The Funnies is the name of two American publications from Dell Publishing (Dell Comics), the first of these a seminal 1920s precursor of comic books, and the second a standard 1930s comic book.
The magazine ran 36 issues – originally weekly, then monthly from April 1929 to April 1930, and then weekly again – published Saturdays from January 16, 1929, to October 16, 1930.[4] The cover price rose from 10¢ to 30¢ with issue #3.[5] This was reduced to a nickel from issue #22 to the end.[5]
Victor E. Pazmiño drew most of the covers for The Funnies (a tradition carried on some years later by the first true comic book Famous Funnies); he also contributed interior strips. Contributors included Stookie Allen and Boody Rogers, as well as Charles Curtis, Ed Hermes, Howard Williamson, F. N. Litten, Kenneth Whipple, Charles Driscoll, Joe Archibald, Sidney Garber, Earle Danesford, Hafon, J. Molina, Bencho, Gil King, and Buford Tone. Carl E. Schultze's Foxy Grandpa strip appeared in this early comics periodical.[6]
The Funnies began running original material with Mayer's feature Scribbly, about a boy cartoonist, laid out to look like a Sunday newspapercomic strip. Art Nugent's single-page puzzle and game feature, called either Home Magic or Everybody's Playmate, ran in issues #1–27. Other, gradual bits of original comics followed, including six-page adaptations of B-movieWesterns, beginning with issue #20 (May 1938), and a four-page true-crime feature, "The Crime Busters", drawn by Al McWilliams, beginning the following issues. Following Gaines and Mayer leaving to produce work for All-American Publications, most reprints other than Alley Oop were abandoned in favor of original content, including "Mr. District Attorney", based on the radio series, and "John Carter of Mars", adapted from the Edgar Rice Burroughsseries of novels, and after a few issues illustrated by his son, John Coleman Burroughs.[9]Captain Midnight adventures were published in The Funnies issues #59 and 61–63. Gaylord Du Bois's American Indian feature, "Young Hawk" first began in The Funnies. E. C. Stoner mainly worked as a cover artist, drawing covers for The Funnies, the latter of which prominently featured the character Phantasmo, Dell's first original superhero feature.[13]
New Funnies
The comic book switched formats and title to become New Funnies with issue #65 (July 1942).[14][15] Now devoted to children's characters like Raggedy Ann and Andy, and talking animal characters including Felix the Cat, Oswald the Rabbit, and Woody Woodpecker, it lasted through issue #288 (April 1962). Its title changed to Walter Lantz New Funnies after 44 issues, beginning with issue #109 (March 1946).[16]
^Don Dixon and the Lost Empire in Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on January 12, 2015. Some sources misspell the title of the accompanying strip as "Tad of the Tambark". As Markstein explains, tanbark "refers to bark used in tanning, which is also used to cover circus rings".