Thursday, July 02, 2020

 

The Long Slow Demise of Buster Brown, Part 14: July to September 1918

The July 1918 strips are a good example of what I would have been for a long while calling the work of Outcault with an occasional minor assist from Ross. But is Ross getting better at aping Outcault's style? On the 7th we see a signature Ross pose in story panel 11, and on the 28th Tige adopts a Ross pose twice (panels 4 and 8). I find it hard to believe that this was the sum total of Ross' involvement, so I'm guessing that he's getting better able to throw us curveballs that look more like Outcault. If he's learned to draw Tige in Outcault's distinctive manner, I'm really losing an important element of my meager art-spotting toolkit.


July 7 1918

July 14 1918

July 21 1918

July 28 1918
On August 4 we get a page that seems to put my worries to rest. This is obviously mostly Ross work. Is it possible that Buster, Tige and Mary Jane are now being drawn by Ross but close enough to the Outcault standard that I fail to tell the difference? Sometimes Ross definitely still misses on these characters, but is that a true tell anymore, or a momentary lapse?

August 4 1918

After August 4th, we are back to what looks more like Outcault to me, but who's to say. The drawing is certainly less fussy than what Outcault used to produce, but it still has many of his distintive poses and stylistic flourishes with little in the way of obvious Ross-isms.

On the August 18 strip we get an enigmatic signature line, "I think this is pretty good,", along with a rather shaky Outcault signature. What does it mean? Is he complimenting Ross on a good ghosting job, or is he merely patting himself on the back for a good strip?

On a different note, I think the strip of the 11th is a real hoot.


August 11 1918

August 18 1918

August 25 1918
On September 1 we get a masthead that looks like vintage Outcault, over an at best indifferently drawn strip that has some telltale Ross-isms on Buster's face (one thing I look for is cheek pouches these days, as they are not something I associate with Outcault). If I had to make a bet, I'd say this masthead has been reused from an old strip.


September 1 1918

September 8 1918

September 15 1918

The last four panels of the September 22 strip are definitely Ross, the rest of the strip it's harder to tell.

September 22 1918

And finally on September 29, I'm calling this Ross in his 'deadline doom' mode. Buster's face is badly drawn, Tige is off-model, but Ross always has time for those frilly dresses.


September 29 1918


Comments:
Hey! This doesn't have anything to do with Buster Brown, but it does relate to some older posts on this blog and I wasn't sure if you would see the comment there.
I noticed several posts about Fay King while reading through the archives of this blog, and her bio mentioned that after February 1954, when she paid for "Bat" Nelson's funeral, her whereabouts were unknown. Someone on another comic strip forum found the following passenger list from a few months later, which shows her leaving for England: https://i.imgur.com/dsdkfom.jpg
I just thought you might find this interesting, since it gives more of an idea of what happened to King after her cartooning career ended.
 
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Wednesday, July 01, 2020

 

Happy Canada Day!



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Tuesday, June 30, 2020

 

The Long Slow Demise of Buster Brown, Part 13: April to June 1918

We start April 1918 with some definite Ross involvement, looks to me like Ross handled most everything except for Buster and Tige in this one.

April 7 1918
April 14 at first blush looks to be a very fine example of Outcault, including some great dialog, but I see Ross' hand on Mary Jane in story panel 7, and the dentist also comes across as a Ross-y kinda guy. Great strip, tho.

April 14 1918

Another good strip on the 21st is marred by indifferent art. Looks mostly like Outcault to me, but it is so slapdash I can't really tell. Did photographers really need to put their subjects on those head positioners as late as 1918? I'm thinking that went out with the horse and buggy.


April 21 1918

I'm guessing April 28 is all Outcault, but again the art is pretty unadorned.


April 28 1918

All the May strips look to me like all or mostly Outcault episodes. A real mix though, with some really fine Outcault work on many pages mixed in with barely journeyman stuff.


May 5 1918

May 12 1918

May 19 1918

May 26 1918

On June 2 it looks to me like Outcault did the first tier or so and then gradually relinquished the work to Ross. The gag of having Tige in a celluloid collar and tie goes precisely nowhere.


June 2 1918

On June 9 I'm guessing the lion's share of the page is by Ross, and he seems pretty rushed. Tige and Buster both go off-model several times.


June 9 1918
 The style is all Ross on June 16, but the execution is pretty darn awful. Did neither cartoonist give a darn about these strips anymore?


June 16 1918

Almost as bad is the 23rd, another seemingly all-Ross page.


June 23 1918
 And finally on the 30th it looks like Outcault stepped in to do the Tige figures maybe, but once again mostly Ross in deadline mode.


June 30 1918


Comments:
Re the head brace for photography: this site says the braces were used "well into the 20th century," so they were likely in use as of 1918. http://thephotopalace.blogspot.com/p/head-brace.html
 
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Monday, June 29, 2020

 

The Long Slow Demise of Buster Brown, Part 12: January to March 1918

Here we are in 1918, the year which Outcault's obituary seems to indicate would have been his last involvement. Are they correct? Well, let's take a look....

We start out the year with an odd strip. That cat, which certainly has personality plus, doesn't look at all to me like Outcault or Ross. The old lady also seems like a different style. Buster and Tige, though, seem like Outcault work.

January 6 1918
January 13 pretty much looks like an all-Outcault production to me.

January 13 1918
 Now here's an interesting strip. We get a visit from both Smithy and Eddie Loomis, but check out this kid who goes by the name Smiley Jones. If that isn't the Yellow Kid a few years older than we're used to, I'll eat my hat. This looks like an all-Outcault strip to me.

January 20 1918

January 27 is a real rush job, but I'm guessing still Outcault.

January 27 1918

After a long layoff, I finally see a little bit of Ross here on February 3. When those twins start to cry they seem to be drawn by Ross.  Earlier on the page I never would have thought of them as being at all 'Rossy'.


Back to what seems to me to be an all-Outcault strip on the 10th

February 10 1918

Tige is the star in this strip, which to me seems like Outcault.

February 17 1918
 The 24th looks like hurried Outcault to me until story panel 11, when Buster sure looks like he's drawn by Ross.

February 24 1918

I'm guessing that Ross did all the adult women in the March 3 strip, and maybe the man as well, and perhaps even some help with Buster and Mary Ann.

March 3 1918
 March 10 is an odd one. The masthead, usually where Outcault puts in a lot of effort, is quite badly drawn. The cow looks like nothing I'd expect Outcault or Ross to draw. Otherwise looks like Outcault to me.

March 10 1918
 Ross is definitely doing a lot of the work on the March 17 strip. It's also one of his favorite gags, where Buster dresses as a girl. Ross could not get enough of this theme.

March 17 1918
 Ross again, and it wouldn't surprise me if this is 90% him with just a few bits by Outcault.

March 24 1918
 The Sunday school teacher doesn't really look like an Outcault or Ross character to me, otherwise I'm guessing almost all Outcault.
March 31 1918


Comments:
I would swear that Smiley's head(s) in panels 5 thru 9 are pasted-in photostats of the head in panel 4.
 
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