| Wolverton, Basil |
| Basil Wolverton was born in
1909, so when comic books began to look for original material in 1936, he
was ready and willing. Self-taught, he tried to sell his first newspaper
strip at the age of 20. Unfortunately some other strip beat him to the
punch. Marco From Mars could have captured the public's fancy
the way Buck Rogers did. Wolverton was one of the earliest creators of new material for the new comic book market. He lived in Vancouver, Washington and was one of the very few comic book artists who didn't live in New York. Working totally through the mail, Wolverton took his s-f strip concepts and turned them into Spacehawk and Space Patrol and Meteor Martin. Unfamiliar comic companies like Centaur and Novelty produced anthology comic titles in the Thirties and Forties. Spacehawk appeared in Circus comics in 1938 with a reincarnation at Novelty's Target Comics in 1941-42.
Also during the Forties, BW worked for Fawcett and Gleason, two of the larger comic producers, doing strips with silly titles like Bing Bang Buster, Scoop Scuttle, Mystic Moot, etc. It was in 1946 that Basil got his greatest publicity break when he won the Lena the Hyena contest. Al Capp had created a character in his Li'l Abner newspaper strip named Lena the Hyena who was supposed to be too ugly for Capp to show in a family newspaper. Her every appearance was marked by an editorial disclaimer covering her features claiming that her face was being suppressed for the greater good of mankind. Well, this was surely a great running gag, but Capp had pretty much painted himself into a corner when the readership demanded that her face be shown. Nothing that Capp could come up with was likely to be horrid enough to justify the gag. So he started a contest to have readers submit what they thought Lena looked like and a celebrity panel comprised, supposedly, of Boris Karloff, Frank Sinatra and Salvador Dali would determine the winner. Wolverton submitted his entry along with a half a million others and he won! Lena (above, at the right of his signature) netted him $500 and she appeared in the Li'l Abner strip and on the cover of Life magazine. You can read all about it in the Kitchen Sink Li'l Abner reprint series, volume 12.
In 1954, he also did a Lena-inspired cover for Mad Comic Book and inside that issue he did a feature on what the readers of Mad looked like. He did a couple more contributions to Mad, then retired from comics in 1955. The remaining years of his life were devoted
to illustrating The Bible Story. In six volumes from Genesis
to Samuel, Wolverton adapted the text of the Bible for
simplicity and clarity and provide hundreds of b&w illustrations for the
work. These six volumes were published from 1961-68 by Ambassador College.
In the early 80s they were reprinted and rest of the Old Testament was added
with newer illustrations by Wolverton. Wolverton had died in 1978, so he
must have been working on these for years before they saw publication.
(Thanks and a tip of the hat to Stuart Ng for
Wolverton's art style isn't classical, but it is unique. He influenced a generation of artists in the Underground Comix field. As he got older, his ability to manipulate the pen and brush diminished considerably. The style took a great deal of control and when he came back into comics for a while in the seventies (covers for DC's Plop comic), he could still make you laugh, but he didn't leave you in awe of the finished product. Whatever he drew, he put his heart and soul into it. And he makes me laugh. He died in 1978. |
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Information supplied by: http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/wolvertn.htm |