
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Comics: Trog's Rufus and Flook




At age 21, Fawkes entered an art contest that was being judged by the Daily Mail cartoonist, Leslie Illingworth. Illingworth was impressed with Fawkes' work and got the young artist a job at the Daily Mail. Using his nickname, Trog, Fawkes created a comic strip about an imaginary furry creature named "Flook". It became an instant hit and Trog became the toast of the town. At a reception soon after its launch the Daily Mail's owner, Lady Rothermere asked him, "How is your lovely little furry thing?" Trog replied, "Fine thank you. How is yours?" The cartoonist had to beat a quick retreat after that quip, but admitted that he couldn't help himself when presented with such a perfect setup.

Trog worked with several writers on the strip over the years- Compton Mackenzie, George Melly and Humphrey Lyttleton among others- and the direction of the strip evolved from a light hearted fantasy for children to pointed political humor similar to Walt Kelly's Pogo. But the stories aren't the reason that Rufus and Flook are so interesting today- it's the unique drawings.

When I first ran across this strip, I admit that I really didn't know what to think about it. The drawings of the main character Flook were dumbfoundingly ignorant. But the incidental characters were wonderfully observed, sharp caricatures of British society at the time. And the backgrounds often included perfectly thought out compositions with impeccable architectural perspective and beautiful stylization of folliage. At first, this sharp contrast between ignorance and genius can be jarring. But after reading a while, the direct, simplistic looseness of the main characters and the planned and observed structure of the rest of the drawings don't clash because Trog's stylish sense of fun makes it all work.

Personally, I think it's a shame Fawkes isn't better known in the US. Perhaps the softspoken, rambling British tone of the stories and the topical nature of the satire doesn't come across at all any more, but those drawings- wow!

This story from early in the strip's run comes from an extremely rare paperback compilation, titled simply Flook...
ROMAN' IN THE GLOAMIN'


























Thanks
Stephen Worth
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
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Labels: comics, newspaper, trog

































6 Comments:
These are really cool. I like British cartoonists. I hope somebody sends you books of David Low, Philip Zec, and Carl Giles cartoons. That would be cool.
Excellent post - great to see some appreciation for Trog. Please post more, there is remarkably little available to see elsewhere so the more the better. Would recommend anyone picking up the Flook collections if you can find them - some of them are very rare and they can command high prices.
One thing though, last I heard Wally Fawkes is still alive! There's a picture of him playing live from last year at http://www.thecnj.co.uk/camden/2008/071708/gulliver071708.html if you're interested. If I'm wrong about this, apologies.
Thanks! The drawings are delightful. The shapes on those secondary characters are wildly original - Every page has something fresh to offer.
Would love to see more.
Thanks very much for this! I love Trog but i can't understand why there are no re-prints of this stuff, as he is one of the all-time greats. He should be better known here in the UK than he is.
Wow, I was never aware of this comic, please post more! :D
Boy did this bring back memories. I had to visit my grandparents on a daily basis to read Flook because my old man wouldn't have the paper it was in in the house. It was one of the best and most inventive UK strips around in the 1970's.
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