Sunday, November 3, 2013

Torchy by Gill Fox

Torchy by Gill Fox

Torchy is a comic strip and, primarily, a series of comic books featuring the ingenue Torchy Todd, created by the American "good girl art" cartoonist Bill Ward during 1944. The character was ranked 97th of the 2011 Comics Buyer's Guide's "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list. After Bill Ward's drafting into the World War II military, the artist created the tall, blond, busty ingenue Torchy Todd for the base newspaper of Brooklyn's Fort Hamilton, where Ward was deployed. The comic strip in which she featured soon became syndicated to other Army newspapers worldwide.Torchy made her comic-book debut as main character of a backup feature of Quality Comics' Doll Man (Spring 1946). Her feature was later published in all but two issues through (September 1950), resuming in (August 1951) through (October 1953), as well as in Modern Comics (Sept. 1946 - Oct. 1950). A solo series, Torchy, had six issues (Nov. 1949 - Sept. 1950), some with art by Gill Fox.Several Torchy stories, including some Fort Hamilton comic strips, were reprinted in Innovation Comics' 100-page, squarebound trade paperback Bill Ward's Torchy, The Blonde Bombshell (Jan. 1992). Others have been reprinted in The Betty Pages (1987); AC Comics anthology Good Girl Art Quarterly (Summer 1990), #10 (Fall 1992), (Winter 1993), and (Winter 1994), and in AC's America's Greatest Comics (circa 2003). Comic Images released a set of Torchy trading cards in 1994. Ward drew an original cover featuring Torchy for Robert M. Overstreet's annual book The Comic Book Price Guide (1978).
(wikipedia.org)


2728 2930 31 32 33

Ella Cinders by Bill Conselman/Charlie Plumb

Ella Cinders had been created by writer Bill Conselman and artist born Missourian Charlie Plumb. Plumb was a cartoonist on the Los Angeles Times when he teamed up with a reporter named Bill Conselman to produce Ella Cinders. The partners tried selling the strip for a year with no success; they offered it free to their home newspaper, the Times, and were rejected. The Cinderella tale was begun in a daily on 1 June 1925, syndicated by United Features, and added a Sunday page in 1927. The Ella Cinders comic strip closed, showing its age, on 2 December 1961, after 33 years of popularity.
Charlie Plumb, a vagabond who carried a cartoonist kit wherever he went, enjoyed the good life in Florida and Mexico. He left the property in the care of an “understudy” for six months while he toured Samoa, returning to Hollywood with the resulting book (“Tin Can Island”) in hand. Conselman worked in Hollywood as well writing for movies for the likes of Bing Crosby. Colleen Moore played the title role in the Ella Cinders movie, the first comic strip to be filmed. Ella Cinders began as a poor girl, slave to a cruel stepmother and two domineering sisters, Prissy and Lotta Pill, just like in the fairy tale. Her young brother Blackie shared the home. Ella’s epic search for her Prince Charming was a soap opera and an adventure strip. She won a beauty contest which earned her free ticket to Hollywood where she worked as an extra for awhile until she met a big movie magnate who, it turns out, was her long-lost father Pa Cinders, on the lam from his harsh-tongued wife. Ella became a big movie star, made one fortune, lost it, almost married Tommy Harris, discovered a lost country where it was still the 1890’s… The strip had gripping continuities and was beautifully drawn (until the feeble Fred Fox took over the strip) often approaching a dark surrealism. Ella herself, a freckle-faced gamin, had the wide eyed look of a silent movie star.
(john-adcock.blogspot.com)
Ella Cinders 1926





Ella Cinders 19260920-22 Ella Cinders 19260923-25 Ella Cinders 19260927-29 Ella Cinders 19260930-1002 Ella Cinders 19261004-06 Ella Cinders 19261007-09 Ella Cinders 19261011-13 Ella Cinders 19261014-16 Ella Cinders 19261018-20 Ella Cinders 19261021-23 Ella Cinders 19261025-27 Ella Cinders 19261028-30 Ella Cinders 19261101-03 Ella Cinders 19261104-06 Ella Cinders 19261108-10 Ella Cinders 19261111-13 Ella Cinders 19261115-17 Ella Cinders 19261118-20