Aussie Comics
& Cartoons in 1970s a very brief history.
Part Two
IS ANYBODY MAKING AUSSIE COMICS ANYMORE?
So, was there anyone who did a standard-type Australian original comic that was so popular in the era before the 1970s? It seemed everyone was vying to be an editorial cartoonist. Let’s face it. It was where all the money was being made. One exception was Skippy by Fauna Productions, it was based on the popular TV series and was drawn by Keith Chatto and A. Cubi. But it only ran for six issues between April 1970 and July 1971 because it was realised that having a comic of a show that was no longer in production didn’t help sales all that much. If Skippy had not been canceled just before the first edition it may have been more sustainable.
But there were still some creators out there with original characters
and ideas, they just weren’t appearing in the standard comic format.
The Saga of Iron Outlaw was produced by Greg and Grae, (Written by Graeme Rutherford and drawn by Gregor MacAlpine) two young men just out of Swinburne Uni that was published by the flailing Melbourne Sunday Observer. Not to be confused with the Maxwell Newton owned enterprise which followed four years later. The colour strip was a satire on Australian life, language as well as Federal and State politics where a Ned Kelly type superhero fights the forces of evil. The comic would be in present times, considered highly inappropriate due to its language (racist) and storylines (also racist). The page continuous comic started in June 1970 and transferred to the Nation Review where it ran as a black and white full-page comic and retitled Iron Outlaw and Steel Shelia when the Sunday Observer folded in February 1971. Attempts have been made to make the 50-year-old strip into a collection but the copyright owners just want to bury the strip in the past because of repercussions due to its content.
Another Ned Kelly continuous story Ned Kelly by Monty Wedd
ran uninterrupted in the Sydney Sunday Mirror for two years in the early
1970s. It was eventually collected as a collection / graphic novel by
ComicOz in 2014.
Captain Goodvibes (aka Pig of Steel or Vibes) was created by Tony Edwards and first appeared in Tracks a popular surfing magazine in March 1973. Goodvibes was a pig who came into being after a porkchop was irradiated by a nuclear plant accident. He was crass, vulgar, smoke drank, did drugs and surfed. Of course, this made him an instant success with the youth of the era. Goodvibes may have been relatable to his readership but it was the evolution of Edward's artwork and splash pages that lifted Captain Goodvibes the strip to a whole new level. Edwards's pen and ink line work were intricate as it was vast, incorporating fantasy islands and cityscapes sometimes making Goodvibes a minor player in the story. With his popularity, Goodvibes became a radio star and released a record, a disco single Mutants of Modern Disco (all Edwards of course), in 1978. Captain Goodvibes also had a cinematic cameo in the 1973 surfing documentary, Crystal Voyager, appearing in a brief but spectacular animated sequence during the film. But most importantly Captain Goodvibe's popularity led to the publication of several Goodvibes comic books, including the Whole Earth Pigalogue (1975) and Captain Goodvibes Strange Tales (1975). In 1982 Tony Edwards killed off Captain Goodvibes forever.
Notable one-off comics not associated with any larger publications (independent)
were The Atomic Horror Comic in 1977 drawn by Phil Pinder and Blinky
Bill Comes To Town 1976 by Sarah Curtis.
ONE MAN
STANDS ALONE
Gerald Carr started the 1970s running and was alone in the Australian comic scene for most of the decade, as an original creator of the traditionally formatted product.
Carr's first self-publication
was a comic fanzine, a one-shot title, Wart's Epic, which was
issued in 1970, containing a mix of adult science fiction, violence, nudity and psychedelic
artwork. Wart's Epic was distributed in Melbourne and by mail
order to the USA. Carr had already had another adult-style
creation Fabula appear in 1969 with the David Syme paper Broadside. The same
people who published The Age.
With nobody producing comics locally Carr contributed shorter stories like Aussie Fan to Rats Satirical Magazine but soon became interested in producing his own, which he undertook all the writing and illustrating himself. His first attempt at self-printing in 1974 was modest, with the comic only being distributed in Victoria. In 1975 Carr added more material and had his comic, Vampire!,
THE ENDING
In conclusion, the period from 1970 to 1979 was a watershed decade for
Australian comics. Artists found their identity but not in the usual format.
The rules changed, style and layout evolved but nobody was prepared for how
different the 1980s would turn out and bring life back to the Australian comic scene.
Panel by Panel was
published in 1979 and it’s almost as if those who read it sighed a collective
“What the…?” because as soon as the decade ticked over to 1980 we saw in
that year alone the creation of Inkspots Anthology by Phillip Bentley.
Tony Edwards Captain Goodvibes Porkarama and the emergence of ex-cop and
motor enthusiast Brendan (BJ) Akhurst whose cartoons and strips would
appear in all manner of auto magazines from bikes to cars to trucks as well as
his oversize collections. Gerald Carr would restart his Bridgett
strip for the Sydney Sun-Herald and continue his self-produced one-shots.
The 1980s would be a quantum leap from the experimental 70s as
Australian comic books and publishers came back with a vengeance.
SOME
REFERENCES:
Magazine
Data File www.philsp.com
The
University of Wollongong archivesonline.uow.edu.au
Panel by
Panel John Ryan (Cassel 1979)
DownUnderground
Phil Pinder (Penguin 1983)
Captain
Goodvibes My life as a pork chop Tony Edwards ( Flying Pineapple Media 2011)
Daniel Best
ohdannyboy.blogspot.com
The
University of Queensland www.textqueensland.com.au
Peter
Hughes & Joe Italiano Alternate Worlds Comic book shop
ComicOz
website www.comicoz.com
The Inked In Image Vane Lindesay (Hutchinson 1979