Donate!BOOKMARK our Homepage!
VOLUNTEERASIFACONTRIBUTEASIFAEXPLORE
LINK TO USASIFAJOIN ASIFAASIFAThanks!

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Biography: Al Capp 2- A CAPPital Offense

This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see reason number 2 on our The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for links to more great posts about print cartoonists.

Al Capp Fearless Fosdick
"They always want me to say who is the best writer in America today, and I can't think of any name but Al Capp... One of the symptoms or diagnostics of literature should be that it is read, that it amuses, moves, instructs, changes and criticizes people. And who in the world does that more than Capp? I think Capp may very possibly be the best writer in the world today." -John Steinbeck, 1953

Al Capp Fearless Fosdick
PLAYBOY: John Steinbeck once described you as "possibly the best writer in the world today". What's your reaction to that?

CAPP: I revere John Steinbeck far too deeply to question his literary judgment!" --Playboy Interview, 1965

Al Capp Fearless Fosdick
"Not many people know that I worked with Al Capp for a year at Terry-Toons on a cartoon adaptation of Fearless Fosdick. Capp is one of the great unsung heroes of comics. I've never heard anyone mention this, but Capp is 100% responsible for inspiring Harvey Kurtzman to create Mad magazine.

Just look at Fearless Fosdick- a brilliant parody of Dick Tracy with all those bullet holes and stuff. Then look at Mad's "Teddy and the Pirates", "Superduperman" or even "Little Annie Fanny". Forget about it. Slam dunk. Not taking anything away from Kurtzman who was brilliant himself, but Capp was the source for that whole sense of satire in comics. Kurtzman carried that forward and passed it down to a whole new crop of cartoonists, myself included.

Capp was a genius. You wanna argue about it? I'll fight ya, and I'll win." -Ralph Bakshi, 2008

Al Capp Fearless Fosdick
Li'l Abner's "ideel"- Fearless Fosdick- first made his bullet-riddled debut in 1942. As everyone knows, Capp's famous strip-within-a-strip began as a direct parody of Chester Gould's classic newspaper comic, Dick Tracy. But like all of Capp's creations, it soon developed into a multi-leveled satire of contemporary American society at large.

Al Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless FosdickFearless Fosdick provided a running commentary on, among other things, the lowly lives of policemen, the capriciousness of the general public, and the thankless role of society's "heroes". With Capp, as with Chaplin, there's always a social subtext to the fun, which in my opinion, separates the men from the boys in comedy. These themes are very much in evidence in our first Fosdick story pick, "The Poisoned Bean Case"...

Al Capp Fearless Fosdick
"The Poisoned Bean Case" is, simply put, one of Capp's masterpieces. It seems to be a special favorite with fans too, both for its astronomical body count and its sheer outrageousness. Believe it or not, this blood-drenched parody ran in family newspapers in the fifties, in Eisenhower's America, on Sundays, no less!

In the following brilliantly demented pages, no one is spared Capp's merciless needle. From the venality of the justice system to the crookedness of the media; from the corruption of big business to the fickleness and stupidity of a complacent populace. The diabolical plot, which concerns product tampering, presages the 1982 Tylenol case by some 30 years.

Al Capp Fearless Fosdick
As a cautionary note to readers encountering this story for the first time: you are hereby warned. It's impossible not to get swept up in the maelstrom of fury that's about to be unleashed. "The Poisoned Bean Case" doesn't so much unfold, as simply detonate! For comics fans who like their irony dark, raw and relentless- we proudly present Al Capp at or near the peak of his powers...

Al Capp Fearless Fosdick
Fearless Fosdick in...
THE POISONED BEAN CASE

Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick
Al Capp Fearless FosdickAl Capp Fearless Fosdick

TO BE CONTINUED...

Let me know what you think of this article in the comments.
-Mike Fontanelli, 2008

Al Capp Fearless Fosdick
For more on Al Capp, see... Al Capp Part One: Li'l Abner Without Apologies, Gene Byrnes' Complete Guide To Cartooning: Part One- Newspaper Comics and People On Paper (MGM/1945)

See also, Boodie Rogers' Babe Comics Part One, Part Two, and Part Three; Basil Wolverton On Cartoon Sounds Part One and Part Two; Jack Davis in Mad magazine, Jack Kirby in Not Brand Echh Number One, Marie Severn in Not Brand Echh Number Two, Forbush Man in Not Brand Echh Number Five, Parody: Whack Comics Part One and Part Two; Basil Wolverton's Powerhouse Pepper; Milt Stein's Supermouse Comics No. 4; Virgil Partch's Wild, Wild Women; Here We Go Again and Man The Beast; George Lichty's Grin and Bear It; Milt Gross Sunday Pages Part One, Part Two and Part Three; and Jim Tyer Funny Animal Comics


Stephen Worth
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
..

Labels: , , , ,

StumbleUpon Toolbar Stumble It!

6 Comments:

At 6:36 PM, Blogger The Magnetic Crow said...

Great stuff :) Al Capp has always been my father's favourite. As a child, I used to have chapters of Lil' Abner read to me at bedtime.

It's excellent to see recognition for such a standout literary figure.

 
At 2:39 AM, Blogger Chris said...

Love it! More, more!

 
At 6:22 AM, Blogger Ben said...

Love Al Capp. I read Lil Abner as kid & always liked to see a Fearless episode. Today that kind of satire would never get passed the politically correct protectors of our morality (they used to be called censors) He even satirized Political correctness before we knew what it was.

 
At 12:44 AM, Blogger Camari Xela said...

More beans!!! This story is very funn!

 
At 4:27 AM, Blogger amir avni said...

Thanks for introducing me to Fearless Fosdick, I wasn't aware of this comic before these posts. Besides being super-funny, It makes complete sense to me that this was the inspiration for MAD, and I agree that social satire separates men from boys in comedy.

 
At 10:27 PM, Blogger LeoBro said...

Thanks for posting this, Mike & Steve. Great stuff. So different from what's in the comics today. All of Capp's characters are unique and fully-realized individuals, even those that get shot in their first frame and never seen again.

Today, a comic artist learns to draw one kind of nose and he's done.

 

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home