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Œuvres de Fontaine Fox

Fontaine Fox's Toonerville Trolley (1972) — Illustrateur — 55 exemplaires
Cartoons Second Book 1 exemplaire

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For over 40 years Fontaine Fox drew the single panel cartoon Toonerville Folks which, at its height, appeared in over 300 papers daily and on Sunday. Given this output it is not surprising that Fontaine Fox’s Toonerville Trolley is a sampler of Mr. Fox’s output (weekday black and white - no Sunday color panels). First and foremost among the people of Toonerville was the Toonerville Trolley That Meets All Trains and its operator “The Skipper”. The trolley, in its day, received all of the public attention that one associates with later cartoon strips like Peanuts and Bloom County. This attention included the sale of wind up tin floor toys featuring the trolley and The Skipper, as well as clockwork toys of some of the other inhabitance of Toonerville.

The book opens with a selection of cartoons focused on the trolley and the skipper. This is followed by selections of Toonerville cartoons with a focus on various members of the Toonerville community – The Powerful Katrinka, Mickey (Himself) McGuire, The Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang, “Suitcase” Simpson, The Absent Minded Professor, “Skyscraper” Smith, Aunt Eppie Hogg (Fattest Woman in Three Counties), “Tomboy” Taylor, The Little Scorpions, and others.

Fox’s cartoon drawing style is very sparse – he makes every line count – and he leaves the viewer with a sense that they have seen more than has actually been presented on paper. The humor of the cartoons is mild and most of it has aged well. Fox retired and quit drawing his strip in 1955. He died in 1964. Given my interest in trains, the only thing this reviewer wishes is that the book had more of the trolley/skipper cartoon panels and less of the others. I think this book provides a good overview of Fox’s work.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
alco261 | 1 autre critique | Feb 7, 2016 |
Fontaine Fox did his "Toonerville Trolley" strip from about 1915 to 1955. It was a broad-humored look at the denizens of a trolleycar route as it careened from place to place. It seems dated today, and the humor doesn't quite carry over to modern times, but one can appreciate how popular it was for 40 years, and it is still a pleasantly quaint panel.
½
 
Signalé
burnit99 | 1 autre critique | Jan 19, 2007 |

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Œuvres
2
Membres
56
Popularité
#291,557
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
2
ISBN
2

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