Showing posts with label Salesman Sam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salesman Sam. Show all posts

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Energy Patterns Observed in a 1927 Screwball Salesman Sam Sunday by George Swan

Today I offer a nice paper scan of a very rare Salesman Sam Sunday by it's creator, George ("Swan") Swanson. I think this may be one of the last Sundays that Swan did before C.D. Small took over the series.

The page is a wonderful example of the streamlined, virtuoso cartooning style of George Swanson. Oddly bereft of its trademark background signs past the first two panels, this episode is all about movement and action.And simplification. The hands of Swan's characters are round blobs, feet are (Charles) Shulz-like black ovals, and the cityscape backgrounds are merely suggestive. The panels are filled with sweat drops, swirls, stars, movement lines, and sound effects. By 1927, Swan has mastered the screwball cartoon vernacular like few others.

March 27, 1927: One of the last Salesman Sam Sunday by George Swan .
C.D. Small would continue the strip for another 10 years or so.
(from the collection of Paul Tumey)

In last week's Salesman Sam essay, we looked at the movement of energy in a Sam by C.D. Small. I made the point that screwball comics have wild and unpredictable (if logical) directions of movement when compared to comics of other genres. Here's how the movements map out in today's Swan comic:


It's all about conflict and comically explosive resolution. The top tier gives us two stable panels, with solid left-to-right movement. The third panel in the top tier initiates a conflicting movement.

After this, we get a tier of relatively minor explosions of random movement. The exaggerated takes shown here would be a highlight in many other artist's strips, but Swan had a much greater range for presenting visual chaos, placing him in the neighborhood of Milt Gross and Bill Holman.

The 3rd tier delivers more building conflict, which continues into the first panel of the last tier. Then, the last two panels explore the energy with the greatest velocity and number of directions of all the panels, proving a satisfying resolution.

All the Best,
Paul Tumey

Saturday, June 23, 2012

C.D. Small's Salesman Sam in the Comic Books



Salesman Sam by C.D. Small, circa December, 1935.
Could that fireman's hat and ax be a nod
to fellow screwballer Bill Holman,
who started his famous screwball fireman
comic Smokey Stover in March, 1935?
Salesman Sam Saturday

New Salesman Sam screwball comics posted every Saturday!

OK girlies, here's look at the later Salesman Sam comics by C.D. Small, reprinted in comic books of the late 1930s.

But first, foo those 4 or 5 of you who follow this blog regularly, I'd like to announce the addition of our Mixed Nuts page. This will be a catch-all section for misc. screwball comics. See the link at the right side of this page.

I'd also like to announce a stupendous, major, incredible, and pretty good change in direction. I happen to be sitting on a small mountain of rare screwball comics. I've spent the first 5 months of this blog's existence writing in-depth articles about screwball comics and sharing lots of these, but the mountain is still pretty high. In an effort to reach a wider audience, and to put some of these great comics back into circulation, I've decided to make a series of daily posts that are shorter and mainly just present the comics themselves, with very brief notes (speshul tanx to the speshul reader who suggested this idea). I also need to reduce the height of this mountain of comics so I can get back to level ground, because I'm stuck here -- halp

You'll find the new weekly schedule at the top right of this page (Milt Gross Monday, Rube Goldberg Tuesday, etc.). Mark your calendars and stop by on the days that interest you -- these posts will only be up for limited amounts of time!

So, without further afoo, here's the first...

Salesman Sam Saturday

The SCREWBALL classic in early reprints

First Issue Cover
Dell's flagship reprint comic
book included
Salesman Sam strips by
C.D. Small from 1936-39
$alesman $am was created by George Swanson in 1922, who drew the first five years or so of the strip. In 1927, Swanson left the NEA syndicate and landed at Hearst's King Features, where he recreated the strip as High Pressure Pete.

Back at NEA, C.D. Small, a very talented cartoonist, doomed to only mimic the creations of others, took over Salesman Sam (the dollar signs were dropped at this point) and drew it until the strip's end in 1936.

However, the beautifully executed Salesman Sam enjoyed an extended lifespan for at least another 3 years in comic books after vanishing from newspapers. Dell Comics' monthly book of King Features comic strip reprints, The Funnies, included a handful of choice Salesman Sam Sundays in every issue until at least 1939.

Here are a few of the reprinted pages that show Small's cartooning chops. It's as if a great concert violinist was asked to step in for master jazz violinist Stephane Grappelli -- the result is technically impressive, but somehow lacking the spark of brilliance. Still, there is much screwball goodness to appreciate in Small's Salesman Sam -- enjoy!

from The Funnies # 2 
from The Funnies # 3
from The Funnies # 5
For more on the Swan/Small Salesman Sam story, click here.

More Salesman Sam reprints from The Funnies can be read on our Mixed Nuts page.

Screwily Yours,
Salesman Paul