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From the Scoop Archive - 2/15/2003
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Fox and Crow
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| The first appearance of the Fox and the Crow. See below for the evolution of the duo... |
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For a classic example of the evolution of a comic book character, and to
see how the antics of a given character often coincide perfectly with the events
of their time, one need look no further than the Fox and the Crow - those
mischief making rascals who were always at each others throats for one reason or
another. But to understand the popularity of the Fox and the Crow, it's
important to look at their glory days in the '40s and '50s.
Though they
made their screen debut in 1941, the green-hatted Fox and his cigar-puffing
companion made their first comic book appearance in Real Screen Funnies
#1, published in the Spring of 1945. World War II was still a few months
from ending, and the United States was feeling the ravages of the past few
years. Food was scarce. And the entertaining adventures of the comic book Fox
and Crow, just like the screen Fox and Crow, provided the kinds of charmingly
antagonistic gags that were lighthearted enough to capture the hearts of an
emotionally stressed audience. Their popularity grew, and they were even given
the very dapper first names of Crawford Crow and Fauntleroy Fox. Of course, the
fact that most of their trickery revolved around either food (as the Fox called
it, "beautiful, wonderful, vitamin enriched food") or money made them all the
more appropriate to their times and helped seal their popularity.
With
his cigar dangling from his gigantic yellow beak, the Crow loved nothing more
than to idle around and wait for the Fox to fall into one of his harebrained
traps. Of course, the Fox was no dummy - and he was always quick to turn the
tables on the instigating Crow - whether that meant swindling him out of still
more money or replacing his beloved cigars with sticks of dynamite.
By
1948, the Fox and the Crow were starting to fade out of the screen scene...but
their comic book hey day was just beginning. The Fox and the Crow had proven so
successful in Screen Funnies that the two appeared as the main feature in
Comic Cavalcade #30. Even with the War over and the US victorious, theirs
was still the type of cockamamie humor that America needed. And sure enough,
three years later at the end of 1951, the scheming duo got their own title.
With this title, the Crow gains a purple top hat and loses his cigar.
Hilarity still abounds, however, and The Fox and the Crow stays on top
for the next several years. But alas, the constant attempts to outsmart each
other, the thinly veiled disguises and once tried and true formula of the Fox
and the Crow started to lose its momentum in the '60s. Slowly but surely, they
began to be phased out of their own title. A look at the covers alone shows the
new characters of Stanley and his Monster start to overtake the Fox and the
Crow. They begin as a small blurb and picture on the cover of The Fox and the
Crow #95, getting bigger and bigger with each issue until sadly, in The
Fox and the Crow #102, the towheaded Stanley and his mangy fuchsia monster
dominate the whole cover, with the faces of our old pals merely tiny mugs at the
top of the book.
In The Fox and the Crow #103, things get even
worse: the actual letters in the title The Fox and the Crow become
smaller, and the letters in the title Stanley and his Monster become
bigger - so they are the same size. Things continue in this way for the next few
issues, and in May 1968, the inevitable happens. The "wide weird wild world" of
Stanley and his Monster take center stage, signifying the end of our beloved Fox
and Crow.
Of course, in retrospect, the fairly simple gags of the Fox
and the Crow couldn't possibly have lasted any longer than they did. One look at
the cover of Stanley and his Monster #109, that definitive May 1968
issue, shows this. With Stanley's pom-pom and go-go boot sporting pal Marcia
featured dancing in the center of a gaggle of hideous monsters, it's clear that
a new era of entertainment is being ushered in - an era of mysterious
happenings, eerie settings and grotesque creatures. But while they couldn't have
lasted much longer, there's no denying that the Fox and the Crow were a
fantastic team while they did last. And to us, that's something to crow
about.
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The first appearance of the Fox and the Crow. See below for the evolution of the duo...
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The two instigators in "Comic Cavalcade #30"
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At last! Their own title!
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Notice the small, but significant ad for "Stanley and his Monster"
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The monster grows...
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...and grows...
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...and the Fox and the Crow just keep getting smaller
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...till Stanley and his Monster take over completely.
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