Showing posts with label Little Orphan Annie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Orphan Annie. Show all posts

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Nemo #8: All Things Little Orphan Annie part 3 of 4

As I've been saying all along, "Little Orphan Annie" was a deeply personal strip with a very personal vision. A personal vision creatively spoken...if that isn't the definition of true art, I don't know what is.

A real example of what a single hand can do compared to all the things we see that a committee can't do. Nothing that was worthwhile was EVER done by committee. Carried OUT by many, sure...but it's that single vision that keeps it potent and pure.

Forget Daddy Warbucks...Harold Gray was Annie's real daddy!









Today is American Independence Day. Please celebrate safely but grandly and personally. It's worth it.

Remember, the people wanted it, Congress set out to do it, a committee of 5 was assigned to prepare it...but when it came down to it, 1 man wrote it.

Then of course that committee and congress homogenized it and bastardized it and abridged it. But we do what we can.

Happy 4th everyone!!

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Nemo #8: All Things Little Orphan Annie part 2 of 4

"Nemo: the Classic Comics Library" continues it's in-depth look at one of the greatest comic strips of all time with Donald Phelps' article on the cultural icon that Annie would become.

Not just years after with Broadway and movies, but right during her heyday and she became a symbol for American can-do attitude during the roughest years of the Depression and representing an example of being a good person even through her darkest travails and she would always end up shining at the end.

Not to mention, being the star of her very own radio serial and selling Ovaltine to millions of kids!







Talk to you soon!

Friday, July 2, 2010

Nemo #8: All Things Little Orphan Annie part 1 of 4

"Nemo: the Classic Comics Library" #8 devotes an entire issue to "Little Orphan Annie" and it's creator Harold Gray and this is one of my favorite issues of the magazine.

If I were to name my top five favorite comics creators they would be George "Krazy Kat" Herriman, E.C. "Thimble Theatre" Segar, Al "Li'l Abner" Capp, Walt "Pogo" Kelly and Harold "Little Orphan Annie" Gray, 5 unique artists with unique viewpoints who had totally individual and diverse ways of expressing themselves on the comics page. Each one a master at what they did and who showed all the different directions a comic strip could go.

This was my first real in-depth exposure to a strip that had died with it's creator and, in my lifetime, been replaced by pale imitations of itself. This is "must read" material for anyone who appreciates an artistic minds viewpoint and what can really happen when things are not homogenized by committee.

Richard Marschall in his editorial can say it all more concisely than I...and does.



Seriously...read it all...appreciate "Little Orphan Annie" for the true work of art it was.

This issue is split into 4 separate articles and I'll be posting them over the next 4 days. This opening essay, 24 pages on "The Life and Love, Friends and Foes, Trials and Triumphs of Little Orphan Anne" is the longest by a long shot and may be a bit long for a blog post, but it will serve as a primer for when I begin posting whole issues every Sunday.

Besides, it's the Friday before the long "Independence Day" weekend. Half of you have to go to work today and you know good and well there will be absolutely NOTHING to do because the other half is already beginning their long weekend. So go ahead and "stick it to the man" who made you come in to work on the chance that he might make $14 today, and spend the entire 8 hours at your desk reading about something much more important than all that work bullshit.

You'll be glad you did in the long run.

























Talk to you soon.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Harold Gray and Little Orphan Annie

Born on January 20th, 1894, this last Wednesday marked the 115th anniversary of the birth of Harold Gray, creator/writer/cartoonist of Little Orphan Annie.

I saw it come and go, but with hurricane force winds, biblical rainfall and what-not of last week I failed to comment on it. Shame on me!

Little Orphan Annie was one of those epic comic strips that could only belong to years past of room for it's creator to move and unfold. It was also such and extension of it's creator and his own philosophies and outlook on life and the world around him, that it was a true work of art!

Who's that little chatter box?
The one with pretty auburn locks?
Whom do you see?
It's Little Orphan Annie.
She and Sandy make a pair,
They never seem to have a care!
Cute little she,
It's Little Orphan Annie.

Bright eyes, cheeks a rosy glow,
There's a store of healthiness handy.
Mite-size, always on the go,
If you want to know - "Arf", says Sandy.

Always wears a sunny smile,
Now, wouldn't it be worth a while,
If you could be,
Like Little Orphan Annie?
That's the theme song to the radio adventure serial based on our heroine...and that's me dressed like her with Sandy. My apologies to her and to Harold, this is what happens when your at the drawing board too late at night.

The stories that were told in the LOA strip were dense and layered...and really took their time getting you in the right state of mind. Annie began as a humor strip in 1924 about a little girl in an orphanage that quickly evolved into a continuity as she was adopted by the Warbucks' in 1925.

As the strip and years crashed on, so did the stock market and America's economy. Gray's own views about honesty, hard-work, self-reliance and so on, began to be reflected more and more through his characters and morals to his stories.

Like I said, stories so dense and layered that it took a year or more to tell each adventure.

Can you imagine anyone doing that in a newspaper strip today? Or any medium?

And he did it really well.

Gray's more conservative views became more and more black and white as he grew older and by the 1960's. as America was beginning to see ironically in more shades of grey, and his strip fell under heavy criticism. By his death in 1968 he and his strip were looked on as an old dinosaur of the past.

So it goes and always for a reason.

But the strip that Gray worked on and his skill as a storyteller can't be denied and should always be remember and read. I've refrained from posting any samples of the strip this time around, because single strips can't do it justice. Those year long stories have to be read and digested in full.

I'm happy to see that there are some reprints being done of the strip, ambitiously titled "The Complete Little Orphan Annie" and you can find them here. If you're at all interested in reading a true American classic and a real work of art you should check it out.

Thanks Harold! You really told some great stories and told them well!

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