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Welcome to the Cheeky Weekly blog!
Cheeky Weekly ™ REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, COPYRIGHT ©  REBELLION PUBLISHING LTD, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED was a British children's comic with cover dates spanning 22 October 1977 to 02 February 1980.

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Showing posts with label Lost Christmas Issue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lost Christmas Issue. Show all posts

Wednesday, 26 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 8)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
SaturdayCheeky Weekly 29 December 1979SaturdayFirst page: Clever replacement of title panel by shunting original 2nd and 3rd panels to the left, inserting an image of Snail in place of the original 3rd panel, and extending the top of panel 5. Reference to Speed Squad in panel 6 has been changed from Skateboard Squad. No resizing at foot of page as Saturday continues on the next page.

Second page: The final row of panels has possibly been extended at the top.


Art: Frank McDiarmid

That concludes my investigations into Cheeky Weekly's lost 1978 issues.

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 1

Tuesday, 25 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 7)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
FridayCheeky Weekly 29 December 1979Friday Hmm, not entirely sure that title panel HAS been replaced. Glad's dialogue altered to refer to 1980. The different lettering style in Cheeky's speech balloon in the final panel suggests the toothy funster was originally shown reading an instalment of the Eagle Eye strip. This indicates that Eagle Eye was slated to start in one of the missing issues, 'cos Cheeky would read the serial in school on Fridays commencing in 06 January 1979's first post-hiatus issue (obviously school was out for the Christmas hols in this particular issue). Resizing at foot of page.

Art: Frank McDiarmid

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 8

Monday, 24 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 6)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes

Thursday

Cheeky Weekly 29 December 1979SundayTitle panel replaced, so this wan't originally a Sunday page. The original Sunday artwork was published as Monday in the 1979 Christmas issue. The Cheeky's Week pages had to be shuffled around in this way when eventually published in 1979 because December 25th fell on a Tuesday, not Monday as the previous year.

Cheeky says this is the first time we've seen Mechanic's face, but we had actually seen it in the 28 July 1979 issue. Had this page been published at Christmas 1978 as originally intended, Cheeky would have been correct. In the altered second panel, Cheeky says he will have to wait until Christmas day to open his presents, yet Ursula and Mechanic have received their presents - so this was clearly drawn as a post-Christmas-day page.

Cheeky's final speech balloon has been altered, it would have introduced the Skateboard Squad strip (in the Christmas 1979 issue, Calculator Kid followed this page). Cheeky's altered text in the final panel, with its reference to a forthcoming Christmas, again conflicts with the the panels featuring Mechanic and Ursula. Foot of page has been resized to compensate for removal of What Did YOU Do Today? diary section.

Art: Frank McDiarmid

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Skateboard SquadCheeky Weekly 17 February 1979Skateboard Squad This appears to be another Christmas story conversion (see also Elephant On The Run, which had a converted story in the same 17 February 1979 issue, and Calculator Kid and Disaster Des who had converted stories printed in the 20 January 1979 comic (see here and here). I would guess that the reference to the infants' 'annual party' was changed from 'Christmas party'. I suspect that a Christmas tree has been removed from panels 8 and 9. Those certainly look like Christmas presents.

Art: Jimmy Hansen

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 7

Sunday, 23 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 5 - The Mystery Comic)

The features which comprised The Mystery Comic were grouped in Cheeky Weekly's centre pages from the 30 September 1978 issue to that dated 30 June 1979. Therefore, had the 30 December 1978 issue appeared as planned, it's a fair bet that the Mystery Comic features would have been located together in the middle of the comic.

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
TubCheeky Annual 1980, page 120TubThe size of this strip clearly indicates it was intended to appear below the Mystery Comic title (during the Mystery Comic's run, Tub was usually featured on The Mystery Comic's cover), so was obviously prepared for publication in the weekly comic. In Cheeky Weekly, during our chubby chum's tenure on the Mystery Comic's cover, the 'Tub' title panel was located at the top of the first frame of the strip but, since for this annual appearance the 'Tub' title has been moved up to replace the Mystery Comic banner, the title at the top of the first frame has been excised. The subject matter suggests the strip was intended for the Christmas Cheeky Weekly. There were in fact 2 Tub stories in the 1980 Cheeky Annual (the other appearing on page 57 - see below), both of which appear to have been drawn for Cheeky Weekly, but this Christmas morning story is the obvious contender for inclusion in the 30 December 1978 lost Christmas issue.

N.B. Although there was a Mystery Comic title above the Tub strip on page 57 of the 1980 Cheeky Annual, the Mystery Comic features were scattered through the annual; pages 6-8 (Mustapha Million), pages 18-19 (Why Dad Why), pages 57-59 (Tub followed by Why Dad Why), 92-93 (Disaster Des) 102-103, 115 (Why Dad Why) and 120 (Tub). This was because the Mystery Comic section of the weekly comic ceased at the end of June 1979, so there was no need for the annual to emulate those issues of Cheeky Weekly in which the Mystery Comic strips congregated on the centre pages.

My thanks to the scanner of the annual pages below who has yet again saved me from having to cram my (if I say so myself) pristine Cheeky Annual into the scanner.

Art: Nigel Edwards

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Why, Dad, Why?Cheeky Annual 1980, page 115Why, Dad, Why?Another page drawn for the weekly comic judging by the width/height ratio but, like Calculator Kid's strip a page earlier in the same annual, this artwork has thankfully remained unresized (is that a word?). Also like Calculator Kid, this Christmas page was curiously located in the November section of the annual.

Art: John K. Geering

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Disaster DesCheeky Annual 1980, page 116Disaster Des Unlike Calculator Kid and Why, Dad, Why, this page drawn for the weekly comic has been resized - the panels in the first three rows have been extended at the bottom. Des had commenced a world tour in Cheeky Weekly dated 09 December 1978 (actually he had embarked on the tour the previous week, but the ship ran aground) which accounts for him arriving at the Arctic in this story, and is evidence that this story was intended for the 1978 Christmas issue..

Art: Mike Lacey

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Elephant On The RunCheeky Weekly 17 February 1979Elephant On The Run I'd suggest this was one of four experiments in converting a Christmas tale into a non-festive-season story (the others being the Skateboard Squad story published in the same 17 February 1979 issue as the EOTR story below, and Calculator Kid and Disaster Des from the 20 January 1979 issue. This episode of EOTR was published in a mid-February 1979 issue of Cheeky Weekly. It's fairly obvious that references to Christmas have been removed, most noticeably in the odd wording of the caption in the first panel. The Man In The Plastic Mac's speech balloon in the same panel has probably been revised so that the word 'weekend' replaces 'Christmas'.

It looks as though the aggrieved commuter in page 1, panel 7, is spouting a similarly altered balloon, as is Elephant in the following picture. The same adjustment is evident in respect of the benevolent gent in panel 7, page 2, and I would guess Elephant's final line in this strip was originally 'Merry Christmas, Pals!". I suspect that some traditional British comic Christmas visual cues (tree, presents, decorations) have been removed from the final panel.

Maybe the editor felt that these converted non-Cheeky strips were less than satisfactory so decided to hold the remainder in abeyance until the 1980 annual. Since most kids' first sight of the annual would be on Christmas morning, stories of a festive nature wouldn't seem out of place.


Art: Robert Nixon

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Mystery BoyCheeky Weekly 20 January 1979Mystery BoyMystery Boy (a reprint of the Who Is Sandy strip from Whizzer and Chips) was the only Mystery Comic strip to feature a continuing story (fellow amnesiac Elephant, from Elephant On The Run, remained a fugitive for the duration of his strip, but each episode was self-contained and no plot development occurred as the series progressed).

It's therefore possible to deduce that, had there been no interruption to the publishing schedule and issues dated 16, 23 and 30 December 1978 had appeared as intended, the episode of Mystery Boy which would have appeared in the 30 December 1978 issue would have been that which was actually displaced to the third issue to appear following resumption of publication, i.e. Cheeky Weekly dated 20 January 1979. This is because the story resumed after the industrial dispute at the cliffhanger it reached in the final issue to be published before the hiatus. There was no Christmas-themed episode of Mystery Boy. Other than the substitution of the Mystery Boy title for its original name, which applied to all the strips during the series' Cheeky Weekly run, there appear to be no changes to the artwork.

Art: ?
This leaves one last character from the complement of Mystery Comic fun-pals unaccounted for - Mustapha Million. I am not aware of any converted Christmas tales featuring Mustapha in Cheeky Weekly's run. Mustapha's sole appearance in the Cheeky Annual 1980 is on pages 6, 7 and 8. This is not a Christmas-themed story and appears to have been drawn to fill an annual-size page. The Mustapha strips in Cheeky Weekly were never more than 2 pages. Probably the 1979 Christmas story was the one intended for the 1978 Christmas issue - there's no way of telling for sure.

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Mustapha Million Cheeky Weekly 29 December 1979Mustapha Million No real evidence for this being a deferred Christmas 1978 strip, but the balance of probabilities is that it is.

Art: Joe McCaffrey

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 6

Thursday, 20 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 4)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
WednesdayCheeky Weekly 29 December 1979ThursdayThe shunted-a-day-forward effect, resulting from the delay of a year in publishing this material, continues to ripple through the post-Christmas day pages of the comic. Title panel replaced by inserting a new second panel featuring a pasted-in 'standard Cheeky face'. Artwork in the final panel has been altered - it would originally have shown Cheeky whipping out The Mystery Comic. Canny editor cleverly changes it to plug the 1980 Cheeky Annual. Our portly pal Tub would have followed this page had it been published as intended in 1978, as the Mystery Comic section would have followed Wednesday (the Mystery Comic concept came to an end in the 30 June 1978 issue). Foot of page resized.

Art: Frank McDiarmid

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 5

Wednesday, 19 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 3)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Tuesday - Boxing DayCheeky Weekly 29 December 1979WednesdayAs a consequence of appearing a year later than intended, this page has been shunted forward a day from Tuesday to Wednesday (Boxing Day in 1979). Title panel replaced (by inserting a new second panel and shifting the original second panel to the left - sneaky!).  This delayed appearance by Spiv  is the final one he'll make in Cheeky Weekly (the final Spiv joke to be written appeared in the 30 June 1979 comic). Calculator's dialogue has been changed as this page would have led to the Calculator Kid strip (Tub followed Wednesday in the 29 December 1979 issue). Foot of page resized.

Art: Frank McDiarmid

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Calculator KidCheeky Annual 1980, page 114Calculator KidThe large amount of blank space surrounding the strip is evidence that it was intended for a page in the weekly comic. Fortunately, no attempt has been made to resize the artwork to better fit the proportions of the annual page, allowing us to enjoy Terry Bave's original page design..

Strangely, this Christmas story was placed in the November section of the annual.

As I didn't want to damage my annual by scanning it, my thanks to the scanner of the Calculator Kid page featured here.

Art: Terry Bave

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 4

Tuesday, 18 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 2)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Monday - Christmas DayCheeky Weekly 29 December 1979Tuesday (Christmas day in 1979 was on a Tuesday)First Page: Title panel replaced. The Cheeky Annual on the toothy funster's bed was presumably changed to represent the 1980 annual. No resizing at the foot of the page, meaning it was originally followed by a continuation of Christmas day.

Second Page: No title panel replacement or resizing at foot of page, as this is a continuation of Christmas Day.

Third Page: The lettering and shape of Burpo's speech balloon doesn't match all the others, so may have been changed.

No evidence of resizing at the bottom of the second and third pages, so it appears there was no What did YOU do today? section for Christmas day 1978.



Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 3

Monday, 17 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed!

Moving on to identify the artwork that would have appeared in the 30 December 1978 issue of Cheeky Weekly (the Christmas issue) had publication not been interrupted due to a strike...

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
SundayCheeky Weekly 29 December 1979MondayThere is no evidence of title panel replacement (from the 30 September 1978 revamp issue to the edition dated 30 June 1979 each day of Cheeky's Week began with a title panel - with the exception of Sunday), the church appears in panel 3 and Cheeky's dialogue in the final panel has been changed from its original reference to 6 Million Dollar Gran, so this was drawn as a Sunday page. In 1978, Christmas day was on a Monday, so this Christmas Eve page was shunted forward a day when it was eventually published the following year. Foot of page doesn't appear to have been resized.

Art: Frank McDiarmid

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
6 Million Dollar GranCheeky Annual 1980, pages 9-116 Million Dollar GranFirst Page: Text in first speech balloon has been changed - presumably 'New Year party' replaces 'Christmas Party' - note the Christmas cracker on the third page (this strip appears in the January section of the annual).

There is evidence of panel resizing to make the strip fit the proportions of the annual pages.

Final Page: Text in panels 1 and 5 has been changed - presumably 'New Year' replaces 'Christmas'. Looks like there's something missing from policeman's speech balloon in panel 4 - could have been a Christmas reference, but more likely the balloon has been enlarged to fill some of the blank space resulting from panel resizing. The final panel has been changed - it would originally have shown Cheeky looking at the TV screen, which was the customary final panel of Gran strips in late 1978. Instead, a Jim Petrie rendition of Cheeky, originally published on page 72 of the 1979 Cheeky Annual, has been pasted in.

As I didn't want to damage my annual by scanning it, my thanks to the scanner of the Gran pages featured here.



Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 2

Sunday, 16 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 7)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Saturday (first page)Cheeky Weekly 22 December 1979Saturday (first page)Title panel replaced. Christmas card story continues. In the first panel of the final row, which depicts Cheeky exchanging a joke with Mechanic, there's a note reading 'Must've read last week's comedy catalogue'. This reference to the Cheeky's Cut-Out Comedy Catalogue Of Mechanic Jokes booklet which appeared in the 15 December 1979 issue was evidently added to the original artwork. The punchline to the previous week's variation on the same joke was 'Mini Miner'. No resizing at bottom of page because the What did YOU do today? diary area didn't appear on the first Saturday page after the 02 December 1978 issue.

Art: Mike Lacey

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Saturday (concluding page) Cheeky Weekly 22 December 1979Saturday (concluding page) Christmas card storyline concludes. The change of lettering style in the dialogue between Cheeky and Spiv in panel 5 suggests the text has been altered - don't know why. This is Spiv's penultimate published appearance - his previous appearance had been way back in the 30 June 1979 issue, which was presumably the last Spiv joke to be written (his final appearance will be in a page from the lost 1978 Christmas issue, published in the 29 December 1979 comic). No evidence of panel resizing, so it appears there was no What did YOU do today? section.

Art: Mike Lacey

That concludes my investigations into Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue.

Cheeky Weekly's lost 30 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 1

Saturday, 15 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 6)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
FridayCheeky Weekly 22 December 1979FridayTitle panel replaced with a copied-and-pasted Cheeky head on a roughly drawn body lacking the 'C' on his jumper. Christmas card story continues. The final panel suggests that the Eagle Eye strip was slated to start in one of the missing issues, 'cos Cheeky would read each EE episode in school on Fridays commencing in the 06 January 1979 issue (obviously School was out for the Christmas hols in this particular issue). Presumably Cheeky would have been reading Eagle Eye in the original artwork. Foot of page has been resized.

Art: Mike Lacey

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 7

Friday, 14 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 5)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
ThursdayCheeky Weekly 22 December 1979ThursdayTitle panel replaced. Christmas card story continues despite change in artist. Final panel is intro to Skateboard Squad, but that strip finished in May 1979, a couple of weeks before the team re-appeared under their new title, Speed Squad. Text has therefore been altered (Why, Dad, Why? followed Thursday in the 22 December 1979 issue - Speed Squad appeared 8 pages later). Foot of page resized.

Art: Mike Lacey

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 6

Thursday, 13 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 4)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
WednesdayCheeky Weekly 22 December 1979WednesdayAnother cut-and-pasted head on new body replaces the title panel. Christmas card storyline continues. Final panel is clearly an intro to The Mystery Comic, but that came to an end in the 30 June 1979 issue, so the text has been changed to make it a Christmas card reference. Clever! In the 22 December 1979 issue, Mustapha Million followed Wednesday. Foot of page resized.

Art: Frank McDiarmid

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
TubCheeky Annual 1980, page 57TubThis was the first of 2 Tub strips in the 1980 Cheeky Annual (the other, more Christmassy tale can be seen here). Both were sourced from material prepared for the missing December 1978 issues. I would guess that this strip was drawn for the abandoned 23 December 1978 pre-Christmas issue, as it has an icy/snowy setting. Note how the Mystery Comic's sci-fi cover background has been cut down to allow the Tub strip to be blown up to fill the width of the annual page - now why didn't they do the same for Tub's episode on page 120 of the annual, seen in the link above, which is left floundering at the centre?

Thanks to the scanner of this annual page.

UPDATE 26 November 2012:

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Disaster DesCheeky Weekly 20 January 1979Disaster DesThis page, one of the two occasions on which Disaster Des occupied the Mystery Comic's cover, appears to include a strip from which Christmas references have been removed (as was the case with Elephant On The Run and Skateboard Squad in the 17 February 1979 Cheeky Weekly, and Calculator Kid in the same 20 January 1979 issue as this Des story). I suspect that Des's speech balloon in panel 2 on the second row originally read "I thought we were going to be home by Christmas, Cap'n!", and that in the following panel he originally said "It's not going to be much of a Christmas with only us two on board". In the final panel, it looks as though the Captain's balloon has been altered, probably the words "some fun" replaced "a party". I'd guess Des's closing balloon originally read "It isn't everyone who gets his own private Christmas circus!"

I have assumed that this strip was originally intended for Cheeky Weekly's 23 December 1978 issue, but it's possible that the Disaster Des strip that was eventually printed in the 1980 Cheeky Annual (as seen in this post) was the one slated for the pre-Christmas issue, and this episode was intended for the Christmas issue.

Art: Mike Lacey

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 5

Wednesday, 12 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 3)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
TuesdayCheeky Weekly 22 December 1979TuesdayA rather peculiar agglomeration of cut-and-pasted Cheeky head with newly-drawn body replaces the title panel. Christmas card storyline continues. Doodle Doug's presence in the final panel indicates that Paddywack would have followed had the page been published in December 1978, but the text has been altered because the Doodle Doug intros to the Paddywack strips ceased as of the 07 July 1979 comic. In the 22 December 1979 issue, Paddywack appeared 6 pages earlier than the Tuesday page, which was followed by a Soggy the Sea Monster reprint. The art at the foot of the page has been resized to compensate for the removal of the What Did YOU Do Today? diary section.

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 4

Tuesday, 11 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! (part 2)

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
MondayCheeky Weekly 22 December 1979MondayChristmas card storyline continues. In December 1978 the introductory page of each daily Cheeky feature had a Cheeky's Week… title panel. These panels ceased to appear as from July 1979. This page in the 22 December 1979 comic has clearly had the title panel removed and replaced with a cut-and-paste Cheeky and some text in a different style to the rest of the page. Calculator Kid would have evidently followed in December 1978, but Cheeky's dialogue has been amended because CK had actually appeared on the preceding page in the 22 December 1979 issue. The artwork at the foot of the page has been resized because the 'What did YOU do today? diary section, which was also present in December 1978, but not in December 1979, has been removed. Disco Kid's badge references a character from TV series Roots, which was first shown on the BBC on 08 April 1977.

See below for what I believe was the Calculator Kid strip that would have followed in the lost 23 December 1978 issue.

Art: Frank McDiarmid

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
Calculator KidCheeky Weekly 20 January 1979Calculator Kid This was one of four strips that I suspect were originally intended for the lost 23 or 30 December 1978 issues, but were converted into non-festive-season stories (the other conversions being the Disaster Des strip that eventually appeared in the same 20 January 1979 issue as this CK story, and Elephant On The Run and Skateboard Squad published in Cheeky Weekly dated 17 February 1979 ).

It would be my guess that this story originally saw Charlie setting out to buy Christmas presents - note the snow, suspiciously festive wrapping paper on Charlie's presents and what look like Christmas decorations inside the store. If I'm correct, the original version of the story was set prior to December 25th, so it's likely that it was intended for the 23 December 1978 issue (I suspect the Calculator Kid strip that eventually appeared on page 114 of the 1980 Cheeky Annual was originally intended for the 30 December 1978 issue). Update 08 October 2020 - see Stephen Archer's interesting observations in the comments section below.

It may be that the Cheeky Weekly editor decided that the Christmas story conversions were not entirely successful, and as a consequence the rest of the non-Cheeky strips originally created for the 23 and 30 December 1978 issues were held over for use later in the year.

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed!  Part 3

Monday, 10 September 2012

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed!

As discussed here, Cheeky Weekly failed to be published for 3 weeks in December 1978 due to an industrial dispute. The missing issues were those that would have been dated 16, 23 and 30 December 1978.

Material for Cheeky Weekly was clearly prepared some weeks in advance of the publication date, so it's a safe bet that the pages scheduled to appear in these lost issues had been delivered to the Cheeky Weekly editor before the industrial action brought publication to a temporary halt. Since two of the lost issues had a Christmas theme (there were two Christmas-themed Cheeky Weeklies in 1977; 24 December's pre-Christmas issue and 31 December's full-blown Christmas issue), these pages could not really be used (at least not without modification - of which more later) until the following festive season, and that is indeed what happened with the Cheeky's Week material.

From the 30 September 1978 issue to that dated 30 June 1979, the Cheeky's Week pages included an introductory title panel, and an area at the foot of some pages entitled 'What did YOU do today?' which gave readers the space to record a brief diary entry. Since a number of the Cheeky pages prepared for the Christmas 1978 issues included these elements, which would have to be removed in preparing the artwork for its eventual use at the end of 1979, it's possible to identify those pages which were salted away by a canny Cheeky Weekly editor for use in the following year's festive editions.

I'm embarking on a series of posts in which I will identify those pages that would have appeared in 1978's Christmas issues had Cheeky Weekly not become briefly embroiled in the volatile industrial relations of the late 70s.

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue

Element Eventually published in Published as Notes
SundayCheeky Weekly 22 December 1979SundayChristmas card storyline begins. Different lettering style in Cheeky's speech balloon in the final panel suggests his original comments have been altered - in the original version he would have introduced 6 Million Dollar Gran, whose strip would commence on the following page. By the end of 1979, Gran had been moved to the rear of the comic. In the 22 December 1979 issue, Sunday was followed by Calculator Kid.

Art: Frank McDiarmid

Cheeky Weekly's lost 23 December 1978 issue - Reconstructed! Part 2

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

The features - Elephant On The Run


A traumatic circus accident plunges an innocent performer into an amnesiac nightmare, in which he is relentlessly pursued by a mysterious stranger without knowing the reason. Wasn't that the plot of a classic Hitchcock film? No, this was the delightfully daft feature Elephant On The Run, which ran for 63 episodes in Cheeky Weekly. As the strip's title intimates, the hero was of the jumbo variety, and we first met him in the revamp issue dated 30 September 1978...


Episode 2...

This second episode set the pattern for many of the subsequent instalments, in which our pachyderm pal donned a series of daft disguises or took on unlikely jobs which led him into various scrapes, with his persistent pursuer not far behind. Over the weeks, the jumbo fugitive appeared as a wrestler, beefeater at the Tower of London, footballer and astronaut, among other equally incongruous roles. The dogged chap in the waterproof windcheater would initially be fooled by Elephant's disguise, failing to recognise our trunk-bearing hero behind a seemingly feeble masquerade. Realisation of Elephant's true identity often dawned when the grey-skinned fugitive inadvertently revealed his trunk. The Man In The Plastic Mac (TMITPM) always suffered some (often painful) setback after apprehending the fleeing tusker, allowing our hero to escape, still puzzling over why he was being pursued. Elephant never asked any of the people he encountered, who were also fooled by his flimsy disguises and who must have been aware of what seemed to be a national press and poster campaign to detain him, why he was wanted.

Despite telling us in the first episode that cannot recall who he is, Elephant doesn't seem to notice that, according to a wanted poster in the comic dated 28 October 1978, his name is Walter. Adopting the guise of a portrait painter in his 05 May 1979 adventure, Elephant advertises his services as "Walter Van Tusk - Artist". In the issue dated 29 September 1979, the son of a vet for whom Elephant is working refers to our grey-skinned hero as Uncle Walt.


The story that appeared in the 04 November 1978 issue enlightens us further on Elephant's circus career. Scowlo the Clown, an erstwhile colleague of our amnesiac hero, tells TMITPM that whenever the fleeing jumbo hears the tune Elephant Capers played on the banjo, he is compelled to perform a tap dance. Hastily learning to play the melody, TMITPM travels the country plucking his banjo at random passers-by. Despite his frantic twangings eventually unmasking our jumbo chum, who is working as a bricklayer, Elephant of course escapes.


There are further circus scrapes in the 20 January 1979 issue, when Elephant gets a job as a knife-thrower. Naturally TMITPM is by chance in the front row of the big top audience but after a tussle on the high wire our jumbo pal flees to safety. Elephant meets an old showbiz pal, retired magician The Great Mysto, in the comic dated 10 November 1979, and gets a job in Barkums Circus during the 26 January 1980 story.

Elephant's flight from TMITPM takes him across the sea, as in the 27 January 1979 issue we find him masquerading as an italian barber in a skiing resort.

Good-hearted Elephant rescues TMITPM from a number of perilous situations, including digging him out of the snow after he is buried by an avalanche in the 27 January 1979 issue, and safely depositing him in a tree while parachuting to earth after a failed rocket launch in the comic dated 17 March 1979.

A Cheeky Weekly reader is featured in the 28 April 1979 story, and conceals Elephant from TMITPM, telling the peripatetic pachyderm "Well, if they caught you there wouldn't be a story next week, would there?" Two more readers of the toothy funster's comic attempt to misdirect TMITPM in the story dated 21 July 1979.

The 11 November 1978 episode ends with a caption reading 'Next Week - The Tyre Trap!' This was the only episode to feature a coming-next-week teaser. Most episodes ended with a caption saying 'And so the chase continues'.

The story printed in the comic dated 17 February 1979 seems to have been prepared for the Christmas 1978 issue, which failed to appear due to industrial action. It looks to me as though references to the weekend have been substituted where, presumably, Christmas was originally mentioned, and I'd guess that the standard British comic Christmas artefacts (tree, decorations, presents etc) have been removed from the final panel, and Elephant's 'Merry Christmas' has been changed.

For 'weekend' read 'Christmas'?
 I suspect Elephant's original final word balloon ended with a 'Happy Christmas'
In the 24 February 1979 story we meet TMITPM's son (who we first encountered in the 20 January 1979 issue) and wife, in a story that includes a guest appearance by boxer Henry 'Couper'. The plastic-coated pest's wife is also seen in the 09 June, 27 October and 29 December 1979 comics. TMITPM's son appeared again in the 08 December 1979 comic.

The 22 September 1979 story reveals that TMITPM's name is Herbert, when he's seen driving a car with a female passenger who doesn't appear to be his wife.

In the 13 October 1979 issue, Elephant suffers further memory loss when he's hit on the head by a horseshoe. A subsequent bonk on the noggin restores his memory to the state it was immediately before the horseshoe struck, i.e. he remembers he's the wanted elephant and that he's being chased by TMITPM, but it appears the reason he's wanted still eludes our tusker pal.

Elephant visits his rich cousin Sniffy during the 15 December 1979 adventure, so by this time the fugitive has presumably regained his memory of his identity, but he doesn't ask Sniffy why he is being pursued. In the 05 January 1980 story, TMITPM makes a new year resolution to stop chasing Elephant, who is seen resolving to hand himself in to his relentless pursuer. Of course, at the end of the episode, the two protagonists tear up their resolutions.

Elephant On The Run didn't survive the merge with Whoopee! when Cheeky Weekly was cancelled, probably because the strip had started to become rather tired towards the end of its (pardon the pun) run. The final instalment didn't explain the mystery surrounding TMITPM's pursuit of Elephant, it was just a standard episode with Elephant fleeing at the end as usual. A further and rather weak episode, set in a holiday camp, appeared in 1980's Cheeky Holiday Special, but again it was just a chase with no attempt at a resolution of the outstanding questions. The final appearance of the be-trunked fugitive occurred a few months later in the Cheeky Annual 1981, in which our grey-skinned chum was involved in a Christmas caper, but the mystery surrounding our hero's plight was again not addressed. Maybe the scriptwriter never actually had an answer, and that could be another reason why the feature was dropped when Cheeky Weekly ceased publication. I suspect any explanation would have proved a disappointment so it was probably wise to bring the strip to an end without any attempt to tidy up the unanswered issues, leaving us to speculate. One possibility is that Elephant was the heir to a fortune, but this seems unlikely given that TMITPM restrains our large-eared hero with handcuffs, leg-irons and ropes on a number of occasions, not the actions of someone bringing good news.

The daft premise and some clever scripts exhibiting a keen sense of the ridiculous elevate most Elephant On The Run episodes above the standard of the average comic strip, with many laughs along the way. The chase element imparted momentum to the stories, and Robert Nixon did some lovely, fun-filled art.


Elephant On The Run made its debut as one of the features in The Mystery Comic. The Mystery Comic concept came to an end in the 30 June 1979 issue, but Elephant On The Run continued until the final issue of Cheeky Weekly. 34 episodes of the feature appeared as part of The Mystery Comic, and of these, apart from the issues dated 16 and 30 June 1979 which were single pages, all were 2-page episodes. 23 episodes were in full colour, 3 had spot colour (black, white and red) and the 21 April 1979 instalment was in black and white except for the title which was printed in red.

29 Elephant On The Run episodes appeared after The Mystery Comic idea was dropped. The first 2 post-Mystery Comic episodes were 2-pagers, but subsequently the strip became a single page only (possibly a sign that the writer was running out of ideas), except for the 06 October 1979 and 12 January 1980 episodes, which were 2-page sets. 7 of the stories during this period were printed in colour, the remainder being in black and white.

The first 2 episodes were the only ones to carry the episode numbers under the title.

Robert Nixon was the original artist on the strip and drew all 34 episodes during the Mystery Comic run. Robert drew 24 of the post-Mystery Comic strips, with Vic Neill providing 4, and Barry Glennard 1, during the same period.

Elephant On The Run was the subject of the main cover illustration on Cheeky Weekly dated 14 October 1978. The picture was actually a blown-up panel from the EOTR strip which appeared the previous week.

In the first 7 episodes, Elephant had what appeared to be sawn-off tusks (or possibly teeth) visible in his lower jaw when his mouth was wide open, but these were not present in the later stories. He did sport false fangs in his upper jaw in the 02 June 1979 story when he convinced TMITPM that he was the vampire tusker, Dracuphant. In the comic dated 08 September 1979, our hero's disguise consisted of a set of false mastodon tusks. Tusks weren't in evidence when the grey-skinned fugitive was the subject of the Pin-Up Pal poster in the 06 January 1979 comic.

The chase crossed over from The Mystery Comic into Cheeky's universe when Elephant and TMITPM fleetingly appeared within the Cheeky Weekly section of the 12 May 1979 issue, dropping a copy of the mysterious publication as they went. Our elephant pal and his plastic-mac-wearing nemesis appeared to have entered into a temporary truce as they were among the guests at Pete and Pauline Potts' party in the 6 Million Dollar Gran strip in Cheeky Weekly dated 06 October 1979.

Elephant On The Run in the Cheeky Weekly Index

Feature First Appearance Final Appearance Total Issues Total Issues Missed In Run Page History
Elephant On The Run30-Sep-7802-Feb-806355,9,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,22,23,32


Issues Missed In Run
03-Feb-79
31-Mar-79
19-May-79
14-Jul-79
01-Sep-79


LocationStartEnd
Mystery Comic30-Sep-7830-Jun-79
Cheeky Weekly07-Jul-7902-Feb-80


Feature Artist Number of Issues First Appearance Final Appearance
Elephant On The Run Mystery ComicRobert Nixon3430-Sep-197830-Jun-1979
Elephant On The Run Robert Nixon2407-Jul-197902-Feb-1980
Elephant On The Run Barry Glennard111-Aug-197911-Aug-1979
Elephant On The Run Vic Neill406-Oct-197912-Jan-1980


Pages per Issue Number of Issues
127
236