
From the Scoop Archive - 4/26/2003
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Smokey Stover: Foo Fighter Extraordinaire
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| Above: A Smokey Stover figurine. See below for some Smokey covers! |
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Climb on into the Foomobile, because this week, we're going to pal around
with one of the wackiest firemen ever. We're talking about Smokey Stover, Bill
Holman's lanky goofball that kept audiences cracking up from 1935 until 1973.
With bizarre, made up words and phrases, Smokey's brand of humor was utterly
unique and especially appealing to audiences who could appreciate a good pun.
From the head of the firehouse Chief Cash U. Nutt (a goofball-and-a-half
with a desk shaped like a foot) to the firehouse cat (a scrawny little thing
with a be-ribboned tail) to Smokey's wife Cookie and son Earl, the Smokey
Stover cast was a hodgepodge of hilarity and misadventure. But not only was
the cast a riot, so were the settings in which they were placed. Mismatched
furniture, flying heads, singing light bulbs (under which Holman wrote the
caption "Light Opera"), two blades of grass greeting each other ("Lawn time no
see"), a man placing fish on a table ("Laying his cods on a table")...you get
the idea.
Puns and zany characters were only the beginning of Holman's
genius, however. He got a kick out of making words up and either leaving them
undefined or creating many different conflicting definitions for them. The
phrase "Notary Sojac", for example. Holman described it as a Gaelic for
"horsecrap". He also described it as Gaelic for "Merry Christmas". Perhaps his
most famous contribution to the modern lexicon, however, is the word "Foo".
Smokey considered himself a "Foo fighter", his fire truck was a "Foomobile", and
he was often heard saying, "Where there's Foo, there's fire." This word caught
on, and the term "Foo Fighters" became popular army slang, referring to
mysterious balls of light that reportedly appeared beside aircraft during WWII.
Now, the term is still popular in UFO circles, and it's even the name of a
popular band.
His wacky words and screwball storylines made for a style
that was individual only to Holman. It could not, as was proved when he retired
and the strip ended in 1973, be replicated by anyone else. Be on the lookout,
however, for original Smokey Stover strip art, comic books, Big Little
Books and other memorabilia - and help spread the word to newer collectors about
this wild, crazy, and altogether pun-derful character.
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Above: A Smokey Stover figurine. See below for some Smokey covers!
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