Showing posts with label Harem Girls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harem Girls. Show all posts

Sunday, April 14, 2019

E. Simms Campbell: Dependent Exemptions

E. Simms Campbell's Harem Girls cartoon from the April 1937 Esquire may seem a tad dated today. Now, as a result of our new tax law, after the 2017 tax year dependents are no longer subject to an income tax exemption, although the standard deduction has been increased. Someone is going to have to inform the sultan.

"You mean I can claim an exemption if I have children?"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, April 1937, page 42



Quick Links to the Attempted Bloggery Archives:

02894

Saturday, May 12, 2018

E. Simms Campbell: In the Harem Maternity Ward

As we prepare for tomorrow's celebration of Mother's Day, let's first take a look back at one depiction of new mothers in the popular "Harem Girls" series by cartoonist E. Simms Campbell. This gag was published in Esquire magazine sometime in the year 1939 and is an over-the-top male fantasy view of female availability, not to mention male stamina. The harem hospital ward, we here learn, serves almost exclusively as a maternity ward. The sultan has proved to be not only exceptionally fertile, but he somehow has been responsible for a prodigious number of concurrent multiple births—and this in the era before fertility drugs, not to mention Viagra!

"This one was appendicitis[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, 1939




Note:  Attempted Bloggery seeks your scans and photographs of obscure published gag cartoons by E. Simms Campbell (1906-1971) and by other New Yorker artists. Make Mom proud.

This cartoon was published in Esquire in the year 1939, but in what issue and on what pages? Obstetrical science needs to know. 



Quick Links to the Attempted Bloggery Archives

Esquire


02545

Sunday, April 15, 2018

Esquire Cartoon Window Signs, 1935-1937

Magazine covers are designed to sell magazines; that's clearly their job. Window signs produced for Esquire in the 1930s used a different promotional tack, taking advantage of the popular, full-page, color cartoons that appeared abundantly in each issue. Up to two such small posters or window signs were produced for issues of the monthly magazine in the mid to late 1930s to promote newsstand sales. The editors selected only one or two of the color cartoons from each issue for use on these signs, giving an indication of which particular artists and cartoons they thought could best promote their magazine. It was a strategy that might well have given Esquire a competitive advantage against those magazines which ran only black and white cartoons.

An Abner Dean gag selected for this purpose in October 1935 seems an unlikely candidate for this sort of display. The old joke is about a father's fecundity, but the setting is somewhat morbid. Dean's work was often odd, to say the least. (A more traditional handling of this sort of gag may be seen in the first Dorothy McKay Esquire cartoon here.)
"Mama, what kind of a man was Daddy?"
Abner Dean
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, October 1935



Rodney deSarro's lustful old lady may anticipate Buck Brown's later Granny cartoons that were to appear in Playboy.
"But lady, when I knocked on your door, I only
asked for a dime[.]"

Rodney deSarro
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, February 1936



Another gag by deSarro depicts a cruise ship's staff nervously trying to reclaim a stateroom after the cruise has ended. The gag appears to be cropped for use on this window sign, cutting off the artist's signature.
"Do you think, sir, we might tell them, sir,
that the cruise is over?"

Rodney deSarro
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, April 1936



A Dorothy McKay gag takes us to the waiting room of a maternity ward where we get to watch a stunned new father drop his hat. This time it is McKay's turn to have her signature unceremoniously cropped. 
"Well, Mr. Hotchkiss! I guess you hit
the jackpot this time!"

Dorothy McKay
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, April 1936



Shh! An uncaptioned cartoon by E. Simms Campbell depicts the ship's captain engaged in some clandestine work.
E. Simms Campbell
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, May 1936

Rodney deSarro's captain on shore leave has found a novel use for a hula skirt. The oval format works well on the window sign and preempts any attempt at cropping.
"She loves me—she loves me not!"
Rodney deSarro
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, June 1936



The "Harem Girls" cartoons by E. Simms Campbell were popular from the very first issue of the magazine. Men trying to make a go at a relationship with a woman must have been amused at the sultan's excesses.
"Make it ten!"
E. Simms Campbell
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, July 1936



In another Abner Dean gag, a sailor on a life raft has some second thoughts.
"Sometimes I almost wish I'd rescued that blonde
instead of the Harvard Classics!"

Abner Dean
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, July 1936



Another of Campbell's "Harem Girls" gags bears a striking similarity to the one in yesterday's post.
"I'll be away for two weeks—sort of look
after things while I'm gone[.]"

E. Simms Campbell
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, August 1936



Gilbert Bundy's young lady exercises her due diligence...
"Oh!  Yes I'll be here[,] Mr. Van Gates—I'm
reading the most interesting book[.]"

Gilbert Bundy
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, September 1936


...While Barbara Shermund's old man sees no need to be hasty.
"Of course I love you—but there's such a difference in our ages—we ought
to wait a few years[.]"

Barbara Shermund
Window Sign/Poster for Esquire, July 1937



Note:  That's it for now. I'd love to hear from anyone with other examples of these window signs featuring vintage Esquire cartoons. Examples of original artwork by any of these artists are always welcome here as well.

02516

Saturday, April 14, 2018

E. Simms Campbell: A Wartime Sacrifice

A wartime "Harem Girls" gatefold cartoon from Esquire shows the ease with which artist E. Simms Campbell could populate his large color cartoons with some two dozen figures, including even three colorful men. The old warrior has been called to fight in the Second World War. Naturally, he seeks help in looking after the home front. The women themselves seldom react to what is transpiring; their role, after all, is to lounge about and look desirable. Still, they don't seem overly upset by the news. It is the sultan whom we get to see overreact in an old-fashioned and exaggerated style of cartooning that seems all too obvious today.
"I've been called to the front, my friend—do you mind taking care of my family?"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, 1940s







The fruit doesn't look bad either.


The sultan overreacts

The "Harem Girls" play it close to the vest.

E. Simms Campbell's signature



Of the three men, only the man in the background has an idealized form, whereas all the women share one.



"[?]"
Artist Unknown



Note:  E. Simms Campbell (1906-1971) created an awful lot of cartoons like this. Attempted Bloggery will continue to survey the work of this artist for the next two weeks or so. Readers with access to original Campbell art or to little-known published cartoons such as this one may submit high-resolution scans or photographs to the blog.

This cartoon was published in Esquire presumably between 1941 and 1945. Write if you know precisely when. 

Who is the mystery cartoonist? What is the caption?


Quick Links to the Attempted Bloggery Archives

Esquire


Attempted Bloggery supports net neutrality.

02514

Sunday, April 8, 2018

E. Simms Campbell: Sleeping Arrangements

It seems fitting that The Pocket Book of Esquire Cartoons, a 1959 paperback edition of selections from The Esquire Cartoon Album: 25th Anniversary Volume (1957), should have on its cover one of the very popular "Harem Girls" cartoons of E. Simms Campbell. The cartoon is not perfect; it relies on a prominent sign to explain the setting, but then it was usually more of a priority to show off the women than to describe the exotic locale. The Harem Girls, it will be noted, do not change their wardrobe when they go to the market. Like the women's clothing, the caption is brief and to the point.
"Something that sleeps twelve!"
E. Simms Campbell
The Pocket Book of Esquire Cartoons, 1959

Back Cover
Fred Lundy
Image added April 13, 2019

First publication:
"Something that sleeps twelve!"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, September 1955, page 100
Image added April 13, 2019


Note:  E. Simms Campbell (1906-1971) is currently having his work surveyed here at Attempted Bloggery. Readers with access to original Campbell art or obscure published cartoons may submit high-resolution scans or photographs to the blog.


Quick Links to the Attempted Bloggery Archives

Esquire


Attempted Bloggery supports net neutrality.

02510

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Blog Post No. 2500: E. Simms Campbell in Color—Esquire Cartoons from 1935

On Amazon, a seller has taken a number of issues of Esquire from 1935 and carefully removed full-page cartoons, of which there are many, selling them as individual cartoon "prints." We have already seen that some issues of the magazine had as many as four full page black and white cartoons by African-American cartoonist E. Simms Campbell and now we find the same for the color cartoons. His specialty was drawing attractive women, often in little or no clothing, but his range is surprisingly broad. Here are the 1935 color cartoons offered for sale on Amazon.


In April, we see a young couple for whom things already are not going well:
"Damn!  Can't you even cook?"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, April 1935, page 43



Campbell's "Harem Girls" were a popular recurring feature in Esquire. Here a bravura illustration entices us with...the merchandise.
"Sorry, buddy—you'll have to deliver them at the trade entrance[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, April 1935

The information on the above issue date comes not from Amazon but from the Comic Art Fans site, which has the original art:
"Sorry, buddy—you'll have to deliver them at the trade entrance[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Original art
Esquire,
 April 1935
The Illustrator in America, page 212
Ex-collection Walter Reed



A Pacific island cartoon has one of Campbell's better captions. The original artwork to this gag was sold at Illustration House on November 4, 2000. The date of the issue comes from there.
"You'd think the damn fools never saw baskets before[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, May 1935, page 78




As already demonstrated, the "Harem Girls" series gave rise to some disturbing scenarios of how the women were regarded by the sultan as property. Was this ever funny?
If found, please return to Abdul Ullah
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, June 1935, page 41





Oh, come on. You know what he means...
"It's nothing—just the usual reaction[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, August 1935, page 173




Campbell's artwork gets the spelling of tattooing right, but the caption drops a t. What's fascinating, though, is how an African-American cartoonist treated racial humor in a magazine aimed predominantly at white men. One wonders to what extent Campbell created his own gags and whether gag writers were involved.
"—of course there's an extra charge for tat[t]ooing in reverse[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, September 1935, page 41






Most juries don't want to be sequestered.
"Are you going to lock us up for the night, Your Honor?"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, September 1935, page 53





Not jailbait:
"That's just what I'm afraid of—that you are old enough[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, September 1935, page 71







Cartoons about sexual assault are alarmingly common in men's magazines of this time period. Some cartoons, like this one, require the reader to figure out the line that precedes the caption.
"—but lady—I ain't got no sister[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, September 1935, page 93






Gags about drinking to excess, even on the job, were also commonplace.
"Whom do you call in a case like this?"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, October 1935, page 65




The following cartoons are from 1935, but for now they lack an issue date.


Showtime:
"I don't see any parade[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, 1935




Smart kids, those Esquire readers.
"They said they were developing some film[.]"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, 1935


The sultan needs some me time.
"Thank God for onions!"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, 1935, page 30








How about that? Unfortunate dialect features prominently in this one.

"What a coincidence—so youse from the south too?"
E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, 1935, page 34


What exactly has Mr. Jacobs been up to? We close with some revivifying humor...
"Tell me about Mr. Jacobs in the morning—you'll find
smelling salts and iodine on the table[.]"

E. Simms Campbell
Esquire, 1935, page 34






Note:  At post time, all of these cartoons are available for purchase on Amazon. Simply follow the aqua link below each image.

Youse know what? Attempted Bloggery has been looking at the work of cartoonist E. Simms Campbell (1906-1971) for a good few weeks now. Interested readers can help carry on this worthy endeavor by submitting high-resolution scans or photographs of original Campbell art or of obscure published works like these. I would be happy to add to this post additional color Campbell cartoons from Esquire issues dated 1935.

The Esquire cartoons in the latter part of this post have years and page numbers, but alas no month. Please help me out if you can. I am, after all, a stickler for these things.






Quick Links to the Attempted Bloggery Archives









The Attempted Bloggery Centennial Posts
Blog Post No. 100
Blog Post No. 200:  A Shaggy Dog Story

Attempted Bloggery supports net neutrality.

02500