STEVE WINDERS EXAMINES THE PHOTO
STRIPS IN THE 1980s EAGLE
When
the new version of EAGLE appeared in
1982 a key element was its use of strip stories composed of photographs, known
as ‘fumetti’ (singular: fumetto), where the characters were played by actors
and in some cases, members of the publisher Fleetway’s
staff. Photo strips had proved successful in a new version of Girl launched in 1981, but those stories
had been contemporary, featured ordinary people and were set in familiar surroundings.
While EAGLE’s photo strips were also
usually set in the present day, they were adventure stories which invariably
featured characters who were anything but ordinary and in the days before
widespread digital photography and computer use, this often posed significant
challenges for the writers and photographers.
The
most popular and successful fumetto was Doomlord,
created by John Wagner and Alan Grant and written by Grant. The two had
worked closely together on Wagner’s creations Judge Dredd and Strontium Dog
in 2000 A.D. The photographer was
Gary Compton. Beginning in the first issue, dated March 27th 1982,
it was originally intended to be a single thirteen part serial about a
monstrous alien sent to Earth to ‘judge’ mankind’s suitability to protect the
planet. Able to absorb the memories of people he killed, Doomlord could also change
his appearance to look exactly like his victims. In his original form, Doomlord
was played by an actor wearing a rubber mask and long ornate robes. In the
story, he decides we are too dangerous as a species and almost succeeds in
destroying us. Fortunately the selfless sacrifice of the strip’s human hero,
Howard Harvey (portrayed by actor Mike Mungarvan), destroys him instead. The
strip was so well received, that a sequel brought another Doomlord to Earth in
a story beginning in Issue 23, dated 14th August 1982 and this one
judged in favour of humanity and stayed to become our protector. However he was
still utterly ruthless in pursuit of his goals. As with several stories in the
new EAGLE, Doomlord raised many
questions about the morality and the consequences of actions. Subsequent
stories often focused on Doomlord’s efforts to force mankind to address issues
like nuclear disarmament, protecting the environment and fairer distribution of
wealth. The strip continued to be popular and when EAGLE discontinued photo stories, Doomlord survived as an illustrated strip, drawn initially by
Heinzl and later by Eric Bradbury. It ran until 1990 when it was finally
dropped in EAGLE’s last major revamp.
However it soon returned in reprints when EAGLE
became a monthly publication in May 1991.
The
only other fumetto from the first issue to survive beyond issue 79 when photo
strips were dropped was Sergeant
Streetwise, about an undercover London policeman, Sergeant Wise, who posed
as an odd job man and operated from a boarding house to fight crime. Wise reported
to Inspector Taggert, who pretended to be his uncle to maintain his cover and he
was occasionally assisted by the incompetent Constable Botham. The strip
appeared intermittently and stories were one-offs or short serials with simple
and often unlikely plots. Streetwise photo
stories also appeared in the EAGLE Annuals
for 1983 and 1984 and the EAGLE Holiday
Special in 1983. Wise was
portrayed by actor and model Bill Malin, whose other credits include playing a
Cyberman in Doctor Who and a vampire
in the film Lifeforce. The strip was
written by Gerry Finley-Day, who wrote Invasion!
and several Dan Dare stories for 2000 A.D. It was photographed by Dave
Watts. After a long break from the weekly it returned as an illustrated strip drawn
by John Vernon in issue 97, finally ending in issue 106.
Also
beginning in the first issue was Thunderbolt
and Smokey, about two boys who transform their school soccer team from a
complete shambles into Schools’ Cup Finalists. Running for 27 episodes, the
strip was largely photographed at the Magna Carta School in Egham Hythe,
Surrey. Colin ‘Thunderbolt’ Dexter was portrayed by Richard Cray and Leo
‘Smokey’ Beckles by Ian Green. Both actors were pupils at the school, along
with the other boys featured in the story. A further Thunderbolt and Smokey photo strip appeared in the EAGLE Annual 1983. As a photo story, the
strip achieved levels of realism rarely achieved in drawn soccer strips,
because most of the action shots were taken during real matches or dedicated
set plays. In a surprise ending, the boys narrowly fail to win the cup, but are
praised for their dedication, belief and spirit. The strip was written by Tom
Tully, whose credits also include Heros
the Spartan in the original EAGLE,
Roy of the Rovers in Tiger and Roy of the Rovers Weekly and the later
adventures of Dan Dare in the new EAGLE. It was photographed by John
Powell. West Ham’s goalkeeper Phil Parkes made a guest appearance in one
episode when he coached Colin Dexter who had to act as goalie after the regular
keeper was injured by a bully. Predominantly set in the school and on football
pitches, it was a particularly easy photo strip to produce.
The
final fumetto to appear in Issue One was The
Collector, an anthology strip of ‘one off’ morality tales. Each story was
introduced by the ‘Collector’, drawn by artist Pat Wright to avoid the need to
call in the same actor repeatedly to pose for just one or two pictures. The
Collector would show readers an item from his collection which would form the
basis of his tale, which was told as a photo strip. Several writers contributed
stories, including Roy Preston, Alan Moore, Brian Burrell and Gerry Finley-Day
and photographers included Gary Compton, Sven Arnstein, Carin Simon and Henry
Arden. Almost all the stories featured horror or supernatural elements and the
single episode stories meant that the settings changed each issue. While most
were contemporary, there were also stories set in the Second World War. The Collector ran until Issue 48, with two
photo strips appearing in the 1983 EAGLE Annual,
another in the EAGLE Holiday Special in
1983 and a final one in the 1984 Annual.
The 1984 Holiday Special and the 1984
Annual each also carried an additional Collector
strip, both drawn by Ron Turner.
Beginning
in the second issue was a short occasional humorous strip called The Adventures of Fred. Portrayed by EAGLE’s Group Editor, Barrie Tomlinson,
who also wrote the strip, Fred was an odd looking character - Barrie Tomlinson was heavily disguised in large glasses,
with a small moustache and wearing an old mac and a hat. His ‘adventures’
appeared sporadically during the first few months of EAGLE and featured visual jokes which usually occupied no more than
half a page. A final episode appeared in the 1983 Annual. Slightly reminiscent
of Chicko in the original EAGLE, there was no dialogue in the
strip.
Another
photo strip with humorous elements was Joe
Soap, which first appeared in Issue 12, dated 12th June 1982.
Written by Alan Grant and photographed by Gary Compton, it was about an
incompetent private detective called Joseph Soaper. There were three serial
stories in EAGLE with a break between
the second and third serial. Joe’s final appearance was in Issue 45. However,
after featuring in a photo strip in the Annual for 1984, he later appeared in
drawn strips in EAGLE Annuals and Summer Specials in stories that were the
inverse of the original EAGLE’s Can You
Catch a Crook? strip, because readers were asked to spot the clues that Joe
missed. Can You Catch a Crook? had
asked readers to spot the clues that Sergeant Dave Bruce had noticed. In the
photo strip Joe was portrayed by actor Michael Scott. A trans-sexual, Michael
has subsequently become Mjka Scott.
Most
photo strips were filmed in London and usually not far from the editorial
office. King’s Reach Tower, where the new EAGLE
was based, provided a remarkable number of backgrounds. Further afield was the location of the ambitious
western photo strip Saddle Tramp, which
began in Issue 14, dated 26th June 1982 and ran for thirteen
episodes. It was principally photographed in Frontier City, a replica wild west
town at Littlecote Manor near Hungerford. The hero was a bounty hunter called
Trampas, a name borrowed from Owen Wister’s novel The Virginian. He was played by Malcolm Warriner, a western
re-enactor, with other parts played by members of his western enthusiasts group.
A recurring theme in the strip was that Trampas would lose his horse and have
to earn more money from chasing bounties to buy a new one. In the thirteen
episodes he managed to catch and often kill a fair number of villains, but the
last episode ends as the first began, with Trampas carrying his saddle on his
shoulder and off to chase new bounties to buy yet another horse. Saddle Tramp also “narrated” a western text story in the 1984 EAGLE Annual, which was illustrated by photographs. The strip was written
by Gerry Finley-Day and photographed by Howard Payton. Sadly, Frontier City was
demolished after Peter de Savary, the brother of Paul, who once owned the TV
and film rights to Dan Dare, bought
Littlecote in 1985!
Beginning
in Issue 24, dated 4th September 1982, Manix was EAGLE’s second
most popular photo strip. Clearly inspired by the original EAGLE’s The Iron Man, Manix was also about a powerful android
robot, who passed for human. However this strip took the concept to another
level, tackling questions that The Iron
Man barely touched on. While the Iron Man’s computer brain was occasionally
controlled briefly by villains, he was always freed before he did any serious
damage. However Manix was controlled for a considerable time by the self-seeking
Colonel Cameron and killed several people on his behalf. When Cameron ordered
him to kill ‘O’, the head of British Intelligence, his own survival impulses
enabled him to override his orders and he began to work for ‘O’ against
Cameron. Subsequently he carried out missions for British Intelligence. As with
Doomlord, Manix was able to change his outward appearance. He could be given
new faces, thereby avoiding the need to keep the same actor, who might not have
been available. Also, as with Doomlord, there was more than one Manix. Two were
destroyed and replaced in the course of the series and there was also a foot
high ‘Mini Manix’ who helped the full size version for a while! The series was developed
by Alan Grant and John Wagner and photographed by Mike Prior. Alan Grant wrote
later stories on his own, using the name ‘Keith Law’. The first Manix was
played by Steve Long. When EAGLE dropped
fumetti, Manix continued as a drawn
strip, with Manuel Carmona as artist. Scott Goodall eventually took over as
writer. Goodall’s previous work had included Thunderbirds for TV Century
21 and Fishboy and Galaxus, The Thing From Outer Space for Buster.
Beginning
in Issue 28, dated 2nd October 1982, was Invisible Boy, which replaced Thunderbolt
and Smokey. It was written by Scott Goodall and photographed by John Powell.
When the young hero, Tim Talbot stumbled into one of his scientist father’s
experiments it exposed him to a strange radiation which enabled him to become
invisible whenever he touched a micro-cell battery. Initially Tim used his
powers to deal with school bullies and similar problems, but later turned his
attention to fighting crime. The strip ran initially for thirteen episodes, but
returned for a longer run in January 1983. However it did not survive the
dropping of photo strips. An Invisible
Boy photo strip also appeared in the 1983 EAGLE Holiday Special and a text story appeared in the 1984 Annual,
but was illustrated with drawings.
Issue 41, dated 1st January 1983, brought another
historical based strip. This was Jake’s
Platoon, about a small group of British soldiers, separated from the main
force after landing on Sword Beach on D Day. With their sergeant and corporal dead,
it fell upon Lance-Corporal Jake Jackson to lead his men back to their
battalion. A brave attempt to produce an action strip, Jake’s Platoon was only partially successful. While there were some
well presented skirmishes with small groups of Germans, the houses were clearly
English, as was the countryside and several characters needed haircuts – a
problem with many war films in the seventies and early eighties. The strip was
written by Gerry Finley-Day and photographed by Carin Simon and ran for seventeen
episodes.
Another strip with a wartime setting began in Issue 64 (11th
June 1983). House of Correction lasted for twelve episodes. An unusual story, it was about an R.A.F.
Officer and his team working behind enemy lines in France to destroy a Nazi
scientist and his evil brainwashing serum and thwarting his plan to blow up the
leaders of the French Resistance. It was
written by Chris Lowder (as Jack Adrian) and photographed by Mike Prior.
Lowder’s previous work had included Adam
Eterno for Thunder and later Lion and five Dan Dare stories for 2000A.D.
The final fumetto Walk or
Die began in Issue 65 (18th June 1983) and was about a group of
seven schoolchildren who survived an air crash in the Canadian wilderness and
were forced to walk through remote hazardous country to reach safety. Two
teachers with them were killed in the first episode following an encounter with
a bear! The story shows how the group are saved by Jim Hardy, an unpopular boy
who put all sentiment and sympathy aside in leading the others to safety. This
was another strip that examined and questioned moral judgements. When the
others ignored Hardy’s warning that the rivers were too dangerous for a raft,
one of them was drowned and an injury which almost led to Hardy’s own death was
caused by the reckless action of one of the others. Walk or Die ran for thirty three episodes, continuing through the
change from photo stories to illustrated strips. It was written by Scott
Goodall and the photographer on the first fifteen episodes was Howard Payton. Two
photo episodes of the strip were included in the final issue to use fumetti (Issue
78) and subsequently the strip was illustrated by Ramon Escolano. It concluded
in Issue 96.
The novelty appeal of the photo strips undoubtedly contributed
to the early success of the new EAGLE, but
writers were severely limited by the constraints of photographed stories,
having to use great ingenuity to devise interesting plots that could be
achieved with a camera and actors. Similarly the photographers and actors
achieved some remarkable shots, but many action scenes looked posed, because
they were. In his autobiography Comic
Book Hero, Barrie Tomlinson wrote:
“Within a few months, it became obvious that readers preferred
drawn picture-strips, rather than photo-strips. To the delight of artists everywhere,
we reverted to all picture-strips. It had been something worth trying. Doing
special effects had been really difficult.”
Fumetti were also more expensive to produce that illustrated
strips. Interviewed for Hibernia Books’ 2018 publication, The Fleetway Files, Editor David Hunt admitted that the “photographic
process was both time consuming and expensive,” before going on to say, “When
sales started to slip after the first year, then the photo-story process became
difficult for me to justify."
Issue
79 did not merely dispense with the photo-strips though. It also marked a
change in size and paper quality for EAGLE.
Now it was printed on cheap newsprint paper where photo strips would not
have reproduced satisfactorily and it resembled the old Lion and Valiant in
appearance and content, with several more comic strips replacing the photo strips and features. It now became more of a traditional comic than a magazine.
Despite
their limitations, the photo stories are fondly remembered today and in the
early issues Doomlord was more popular
with readers than Dan Dare.
I am grateful to Jim
O’Brien, David Ronayne and Stephen Reid, who provided some information for this
article.