems to have done the figures of the two guests in story panels 1 and 11, and maybe others?
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1/9/1916 |
On January 16, Outcault once again draws indifferently, but breaks the fourth wall in a fun strip:
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1/16/1916 |
January 23 has Outcault drawing better than he has all month.
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1/23/1916 |
On January 30 Outcault is drawing well enough, but the script is instantly forgettable. Well, except for the horse threatening to have a cow bite Buster on the eye. My goodness!
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1/30/1916 |
February 3 offers us a very energetic action page. Seems to me Grandpa's poses are more like something I'd see from Ross than Outcault, but the art style still seems Outcault. Maybe Ross did layouts?
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2/6/1916 |
February 13 looks like Outcault except for that strange delivery boy. That doesn't look like Outcault or Ross to me.
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2/13/1916 |
February 20 seems like a tailor-made page for Ross's help. He's so good at depicting women in action like this. Yet I see no evidence of his style at all.
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2/20/1916 |
On February 27 I'm not seeing any evidence of Ross, but these first two months of 1916 just in general seem rushed-looking.
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2/27/1916 |
Here's Ross again, this time supplying the body and even at least once (story panel 2, and maybe 3 and 5) the face of Buster Brown. What makes this doubly weird is that Outcault is a character in this strip. Why would he get a ghost to draw a strip in which he appears? Just seems very counterintuitive to me. Did Outcault draw himself !?!?!
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3/5/1916 |
We seem to be back to Outcault on the 12th, but it is very poor work. Some of the faces are just awful.
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3/12/1916 |
Another apparent Outcault production on the 19th, this time showing considerably more effort, though the faces are still rather simply drawn. .
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3/19/1916 |
On March 26 Outcault introduces a new character, Smithy. Smithy manages to out-prank even Buster, all while maintaining an over-the-top sunny attitude toward his victims. Poor Buster can't figure out whether to love or hate his new neighbor. Looks like Outcault throughout to me.
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3/26/1916 |
# posted by Allan Holtz @ 8:00 AM