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Artist identification thread

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topic icon Author Topic: Artist identification thread  (Read 17243 times)

Robb_K

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Re: Artist identification thread
« Reply #125 on: August 03, 2025, 06:29:39 AM »


This is really out of my League.
(1) But, seems to me that he would have drawn the whole story rather than just pages 2 and 6.
My feeling was that the gag was that the bird swore or sang rude songs.  The 'Prof' is royally annoyed and hasn't tied the bird up so securely just because he had 'lost his voice.'
(2) Didn't Barks do a similar gag at some stage? He used Parrots more than once. The pages explaining what the bird sang are missing, which is possibly because the story was vetoed by the editor or publisher who never gave him the vetoed pages back.
Who knows? Great find anyway, Robb!

(1)The entire 6-page story WAS drawn and fully inked.  We just don't have access to the other pages.  Whoever bought them in Clinton's estate sale hasn't shared those pages publicly.  Yes, perhaps the bird sang rude songs, so the angry Professor Foxy couldn't dare share his wonderful discovery with the entire nation in his advertised live radio broadcast.  My adding in Page 4, show that you may well be correct.  The Parrot has a rebellious attitude, and likely used language The Professor didn't like, which could embarrass him in front of The American public, so, in the professor's attempt to shut the bird's beak, the latter bit him on his nose. Thus the strapping of the parrot to the wall plaque.

I doubt that the story was vetoed by his editor, his partner, Joe Barbera was the editor.  The publisher (3rd partner (Controlling partner)) would not have rejected a story.  Both Eisenberg and Barbera were well-versed on the dos and don'ts of small children's cartoons and comic books.  Eisenberg had been drawing lots of "Tom & Jerry" comics for MGM (Dell Comics/Western Publishing) for quite a few years.  I think it's a lot more likely that the story never got published because their controlling partner cancelled the series because of a dirth of sales.

(2) Yes, Barks drew Scrooge's pet parrot saying very rude words to someone who Scrooge needed to have a good impression of Scrooge. 
« Last Edit: August 04, 2025, 12:38:22 AM by Robb_K »
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mopee167

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Re: Artist identification thread
« Reply #126 on: August 03, 2025, 10:48:18 AM »

I’d never heard of Walter Clinton, and claim no expertise on funny animal artists, but Harvey Eisenberg looks to me to be a solid guess as the artist on the "Professor Foxy" feature.
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Robb_K

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Re: Artist identification thread
« Reply #127 on: August 03, 2025, 05:04:12 PM »


I’d never heard of Walter Clinton, and claim no expertise on funny animal artists, but Harvey Eisenberg looks to me to be a solid guess as the artist on the "Professor Foxy" feature.

Yes, especially the large knot in the make-shift wood plaque to which the WonderBird is hung on the wall, gives it away.  No other animator/cartoonist ALWAYS drew wood covered with such detail.   Also, the heavy inking, in general,  and strongly-animated motion in his figures' movement looks very like Eisenberg;'s style.  And the art style and timing of the art's production(Mid 1948), fits in perfectly with the end of Dearfield's "Foxy Fagan" run.


Thanks for your input. 
« Last Edit: November 01, 2025, 06:07:20 AM by Robb_K »
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Rex Fury

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Re: Artist identification thread
« Reply #128 on: September 02, 2025, 04:07:45 PM »

Anybody other than me see a touch of Wally Wood in "Nuts" number 1? I bought it recently and could have sworn Wood worked on it? However he's not credited with any work on the comic.

Speaking of Wood, I also picked up Masked Ranger number 8. The artist Woodbridge's signature was hyphenated on the cover. The seller mistook this to mean it was by Wally Wood!
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crashryan

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Re: Artist identification thread
« Reply #129 on: September 02, 2025, 05:39:20 PM »

The "Woodiness" in the last story is from Hy Fleishman. He was strongly influenced by Wood in much of his work. A random example: the faces in the last story of Mister Mystery #8.

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