All of this, of course, just whet my appetite, prodding me to go the whole hog and attempt to post the entire strip. Will I accomplish it? I'm not sure. I've managed to gather a complete run of the daily strips, from November 26, 1956 to March 1, 1958, but for the final six weeks I've found no Sundays. At that point several papers dropped the strip, and of the three I found still carrying it, two had no Sunday edition and the other either had no Sunday funnies or chose not to archive them. Whether Wolfe Sundays were still being produced at that point remains a mystery.
Wolfe debuts, Nov. 26,1956 |
Mr. Kost's piece listed several newspapers in which the strip appeared, and two others where it may have run. I've been unable to verify any of those, but I did find the strip at various times in the following papers:
The Fort Lauderdale News
The Delaware County Times (Pennsylvania)
The Boston Globe
The Indianapolis News
The Cedar Rapids Gazette
The Wisconsin State Journal
The Press-Tribune (Roseville, CA)
At least in the beginning, the daily and Sunday strips had different continuities. The dailies begin with a case involving a corpse named Parterow, and Sundays with an actress named Peggy Royce. How readers whose papers carried both strips made sense of this, I don't know.
Though every strip carries the by-line Rex Stout, both Mr. Kost and the Stripper's Guide identify the writer of the early months as John Broome. Thanks to a February 1957 letter from Stout (included in Kost's article) we know Stout was fully engaged, receiving advance strips and providing input. In August 1957 the scripting chores appear to have passed to Ed Herron.
The final strip, appearing March 1, 1958, appropriately shows Wolfe and Archie driving off into (more or less) the sunset. That this is the last strip is verified by a notice in the March 3 issue of the Wisconsin State Journal, announcing the Wolfe strip has been discontinued, and his spot would henceforth be occupied by Smokey the Bear. Can you say Pfui?
Wolfe's last bow, March 1, 1958 |
Looking forward!
ReplyDeleteI await with bated breath.
ReplyDeleteMe too. I must have known that there was a Nero Wolfe comic strip but I had forgotten. I will be reading along.
ReplyDeleteand I see they're driving off in a Dodge. I though they had a fancier car.
ReplyDeleteI wasn't aware of the comic strip - thanks!
ReplyDelete