Bill Peckmann &Comic Art &Daily post 16 Dec 2011 07:16 am

King of the Cowpokes

Another excellent post from the collection of Bill Peckmann. Here, I turn it over to Bill:

    “King of the Cowboy Cartoonists”. If there was ever such a title, Jack Davis would garner my vote!

    Here are two westerns by Jack that ran in EC Comics’ title “Two-Fisted Tales”.

    In “TFT” No. 34, July-Aug 1953, the first story “Betsy”, was not only drawn by Jack but also written by him. The usual editor/writer of the comic book Harvey Kurtzman, was laid up with a serious illness, so Jack and the rest of the cartoon crew jumped in and wrote their own tales.

    Jack’s story “Betsy” is a riff on “High Noon”, a very popular movie of its’ day. (Gary Cooper even makes a cameo appearance in the story. More on that in a later post.) It’s a labor of love for Jack and it shows. It’s laid out by him in that wonderful Kurtzman lay-out style and the coloring by Marie Severin is really exceptional.

    Jack also seems to be ahead of his time with this story because it’s done quite a few years before the gritty, gnarly noir western movies of Clint Eastwood, but it certainly has the feel of one those films.

    (Here’s the cover of the comic, which we’ve posted already, but you might want to run it at smaller size, ala “Ben and Me” today. I hope your readers enjoyed “Ben” as much as we did.)

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Here’s Jack’s second western story titled “Gunfire”. This appeared in “The New Two-Fisted Tales”, No. 36, Jan. 1954. With this issue, Harvey Kurtzman was not at the writer/editorship helm of the comic any more, the success of Mad comics took up all of Harvey’s time, and the running of “The New TFT” went to John Severin and writer Colin Dawkins.

“Gunfire” was written by Dawkins and illustrated by Jack, and Jack’s in his best Kurtzman type lay-out mode, beautifully constructed pages and panels.

(Even though Clint Eastwood was only 23 years old at the time when this story came out, and not a movie star yet, somehow Jack was able to come up with the perfect prototype of a Clint Eastwood western hero. It’s all there, looks and costume and action! It makes ya wonder.)


Here’s the cover of #36.
This cover of “The New Two-Fisted Tales” no. 36
was penciled by John Severin and inked by Bill Elder.
It’s not a Jack Davis cover.

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Here are a couple of ruffs Jack did for Western illustrations.

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Many thanks to Bill Peckmann for sharing his collection with us.

One Response to “King of the Cowpokes”

  1. on 17 Dec 2011 at 5:47 pm 1.Eddie Fitzgerald said …

    Man, nobody does comic fights like Jack Davis. Kirby comes close, but Jack is in a class all by himself.

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