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The story of screwball comics, with new research and rare art from some of the most hilarious cartoonists of all time. Before screwball became a movie genre, it was a staple of other forms of American culture, including newspaper comic strips. Emerging from the pressures of a rapidly accelerating technological and information-drenched society, screwball comics offered a healthy dose of laughter and perspective. The disruptive, manic, and surreal verbal-visual comedy of these funnies fostered an absurdist sensibility embraced by The Marx Brothers (who took their names from a popular comic strip), W. C. Fields, Tex Avery, Spike Jones, Ernie Kovacs, and Mad magazine. Comics scholar Paul C. Tumey traces the development of screwball as a genre in magazine cartoons and newspaper comics, presenting the work of around fifteen cartoonists, with an art-stuffed chapter on each.
The book offers a wealth of previously un-reprinted comics unleashing fresh views of some of America's greatest and most-loved cartoonists, including
George Herriman (
Krazy Kat),
E.C. Segar (creator of Popeye),
Rube Goldberg (
The Inventions of Professor Lucifer G. Butts, A.K.),
Bill Holman (
Smokey Stover), and
Frederick Opper (
Happy Hooligan). In addition, readers will be delighted to discover previously lost screwball masters, such as
Gene Ahern (
The Squirrel Cage),
Gus Mager (
Sherlocko the Monk),
Boody Rogers (
Sparky Watts),
Milt Gross (
Count Screwloose),
George Swanson (
$alesman $am) and others.
Both humorous and educational, this book is aimed at a general audience of all ages and at university comics studies programs.