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Can you help ID these comics panels?

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Luc Sante, Paris Review    Posted date:  March 12, 2016  |  2 Comments


The Paris Review—to which I’ve had a lifetime subscription since the late ’70s—has provided me with yet another comics-related mystery. Over the years, they’ve published many collages which have used comics imagery, such as this one, by poet John Ashbery, which incorporated one of the most famous faces of all and so was immediately identifiable by me, and this, by an artist known as Jess, for which I needed help tracking down the original source.

In the current Spring 2016 issue, to accompany an interview with Luc Sante, the magazine published a flyer the writer had created in 1980 promoting a gig by the band the Del-Byzanteens. As you can see below, the promo repurposed panels from comics which seem to me to have the feel of comic strips rather than comics books, though I might be wrong about that, and I could instead be perceiving the style difference between UK and U.S. comics.

Of course, I could easily be wrong about it all.

Take a look and tell me what you think.

LucSanteParisReview

So?

I have no idea who the original artist might be here. Do you?

UPDATE: Well, that was fast!

Sean Howe, author of the wonderful Marvel Comics: The Untold Story as well as the upcoming Agents of Chaos (about the founder of High Times) reached out directly to Sante—because Sean knows everyone—and was told:

They’re from a stack of promotional offprints I found when I was working at the Strand, aimed at newspapers and syndicates, for a strip called “Drift Marlo,” by Tom Cooke. Never having seen the strip anywhere else, I’d always assumed it had gone nowhere, but I was wrong …

Sante also provided a link to an entry on Ger Apeldoorn’s blog which included some of the strips from which Sante created his flyer. Including this one, the center panel of which provided the central panel above.

DriftMarlo

Mystery solved! Thanks, guys!





2 Comments for Can you help ID these comics panels?


Ger Apeldoorn

And indeed – before I knew Sean referred to me, Drift Marlo was the strip that occurred to me. A strip that was know to me mostly because it was included in The Mennomannee Falls Gazette, a weekly paper by Mike Tiefenbagger, which appeared in the seventies and reprinted all current and a load of older adventure strips in pristine condition (by paying for them and using syndicate proofs). So that actually may have been the source.

    Scott

    Ah, the The Menomonee Falls Gazette — I remember it well, and bought almost every issue. For some reason, however, Drift Marlo … didn’t stick.



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