Sunday, June 18, 2017

50 year Flashback: BEANO SUMMER SPECIAL 1967

When I was a kid, I'd wait until I was on holiday to buy the latest summer specials. Picking up this Beano Summer Special from a stall on Blackpool prom in 1967, accompanied by the sea air and the sounds of seagulls and trams, was all part of the holiday experience. It also provided something to read in the guest house during the inevitable rainy days. 

Let's take a look at a few pages from this wonderful special. The cover artwork is by Dudley Watkins, showing a seemingly reckless Biffo the Bear leaping off the pier, but there's a safe resolution on the back cover...

Inside, the 32 tabloid sized pages were packed with all-new strips and features. The layout was often interesting, with strips sharing space, such as this spread with Punch and Jimmy by David Jenner alongside Dennis the Menace by David Law...

Most of the strips had a holiday theme of some sort. This Roger the Dodger page by Robert Nixon shows an old-style railway carriage and a stereotypical boarding house landlady...

This special had a good selection of adventure strips too; General Jumbo, The Q Bikes, and a great full colour centrespread with The Iron Fish, drawn by Sandy Calder...

A really nicely illustrated Lord Snooty and His Pals story by Dudley Watkins...

A very funny Dennis the Menace page by David Law...

...and what I think may be the very first Bash Street Dogs story, simply titled Dogs' Tale. The dogs had appeared in a few Bash Street Kids episodes in the weekly, but this is months before they achieved their own Pup Parade strip. You'll notice that they look a little different to how they appeared in the regular series. Art by David Sutherland...


That was a few pages from the 1967 special. Don't forget that the current Beano Summer Special is in the shops now!
Cover by Nigel Parkinson


All artwork in this post ©D.C. Thomson and Co. Ltd.

14 comments:

  1. While I never really read the regular issues, I did love my brother's Beano summer specials with the bigger, shinier pages and themed strips. No wonder Oink! was such an instant hit with me when it appeared in its format. Speaking of which, reading this post reminded me of your own spoof strip, The Iron Salmon, from Oink! Quality stuff and after this post it's clear the spoof was written by someone who was a fan of the original - http://the-oink-blog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/09/67-this-one-is-full-of-rubbish.html

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  2. Great to see he early Pup Parade and of course miss your take in today's Beano

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  3. What I liked about DCT specials of the 60s and 70s was their format & size. In the comics, the format was always fixed and regimented. In the specials, the presentation appeared to be so relaxed, it's almost if the staff were having a party (if that makes sense).

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  4. I think there's a lot of truth to that, Sid. It was probably wise to stick to a regimented format for the weekly, but the specials allowed for more experimentation (plus they had more pages to play with). In a way it was like the weekly being a school timetable they had to adhere to, but the special reflected the carefree aspects of the school holidays.

    Thanks, Peter. I hope Pup Parade will be back later in the year. Nothing scheduled yet though.

    Phil, I'd forgotten I'd written that Iron Salmon strip! Thanks for the reminder!

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  5. Great to see "Punch and Jimmy" again that used to be a favouroite of mine I loved David Jenners art (didn't know or had forgotten his name so thank you that)

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  6. Those 1960s & 70s Beano Summer Specials are a favourite part of my collection. Simply seeing the lush colour inside (on selected pages) made it compelling. Better than the Beano books in my opinion.

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  7. Hi Lew

    As much as I loved those Summer Specials, the most nostalgic part of your article today was the Blackpool holidays. Back then, half of Barnsley fell on Blackpool in late August. Friends and family wou;d take over the Guest house and we would spend hours on the beach. Something I hated as a child....so many newsagents and market stalls to scour! I would be the one sulking on the sand, kids were not important enough to have a deck chair. I would moan about the heat (no change there) and would read my specials on the sand to pass time.
    When we did walk around, we would only manage five minutes and would bump into someone my dad worked at the pit with, I would be fidgeting and be told "keep it up and I will give you something to moan about!"

    It was an idyllic childhood. I was safe and fed and we only didn't have money. Almost all those family members are gone now, but when I see a cover of a Summer Special from those days, they are alive in my head again. Arguing, laughing, it all comes back! What a privilege to have lived in those days.

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  8. good work.. and 1/6 for a comic full of the works of Dudley Watkins, Davy Law, David Sutherland and Robert Nixon? Sold

    and the horse in the first Dennis strip.. love the design there. okay, you could say one of the back legs looks a bit odd, but the design of it rushing forward really gives you the impression of Dennis taking old of the reigns and just letting it go wild at high speed.. .. though I think the strip has a bit of a weak ending with the panel before it.. a gypsy boy coming out of nowhere to let they rent his caravan seams a bit.. short.. I know it's only one small panel for it anyway but... seams a bit quick to me.

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  9. The last minute resolution to a story is a standard of humour comics though, Manic. It would have weakened the ending if the gypsy had been seen earlier. Yes, the horse looks wonky, but that makes it funnier! :)

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  10. My apologies for taking a while to process your comments. Inspired by the hot weather, and as I'd caught up with deadlines, I thought I'd take a few days off in sunny Blackpool! I'm back at the drawing board today (Thursday) with work for Epic, then it's the Birmingham Comics Festival on Saturday!

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  11. ^_^ no problem from me

    and yeah, it just seams abit more jarring here for the ending, but yeah, I can't personally think of a better one and yep, great horse

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  12. Thanks for doing this blog on the DCT comics! Having only read annuals in the 60s and 70s (since I grew up near Chicago not in the UK) I am really enjoying all the history and the trips down memory lane!

    One question my siblings and I have is, "when did Dad stop giving Dennis the slipper at the end of every strip?" I recall a special annual (10 year ago?) that reprinted a Dennis comic with Dennis getting the slipper at the end, and there was a fairly serious disclaimer advising this type of behavior / spanking is not permissible in society any longer! Did DCT get pressured (legal?) to stop the spanking routine or was it simply keeping with the times?

    Thanks!

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  13. There was no legal pressure to stop scenes of spanking. It was just no longer relevant when corporal punishment was banned in schools and parental violence against children was seen as wrong. Such scenes were phased out in comics about 30 years ago. Thankfully it's been consigned to the past now and writers have to come up with more inventive endings to the stories. (Although the variations on spankings were inventive at times, but those scenes could unsettle and even disturb a young reader today with no reference point for such punishment.)

    The other thing is, comics don't want to attract the wrong kind of reader, if you know what I mean.

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  14. Yep, I get it.

    I think corporal punishment was banned in schools in the USA (more/less) by the 90s so my kids had no real exposure to it.

    But when I would read them Dennis the Menace in the late 90s early 2000s, and Dennis would get the slipper (from an ostrich, from an anaconda, from a fan, you get it...), they thought it was absolutely hilarious.

    Just curious... how popular was Dennis for DCT? Was he the most popular? I assume he was, since he had a solo annual. But then again I think his annual was every two years? Is it possible to quantify how popular Dennis was like "He accounted for [X%] of DCT's sale?

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