Thursday, August 29, 2024

Alexander Woollcott's Copy of Private Lives by Noël Coward

"Private Lives," Noël Coward's "intimate comedy in three acts," was published in 1930. Coward inscribed a copy to drama critic Alexander Woollcott the following year and Woollcott, as the owner, added his signature in pencil as well.


Even Woollcott couldn't keep his books in pristine condition.

The first hardcover edition was priced at $1.75.

Is this how you would inscribe inscribe your book to an esteemed member of the Algonquin Round Table? Of course it is.
"For Ackie Wackie
from
Noly Poly
1931"

Title page

Noël Coward
AbeBooks listing accessed August 29, 2024

Noël Coward
AbeBooks item description


Note:  I read "Private Lives" in college from an under-inked Xerox copy that doesn't compare in any way to the extraordinary first edition shown above, except for the text. I have a special liking for books inscribed author to author, artist to artist, or, as you might imagine, cartoonist to cartoonist. Take your pick from your home library and send me photos of whatever you've got. I know just the blog for them.




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Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Warren's Copy of Hand Drawn Jokes for Smart Attractive People by Matthew Diffee

When his collection Hand Drawn Jokes for Smart Attractive People was published in 2015, cartoonist Matthew Diffee was especially generous at signings, inscribing copies for fans and adding clever original drawings. One book inscribed to someone named Warren is currently available from Back in Time Rare Books of Jacksonville. It includes a drawing of the face of a moralist, apparently, saying, "I hope you like this kind of smut!" I do and, incidentally, way to sell it!



Matthew Diffee
AbeBooks listing accessed August 26, 2024


Matthew Diffee
AbeBooks bibliographic details



Note:  This is the only signed copy of Matthew Diffee's Hand Drawn Jokes for Smart Attractive People currently listed on AbeBooks and it's a doozy. I happen to have room here on the blog for other personalized copies with original drawings, even smutty ones. Please send images.



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Monday, August 26, 2024

My Entry in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #910

You can almost hear the heavenly harp music emanating from The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #910 from the issue of August 26, 2024, along with one very distant thud. My caption is shown below. The angelic drawing is by Sofia Warren.

"Have you been swearing again?"




These captions just wouldn't float:

"I knew that church organ was a bad idea."
"Butterfingers."
"I told you not practicing might lead to some fallout."
"And that's why we don't play 'Ring Around the Rosie.'"




September 7, 2024 Update:  The Finalists




September 14, 2024 Update:
  I voted for the caption from Maplewood.



September 22, 2024 Update:  The Winner







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Sunday, August 25, 2024

Rowland B. Wilson: Going Electric

Bob Dylan went electric in July of 1965. Rowland B. Wilson's Spanish serenader took a few more years to reach that milestone, but he arrived there in October of 1969 when a certain cartoon appeared in Playboy. The original magazine art demonstrates Wilson's customary mastery of local costume and architectural detail. It was sold on July 17 at Heritage Auctions.



Rowland B. Wilson
Original art
Playboy, October 1969


Rowland B. Wilson
Heritage Auctions listing accessed July 13, 2024

Rowland B. Wilson
Heritage Auctions item description

Sold!




Note:  I'm quite happy to use this blog to celebrate the artistry of the talented Rowland B. Wilson. If you send me scans or photos, I'll plug them right in.





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Saturday, August 24, 2024

Rowland B. Wilson: An Acute Infringement

This past July 10, Heritage Auctions sold an original Playboy cartoon by Rowland B. Wilson. The stamps and printer's markings indicate it was published in the magazine. The full page cartoon demonstrates Wilson's skill as a draftsman and watercolorist, as well as his penchant for dramatic, low angles. But the humor comes from the contrast of the unsophisticated, dying, older man summing up the political situation with contemporary academic jargon. My only quibble is the use of the word aborigines in the setting of the American Old West. It feels wrong, even by the standards of 1975.

"The way I figure it, captain, the aborigines sense an acute infringement of their territorial imperative
and are retaliating with aggressive anti-establishment behavior!"

Rowland B. Wilson
Original art
Playboy, c. 1975



". . . retailing with aggressive anti-establishment behavior?"
Rowland B. Wilson
Heritage Auctions item description



Note:  Was this cartoon art actually published? It was. I can't find it anywhere, but that doesn't mean much. Heritage couldn't locate it either, designating it only "HMH"—for Hugh M. Hefner—"c. 1975." So I'll put it to the readership: When did this cartoon by Rowland B. Wilson appear in Playboy magazine? Kindly site chapter and verse. Please send a scan or photo of the spread as well, and I don't mean the centerfold.



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Friday, August 23, 2024

Rowland B. Wilson: Meet The Executioner

On July 24, Heritage Auctions sold a full-page original Playboy cartoon by Rowland B. Wilson that appeared in the August 1985 issue. Say what you will, the artwork is well-executed.

"Hi! My name is Rick—I'll be your executioner today!"
Rowland B. Wilson
Original art
Playboy, August 1985, p. 105


Rowland B. Wilson
Heritage Auctions listing accessed July 13, 2024



"Created in mixed medial [sic] on textured art paper."
Rowland B. Wilson

Heritage Auctions item description

Here it is in situ in the magazine:

Sold!






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Tuesday, August 20, 2024

The CartoonStock Cartoon Caption Contest No. 183

I'm afraid I had to make a deal with the devil in order to solve CartoonStock Caption Contest number 183. The infernal scene is set in a shopping center's parking lot. The King of the Underworld offers a crown on a pillow to a woman packing groceries into her car. Easy peasy, right?


The rules of the monthly cash prize contest have not changed (and neither has my description of them): Five dollars buys up to three entries. Real cash prizes are $500 for first place and $100 for each of five runners up. As of this writing, I've put $140 into the first twenty-eight pay-to-play contests and this twenty-ninth challenge brings my total cash outlay up to $145. Having achieved runner-up status with two previous entries, I've collected $200 from CartoonStock, so I'm still playing with the house's money, thank goodness. In fact, so few contestants enter that the odds may generally be considered favorable even for us less-gifted caption writers. My three entries are shown below, above the break. The cartoonist is David Borchart.

"I'm already enjoying the life of Satan's mistress."
"Not unless you install air conditioning."
"How would you feel about a church wedding?"
* * *
"Never mind all that. How's your wi-fi?"




September 1, 2024 Update:  The Winner



Lawrence Wood mentioned my church wedding caption in his commentary, something that hasn't happened in a while:
https://www.cartoonstock.com/blog/demons-in-the-parking-lot-caption-contest-commentary-with-lawrence-wood/


It was the insightful Joel Mishon who selected and actually defended my caption (29:55), going so far as to call it his version of "Only if we bring them up Catholic."

The Judges Deliberate







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Monday, August 19, 2024

My Entry in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #909

Would you like some fries with The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #909 from the issue of August 19, 2024? My caption is shown below. The drawing is by Benjamin Schwartz.

"Better make it a double. I've been supersized."


I believe the good doctor has hidden a private message in the cartoon. It's a little scratchy but I think it says Nina.




September 1, 2024 Update:  The Finalists




September 7, 2024 Update:
  I voted for the caption from Springfield.


September 14, 2024 Update:
  The Winner





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Sunday, August 18, 2024

Peter Arno's Side-Show for March 1937

The March 1937 installment of Peter Arno's "Side-Show" is definitely a keeper. I'm keeping my copy. The magazine is College Humor. These Arno cartoons must have created a sensation among young readers, but they were never collected and have been lost to popular culture for many decades. My guess, though, is that the people who encountered these drawings when they were coming of age remembered them fondly for life.

"Hurry, dear! Our guests are beginning to arrive!"
Peter Arno
College Humor, March 1937, p. 18
 

"Gosh, I forgot to look at your teeth, didn't I?"
* * * 
"After the part where you tell them to 'speak now or forever hold their peace'—er—don't pause too long."

Peter Arno
College Humor, March 1937, p. 19



Here's the original art for each of these as seen on a 1985 contact sheet from the Nicholls Gallery:

"Hurry, dear! Our guests are beginning to arrive!"

"Gosh, I forgot to look at your teeth, didn't I?"

"After the part where you tell them to 'speak now or forever hold their peace'—er—don't pause too long."


Note:  For those keeping score at home, I am still looking for the published versions of three of the Peter Arno College Humor cartoons consigned to the Nicholls Gallery in 1985. There's also a "rather dumb" Otto Soglow psychoanalysis cartoon that should be in one of these issues as well.

"It's the master's idea—says it keeps them out of the Stork Club."
Peter Arno
Original art
College Humor, c. 1936-1937

"It isn't every student I'd let mark her own examination paper, Miss Dawson."
College Humor, c. 1936-1937


"You may shut off the heater now, Oglethorpe."
Peter Arno
Original art
College Humor, c. 1936-1937




An organ grinder on the street feels sad that his monkey has more satisfying interactions with people than he does. He goes to a psychoanalyst and soon after changes places with the monkey.
"I think rather dumb." —Barbara Nicholls
Otto Soglow



So I'm keeping an eye out for "It's the master's idea—says it keeps them out of the Stork Club," "It isn't every student I'd let mark her own examination paper, Miss Dawson," and "You may shut off the heater now, Oglethorpe," but if any reader should already know where they are hiding out, please do tell.

All right, if you insist, I'll give you my own best guess for the location of these cartoons: College Humor, February 1937. Unfortunately, I don't see a copy currently available for sale but one was sold on eBay not all that long ago.




College Humor, February 1937
eBay listing ended June 28, 2024

College Humor, February 1937
eBay item description





Here are some better images made with a scanner:

So please give a shout if you have a copy. And for heaven's sake, stay out of the Stork Club.




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