DCML Digest, Vol 60, Issue 7

Don Rosa donrosa at iglou.com
Thu Feb 14 15:50:42 CET 2008


 
From: "Tom Wormstedt" <t.wormstedt at gmail.com>
Subject: Don Rosa 2008 Finland Life Of Scrooge Calendar

I just recently got 2 copies of this calendar - one for my dad as a gift and
one for myself. ...
Don, if you see this and could tell me your original english text for it
that would be a big plus as well.

----------------------------------------
And I'm HAPPY to do this. I was rather perturbed that so few publishers gave
this information to readers with my posters each month. I wrote an
introduction to the series, a description of the thought process behind each
poster, a list of the Barks stories featured in each group of scenes, and
finally a TITLE to each poster. The main intro and individual intros were
not essential to the presentation, nor were my comments on the list of Barks
stories -- that could all be omitted. But if the featured Barks stories are
not briefly listed and the poster title offered to identify the topic of the
poster, HOW would the average reader know what the @#$% I was doing? Unless
the reader was a Barks scholar of the first water, he'd never recognize that
all the various images were panels copied from famous Barks stories -- most
scenes would simply look nonsensical. Even *I* would not recognize all of
the scenes I chose in all 12 posters! But then to not even give readers the
poster TITLE to identify the topic! Readers would have NO idea what the
poster meant! Well...
This was the most time-consuming project that I'd ever undertaken. The
research into every $crooge story Barks had ever created, the
decision-making involved in choosing the best stories and then best panel to
represent that story, the design of the jigsaw-puzzle-like lay-outs, MANY
trips into town to copy shops with stacks of old comics to copy hundreds of
specific Barks panels each copied at a different % enlargement size to meet
my needs, the laborious tracing of each panel of art on a lightbox adapting
the art to fit the space and rendering it in my own style based on Barks'
original, using PhotoShop for the first time on my art to enhance each line
of each drawing to get these special (to me) poster images as perfect as I
could, writing detailed instructions to colorists for every aspect of the
posters........ whereas a normal cover or PICSOU pin-up might take me 1-2
days, each of these posters took me over one full week! 
And then for so much of that effort to be turned into a total mystery for
readers.   I'm not going to this much trouble on anything again.
Here are the texts -- I apologize to all European readers who never knew
that I had tried to give them this explanation of that poster series.
--------------------------------------------------
INTRODUCTION TO POSTER SERIES:
I was asked to create a series of pin-ups/posters to commemorate $crooge
McDuck's 60th anniversary, dating back to when Carl Barks created the
character for what was only planned as a single appearance in a Donald Duck
story late in 1947. I  should pick 12 different aspects of the "$crooge
McDuck mythos" and devote one large illustration to each topic.

But HOW can anyone really create single illustrations depicting 60 *years*
of $crooge stories involving even one particular aspect?! Hundreds of
writers and artists have created *thousands* of Uncle $crooge stories in the
past 60 years, and, being an American, I'm not even familiar with the vast
majority of all the $crooge adventures ever created around the world. So, my
"coward's way out" is to simply do what I spend most of my time doing anyway
-- I depict 12 different aspects of $crooge McDuck's legend as seen in the
stories of his creator, Carl Barks. As large as that body of work still is,
it is at least possible to deal with a goodly sampling of Barks' most famous
and beloved stories which pertain to a certain aspect of the comic life of
his greatest creation. These posters will show the *seeds* of the $crooge
mythos upon which were based these past 60 years of stories by so many other
creators... me, included. 

Here is the list of the $croogian topics which will appear during the next
12 months, culminating in December, 2007, when $crooge officially celebrates
the 60th anniversary of his first appearance.

(Note: except for #1 & #12, this list is not in any logical order other than
the order in which I completed each poster. The list should be reordered to
coincide with the actual planned order in which the posters will be
presented, as long as the first and last posters are presented in January
and December, respectively.)

#1/January:  Early Versions of Uncle $crooge

#2/February: The #1 Dime!

#3/March: Strange Beings

#4/April: Uncle $crooge's Early Life

#5/May: The Money Bin

#6/June: Uncle $crooge's Greatest Treasures

#7/July: The Beagle Boys

#8/August: Monsters!

#9/September: Lost Realms

#10/October: Flintheart Glomgold

#11/November: Magica deSpell

#12/December: Sixty-ONE Christmases with Uncle $crooge!

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------

EARLY VERSIONS OF $CROOGE McDUCK

In the first poster in this series to commemorate $crooge McDuck's 60th
year, I chose to examine the first 3½ of those 60 years during which Carl
Barks was still designing and redesigning his new character's history,
personality and (as we see here) clothing & whiskers. Here we have views of
all the earliest appearances of the World's Richest Duck.

CLOCKWISE FROM  TOP-LEFT:

*The original aged tycoon in his oversized stemmed glasses and robe, eyeing
the bear cub he actually never saw during  $crooge's *debut appearance* in
"Christmas on Bear Mountain" (DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #178 -- Dec. 1947).

*Losing the spats but gaining large pince-nez glasses (no stems) and an
overcoat and hunting cap, accessorized by a pistol --  I give you $crooge's
"country gentleman" outfit  from "The Old Castle's Secret" (DONALD DUCK FOUR
COLOR #189 -- June 1948).

*Nattily dressed in suit & derby hat, a still somewhat mean-spirited $crooge
McDuck prepares to dump itch powder on his shiftless nephew Donald in an
untitled 10-pager in WALT DISNEY'S COMICS & STORIES #104 (May 1949).

*The first appearance of his top hat, $crooge is a well-dressed cast-away as
he relaxes on a tropical beach in "Race to the South Seas" (MARCH OF COMICS
#41 -- June 1949).

*Stems back on his glasses, but switching to a fur-trimmed frock coat, $McD
is meeting Bombie the Zombie, even though he never actually did so during
his cameo appearance in "Voodoo Hoodoo" (DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #238 --
August 1949).

*The best-dressed $crooge of all time, wearing a suit & tie *and* a
fur-trimmed frock coat, and his whiskers gradually diminishing, as he
considers Donald's Santa disguise in "A Letter to Santa" (CHRISTMAS PARADE
#1 -- November 1949).

*Admiring the rare gnoof in his private zoo, $crooge has switched back to
the fur-trimmed frock, but still no belt and with glasses still stemmed, in
"Trail of the Unicorn" (DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #263 -- February 1950).

*Getting close! The pince-nez glasses are back and $crooge's frock is now
trimmed in fine mole-skin rather than shaggy fur, but it's solid black in
color and his spats have only single buttons, in a desperate scene from "The
Magic Hourglass" (DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #291 -- September 1950).

*CENTRAL SCENE: The "classic", modern $crooge McDuck, as he has appeared
since July, 1951. (I've *slightly* changed my own physical appearance since
I first debuted just one month earlier, or actually at the same time this
"July" dated issue was on the newsstands. Changed my clothing, also -- that
original diaper had to go.)

DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: My dedication of "D.U.C.K." (Dedicated to Unca Carl from
Keno) is *certainly* included in each of these Barks-tribute posters! Give
up? Look in the tears and wrinkles of Bombie's shroud on his chest.

---------------------------------------------------------------------

$CROOGE McDUCK AND HIS NUMBER ONE DIME
 
After $crooge himself, what could be the next topic of these pages other
than his #1 Dime, the first money he ever earned? In the central scene I
give you a "generic" view of $crooge dusting the belljar under which the
famous Dime is usually found resting on its velvet pillow atop a marble
pedestal.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP-LEFT:
*Not a scene that Carl Barks ever showed directly, but one scene on this
page *must* show the young shoeshine boy as he earned his First Dime
cleaning a ditchdigger's boots on a Glasgow street.
*Magica deSpell, who is collecting various coins from the world's richest
men to use as ingredients in a magic spell to make herself rich, has the
first moment of realization that the first coin earned and carried
throughout his life by the world's *richest* man had to be the most potent
such talisman on earth -- so began her career in trying to steal it! ("The
Midas Touch" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #36)
*Directly above that scene is a close-up of the tiny Dime, though it is
based only on my own speculation that it was probably the most common
10-cent piece in circulation at the time of $crooge's youth, a "seated
Liberty" dime .
*Shrunken by a weird invention, $crooge is trying to rescue his lost Dime
from beneath an anthill when he encounters a resident with a taste for
tycoon. ("Billions in the Hole" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #33)
*The #1 Dime makes its  very first, if brief, appearance when it saves the
Ducks from Beagle Boy confinement -- it is so worn and thin from constant
handling that's it's sharp enough to cut ropes! (untitled story in UNCLE
$CROOGE FOUR COLOR #495 -- actual U$ #3)
*A second scene from the first Magica story, but it's significant that her
first try was perhaps the closest she ever came to succeeding in melting the
Dime in the fires of Vesuvius. ("The Midas Touch" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #36)
*In the first appearance of Flintheart Glomgold, $crooge used a string tied
around his #1 Dime to win a contest that named him the World's Richest Man.
("The Second-Richest Duck" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #15)
*In another Magica story, $crooge and his Dime were threatened by some weird
faceless critters. ("The Many Faces of Magica deSpell" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #48)
*Another threat from another weird critter, this one no less than a Martian,
as $crooge saves his Dime from the purser's safe of a sunken ship. ("Lost
Beneath the Sea" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #46)
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: the dedication is hidden in the pebbles beneath the Dime
in the anthill scene.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
$CROOGE McDUCK AND STRANGE BEINGS
 
$crooge met some unusual intelligent beings of either earthly or alien
origin in Carl Barks' stories. Barks' most famous unusual people are, of
course, the residents of Plain Awful who owned the square eggs, but $crooge
never visited there in Barks' adventures, otherwise I would have made one of
them the subject of the central scene here. I was very pleased to award that
spot to my own favorites, the Peeweegah Indians! Here we see $crooge
pleading his case before the skeptical Peeweegah Chief and equally skeptical
chipmunk onlooker. ("The Land of the Pygmy Indians" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #18)
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP-LEFT:
*On a asteroid we have two races of aliens seen in "Island in the Sky"
(UNCLE $CROOGE #29)
*Having an aerial cavort are the Greek Harpies who kidnapped $crooge to
Colchis ("The Golden Fleecing" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #12)
*The Venusian King who swapped $crooge an entire planet of gold for a box of
dirt and got the better end of the deal. ("The 24-Carat Moon" -- UNCLE
$CROOGE #24)
*Mini-aliens try to get $crooge's attention to make a big grain deal.
("Micro-Ducks from Outer Space" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #65)
*The Mermaid Queen sends a goon (a mergoon?) after $crooge as an invader to
her realm. ("Hall of the Mermaid Queen" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #68)
*Next to the Peeweegahs, my favorites are the Terries and the Fermies! ("The
Land Beneath the Ground" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #13)
*To balance the Mermaid Queen in the right corner, in this left corner I
give you another undersea royalty, the King of Atlantis, also seizing the
invading McDuck. (untitled story  --  UNCLE $CROOGE #5)
*The leader of the Martian undersea metal salvagers I also showed in my "#1
Dime" topic poster. ("Lost Beneath the Sea" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #46)
*Peeking from below the asteroid, another fugitive from the #1 Dime poster,
a member of the tribe of faceless people seen in "The Many Faces of Magica
deSpell" (UNCLE $CROOGE #48)
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: Look at the frill on the Peeweegah Chief's buckskin
pants.
----------------------------------------------------
 
$CROOGE'S EARLY LIFE
 
I guess I'm rather well-known for my "Life of $crooge" stories, and they
would provide a wealth of scenes for this page. But these are to be tributes
to Carl Barks' stories, not mine! And that made this a tough job since Barks
gave us very few visual flashbacks to $crooge's youth. But I think I have
them all here. Still, for the central scene I hope I can be forgiven for
using my own version of $crooge as a young shoeshine lad. Barks showed him
at that age only once, drawing him already with glasses *and whiskers*; but
since Barks did not write that story, I try to use that as my excuse for
dispelling with such an odd rendition.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP-LEFT:
*$crooge digging for copper ore in 1882 Montana in a flashback in the very
*first* "Uncle $crooge" story in the very first issue of an all UNCLE
$CROOGE comic! ("Only a Poor Old Man" -- UNCLE $CROOGE FOUR COLOR #386)
*Again, I use my own image of a young $crooge to show him gathering firewood
to sell, something mentioned by $crooge when once reminiscing about his
earliest jobs. ("The Golden River" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #22)
*Just because I'm short of Barks flashback scenes to show you, here's
another view of $crooge in the copper fields of 1882 Montana. Maybe I could
claim this comes from his previous days "in the cattle wars of the old
frontier" as mentioned in the same story. ("Only a Poor Old Man" -- UNCLE
$CROOGE FOUR COLOR #386)
*I used $crooge's days as a prospector in Arizona in my "Life of $crooge",
but I removed his glasses deciding those came later. But here he is with
spectacles as Barks showed him in a flashback to those years. ("Ghosts of
Pizen Bluff" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #26)
*Yes, I also removed $crooge's glasses when I did stories of his years on a
Mississippi Riverboat, but here he is just as drawn in an untitled 1957
adventure which was Barks' only $crooge story set entirely in his youth.
(UNCLE $CROOGE GOES TO DISNEYLAND #1)
*Need I say what this is? $crooge proudly displays the find that at long
last made him rich, the Goose Egg Nugget, which is catching the eye of one
Glittering Goldie. And the rest, as we say, is history. ("Back to the
Klondike" -- UNCLE $CROOGE FOUR COLOR #456 -- actually U$ #2)
*I can't swear that this Barks flashback showed $crooge in his youth
somewhere inside that diver's suit, but it seemed to be a reference to a
much earlier time when $crooge spoke of his days salvaging sunken treasure
on the Spanish Main. ("Only a Poor Old Man" -- UNCLE $CROOGE FOUR COLOR #386
-- actual #1)
*One of my favorite single panels of all time! The world's first view of
$crooge on the streets of Dawson City during the Yukon Gold Rush! (once more
from "Only a Poor Old Man" -- UNCLE $CROOGE FOUR COLOR #386 -- actual #1)
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: look at the tunnel wall next to the central shoeshine
boy's shoulder.
---------------------------------------------------------
 
$CROOGE McDUCK'S MONEY BIN
 
The truth is that Carl Barks never tried to decide on one single version of
the Money Bin. He would always change its appearance slightly by need or
whim. But he did seem to decide on a general appearance along about 1956.
Here, around a central view of $crooge typically enjoying himself in his
cash, I give you all of the early versions of the world-famous McDuck Money
Bin!
READING IN RIGHT-TO-LEFT FASHION (NOT CLOCKWISE!) :
*The first time that it was suggested that $crooge had all his money in cash
and kept it in one "bin", literally a grain bin on a farm, was in this
untitled short-story in 1951. It was an excellent (and very funny) lesson in
economics, and a favorite of mine, but a story that I personally regard as
perhaps a dream that $crooge had one night as it is just a bit too fantastic
for me to accept... well, you'd hafta read it to know what I mean. (WALT
DISNEY'S COMICS & STORIES #126)
*The first appearance of a giant megalithic "McDuck Money Bin" on a hill in
downtown Duckburg was in this untitled 1952 story. The Bin is described as
being "new", but later stories described it as having been on the hill for
many decades. Yes, the joke is that it's supposed to resemble a safe (with a
huge combination dial) while surrounded by a moat of acid and many other
boobytraps. (WALT DISNEY'S COMICS & STORIES #135)
*Later that same year of 1952, in the very first "Uncle $crooge" story in
the very first issue of UNCLE $CROOGE comics, the Money Bin jumped from the
hill to a downtown street so that the plot could involve the Beagle Boys
buying the adjacent lot and digging right into the Bin wall from their own
building! ("Only a Poor Old Man" -- UNCLE $CROOGE FOUR COLOR #386)
*You could argue that this was never intended to be a permanent Money Bin,
but just another one-shot idea for another Beagle Boy heist, but $crooge
converted all his cash to paper currency and stored it inside this round
(and easily rolled away!) Bin in 1953. (untitled story in UNCLE $CROOGE FOUR
COLOR #495 -- actual U$ #3)
*Here is the most logical design for the Bin, used only once in 1955; it
shows a very efficient idea of the McDuck offices attached to the actual
3-cubic-acre Bin of money. But the later cube-shape Bin has more charm!
("The Lemming with the Locket" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #9)
*This isn't *exactly* how the Bin looked in the 1956 story that I cite as
the first appearance of the final design, but this is how I see the classic
Money Bin. The McDuck offices must be contained inside a narrow facade in
front of the actual Bin in the rear, which doesn't seem very efficient or
convenient for the employees, but y'gotta love it! ("The Land Beneath the
Ground" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #13)
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: look in the stones in the wall near $crooge's left hand
(to your right).
---------------------------------------------------------------
 
$CROOGE McDUCK AND THE BEAGLE BOYS
 
The terrible, terrible Beagle Boys! The greatest, albeit most inept, crooks
in comicdom! They seemed to be the only recurring villains that Carl Barks
really liked -- after creating Magica DeSpell he used her for only a few
years before dropping her for the last 3 years of his career, and he used
Flintheart Glomgold only three times *total*. But the Beagle Boys were
constantly attacking $crooge's  Money Bin ever since the very first "Uncle
$crooge" story in the very first issue of "Uncle $crooge" comics! Here I
give you scenes from some, but certainly *not all*, of Carl Barks' most
famous Beagle Boy attacks.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP-LEFT:
*In their first two appearances, The Beagle Boys were not wearing their
later prison uniforms. They seemed to be a "street gang"... a "crook
fraternity"... perhaps not even related to one another. They had the name of
their club on their T-shirts and wore simple baseball caps (if created
nowadays rather than in 1951, I guess those caps would be worn backwards to
further demonstrate their low mentality). (untitled story -- WALT DISNEY'S
COMICS AND STORIES #135)
*The BB's try (very unsuccessfully) to imitate $crooge's demonstration of
how he dives into his money, in the very first "Uncle $crooge" story. ("Only
a Poor Old Man" -- UNCLE $CROOGE FOUR COLOR #386 -- actual #1)
*To balance the first appearance of the baseball-capped BB's on the left,
here on the right I give them to you still similarly garbed in their second
appearance one mere month later, chipping $crooge's money out of a block of
ice. (untitled story -- WALT DISNEY'S COMICS AND STORIES #136)
*The BB's reveal themselves to our heroes who thought they were ghosts of
Spanish Conquistadors in the untitled story about $crooge's search for the
Seven Cities of Cibola. (UNCLE $CROOGE #7)
*Imitating another ancient ghost with a pirate cut-out and a lighthouse
beacon. ("The Strange Shipwrecks" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #23)
*The BB's become astronauts in a snazzy spaceship to beat $crooge to a
golden planetoid. ("The 24-Carat Moon" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #24)
*$crooge buried his money underground but the BB's hit a gusher with their
oil-drilling rig. ("The Money Well" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #21)
*$crooge hides his money in trees but the BB's invent a giant
tree-cutter-shredder. ("The Paul Bunyan Machine" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #28)
*The BB's have stolen a portable petrifying-ray machine from a mad professor
who loves cabbage in an untitled story (UNCLE $CROOGE #8)
*If only the Money Bin were as small as it is in this story when it was hit
by a shrinking ray, it would be much easier to steal, but then the money
inside wouldn't be worth so much! ("Billions in the Hole" -- UNCLE $CROOGE
#33)
*Two disguised BB's, one as a robot seaman and another as the ship's
skipper, planning to hijack $crooge's fortune hidden in cans in the hold of
a freighter in an untitled story about Hawaii. (UNCLE $CROOGE #4)
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: look in the grid pattern on the rear end of the Paul
Bunyan machine (to the right of the oil derrick).
------------------------------------------------------------
 
$CROOGE McDUCK'S GREATEST TREASURES
 
Oboy! I enjoyed designing this one! My favorite Carl Barks stories are the
great treasure hunts! I was so inspired that I created an interesting
symmetry to this page design. At least I think I did. But you might accuse
me of also "cheating" a bit by including some items that are more like
"trophies" than valuable treasures.
Further cheating in the central scene combining two adventures that took
place in frigid climes. $crooge wears the Crown of Genghis Khan ("The Lost
Crown of Genghis Khan" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #14) while sampling the taste of
frozen Bombastium ("A Cold Bargain" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #17). Oh, okay, and I
cheated again by drawing $crooge's penguin pal smaller than life-size, but I
didn't want her to dominate the scene.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP-LEFT:
*The "ghost of Sir Quackly" threatens an early version of $crooge McDuck in
his second appearance in comics and his *very first* treasure hunt story!
("The Old Castle's Secret" -- DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #189)
*The world's only 1916 quarter, a coin $crooge made so rare that *he
himself* was the only person rich enough to buy it from him! Whups!
(untitled Atlantis adventure -- UNCLE $CROOGE #5)
*$crooge orbits his own solid gold planetoid. ("The 24-Carat Moon" -- UNCLE
$CROOGE #24)
*$crooge swims in the treasure bins of just one of the Seven Cities of
Cibola while the booby-trapped Emerald Idol leers ominously. (untitled --
UNCLE $CROOGE #7)
*Okay, so that Grecian urn might not be worth so much except as a trophy,
but it was very valuable to the Terries and Fermies. ("The Land Beneath the
Ground" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #13)
*An ol' rock that turns base metal to solid gold... is that more valuable
than an ol' urn? Okay! ("The Fabulous Philosopher's Stone" -- UNCLE $CROOGE
#10)
*Just one treasure from the bottom of a flooded sacrificial pit in Central
America. ("The Crown of the Mayas" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #44)
*The GOOSE EGG NUGGET!!! ("Back to the Klondike" -- UNCLE $CROOGE FOUR COLOR
#456 -- actual #2)
*Discovering some very famous diggings! ("The Mines of King Solomon" --
UNCLE $CROOGE #19)
*The Candy-Striped Ruby! ("The Status Seeker" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #41)
*Diving for the Pearls of the Kuku Maru protected by a Hindu idol. ("Deep
Down Doings" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #37)
*Turning more metal into gold, this time with Vulcan's Hammer. ("Mythtic
Mystery" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #34)
*Running from the Sleepless Dragon with Jason's Golden Fleece. ("The Golden
Fleecing" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #12)
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: look in the Emerald Idol's headdress.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
MONSTERS!
 
I'm having more fun with these tribute posters as I go along! This time I
give you the best giant or supernatural (and a few phony) monsters that
$crooge McDuck faced in the stories by his creator, Carl Barks. And I knew
which character *had* to be in the central scene -- Bombie the Zombie
("Voodoo Hoodoo" -- DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #238). Yes, I know $crooge did
not actually meet Bombie face-to-face in that story, but $crooge *was* the
fellow to whom Bombie was trying to deliver that booby-trapped voodoo doll.
And in that early story in $crooge's history, Barks did not yet even draw
him as I show him here. So, I may have taken some "artistic liberties", but
it was worth it if it means I can make my pal Bombie the central monster on
this page!
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP-LEFT:
*A rather inexplicable being from a later Barks story, that's the Wild Girl
who lived with dingoes in Australia. ("Queen of the Wild Dog Pack" -- UNCLE
$CROOGE #62)
*Coming up now are what are actually three *phony* monsters. First, this
hotel-bellboy "ghost" turned out to be fake (Barks did not like supernatural
concepts in his stories), but it makes a nice visual addition to a
"MONSTERS!" page. ("The Mystery of the Ghost Town Railroad" -- UNCLE $CROOGE
#56)
*Another fake "ghost", supposedly the spirit of Sir Quackly McDuck
protecting his jewel box in $crooge McDuck's *first* ever treasure hunt.
("The Old Castle's Secret" -- DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #189)
*One more fake monster from Castle McDuck, this one a disguised member of
the McDucks' ancient rival clan, the lowlander Whiskervilles. ("The Hound of
the Whiskervilles" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #29)
*One of my childhood favorites, the Sleepless Dragon who protected Jason's
Golden Fleece in Colchis. ("The Golden Fleecing" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #12)
*Across the bottom I give you three *giant-size* monsters that $crooge has
encountered. First is one of the legendary Rocs that $crooge faced in an
adventure that seems to have only been a dream. ("The Cave of Ali Baba" --
UNCLE $CROOGE #37)
*In the center is a giant jellyfish that attacked $crooge's submarine while
he was carrying the Candy-Stripe Ruby. ("The Status Seeker" -- UNCLE $CROOGE
#41)
*One of the huge robots that were commandeered by the Beagle Boys to loot
the McDuck Money Bin! ("The Giant Robot Robbers" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #58)
*Another all-time favorite! Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the one, the
only, Abominable Snowman of the Himalayas! ("The Lost Crown of Genghis Khan"
-- UNCLE $CROOGE #14)
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: look on the Sleepless Dragon's big Jay-Leno chin.
---------------------------------------------------
 
$CROOGE McDUCK'S LOST REALMS
 
This page is a tribute to all the wondrous lost lands and special places
that Carl Barks created for $crooge McDuck's adventures! These scenes get
more fun to do as we go along, and this one might have been the most fun of
all... but a LOT of @#$%& work! The greatest lost realm that I think $crooge
ever visited is easily the wonderful valley of peace and harmony, milk and
honey, Tralla La; in the central scene, I represent the valley in the person
of one of the Tralla Lalian (?) leaders as he shows $crooge the wonders of
his happy land.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP-LEFT:
*Across the page top I give you three famous castles/palaces from $crooge's
adventures. First, even though it might not really be a "lost realm", and
not even very pretty to look at, still, one of the most important estates in
$crooge's life is Castle McDuck on a remote Scottish moor. ("The Old
Castle's Secret" -- DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #189)
*Top center is no less than the castle of Valhalla that $crooge encountered
on an errant asteroid. ("Mythtic Mystery" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #34)
*The remote and mist-shrouded city of Colchis where the Harpies guard
Jason's Golden Fleece. ("The Golden Fleecing" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #12)
*Here we have the lost city of Tangkor Wat somewhere in an Indochina jungle.
("The City of Golden Roofs" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #20)
*Here's another beautiful lost valley, this one hiding the gold mines of the
ancient Incas (though Tralla La didn't have these nasty booby-traps that
greeted $crooge's arrival). ("The Prize of Pizarro" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #26)
*Below the ruins of his palace on the Isle of Crete, at the end of the
famous Labyrinth maze, was found the treasure-filled secret throne room of
King Minos. ("The Fabulous Philosopher's Stone" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #10)
*I couldn't fit them all in this tiny view, but I give you at least five of
the Seven Cities of Cibola! (untitled story in UNCLE $CROOGE #7)
*Here you can see regiments of Terries and Fermies marching through... Terry
Fermy! ("The Land Beneath the Ground" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #13)
*The lost city of Atlantis surrounded by its guardian whales (untitled story
in UNCLE $CROOGE #5)
*With its famous whirlpool seeming to lead down to Atlantis, I give you the
wonderful valley of Tralla La (with its mountainous walls severely shortened
to fit them into the tiny scene). (another untitled story in UNCLE $CROOGE
#6)
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: In the Incan valley, look at the nearer of the two walls
where the spring-loaded blade awaits unwary invaders.
-----------------------------------------------------
 
FLINTHEART GLOMGOLD
 
For me, Flintheart is the greatest $crooge villain since he is, in the
tradition of all great pulp fiction, our hero's "evil twin"! But as famous a
villain as Flintheart has become in 6 decades of $crooge McDuck adventures,
the fact is that his creator Carl Barks only used Flinty three times! First
in 1956, the next time over 3 years later, then one final time a full seven
years after that. Flintheart has gained his real fame in the *many* $crooge
stories created by Egmont in and for Europe. But since this is a series of
Barks tribute pages, that leaves me with the tricky job here of using scenes
from *only* those three stories! Well, okay, let's try it. I start with a
central scene of a classic "generic" face-off between the world's two
richest tycoons.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP-LEFT:
*Fighting! ("The Second-Richest Duck" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #15)
*The Glomgold Money Bin at his home base in the Valley of the Limpopo, South
Africa. (U$ #15)
*More fighting! ("The Money Champ" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #27)
*Flintheart firing rockets at $crooge's jet! ("So Far and No Safari" --
UNCLE $CROOGE #61)
*$crooge (or at least his hat) being hit with a glob of a witch doctor's
shrink potion fired by Flintheart. (U$ #27)
*The end of the great string-ball competition to be Richest Man in the World
-- it's a tie? (U$ #15)
*No more fighting... now only cussing! (U$ #15).
*The great silver dollar competition to be the World's Money Champ! (U$ #27)
*Oh, no! They got loose! They're at it again!!! (U$ #15)
*$crooge's jet being hit by Flinty's rockets from the opposite side of my
drawing! Good aim! (U$ #61)
*Flintheart firing the shrink-potion glob at $crooge with his giant cannon,
itself already a victim of its own ruptured ammunition pouch! (U$ #27)
*The beginning of the great string-ball competition to be Richest Man in the
World (U$ #15) ...but the richest tycoon on earth, as we all know, will now
and forever be Carl Barks' $crooge McDuck!!!
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: look in the strands near his foot on $crooge's large
ball-of-string.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
MAGICA deSPELL
 
While the Beagle Boys wanted the largest part of $crooge's money (all of
it!), this femme fatale wanted the smallest part... only one thin ten-cent
piece. But that dime was THE Dime, the first coin $crooge ever earned.
According to Magica's (and $crooge's) creator Carl Barks, she wanted to use
that coin to forge a magic amulet that would give her the Midas Touch...
*not* because the Dime had magical good-luck abilities of its own, but for
the opposite reason of it having powers that $crooge himself had given the
coin by handling it since his childhood. (Another aspect of Barks' original
concept for Magica deSpell that I like to harp on is that she is *not* the
supernatural "witch" she is often portrayed as in European tales -- she is a
normal person who has studied the mystic art of sorcery.) Barks only used
Magica for a few years of his career, from late 1961 to mid 1964, then
seemed to go back to using the Beagle Boys as $crooge's only recurring
villain(s). I picked some classic Magica poses from specific stories, but
most of which might have appeared in any Magica story created in the past 46
years. And they are arranged around a "generic" central scene of Magica
again gaining possession of the #1 Dime, though we know it's, as always,
only temporary!
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP-LEFT:
*Look out! FOOF BOMBS! ("Ten Cent Valentine" -- WALT DISNEY'S COMICS &
STORIES #258)
*Magica's famous Sorcery Shoppe on the slopes of Mt. Vesuvius in Italy (I
stuck some other volcano in the distance, for effect). Looking on are the
two spies sent by $crooge to keep the shop under surveillance. ("The Many
Faces of Magica deSpell" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #48)
*Magica gives a Beagle Boy some lightning in his gabardines in a rare
team-up. ("The Isle of Golden Geese" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #45)
*One of Magica's many near successes in melting the #1 Dime to make her
amulet. (In an earlier page, I already used a scene of the traditional
melting method using the fires of Vesuvius.) ("Oddball Odyssey" -- UNCLE
$CROOGE #40)
*A typical magical disguise. ("For Old Dime's Sake" -- UNCLE $CROOGE #43)
*Magica uses a nice fly-fishing technique to glom the Dime on the opposite
side of the drawing. ("Raven Mad" -- WALT DISNEY'S COMICS & STORIES #265)
*The sorceress casts a spell to summon a fiery meteor from outer space to
smash the Money Bin! (U$ #43)
*Magica strikes a sexy pose! Sophia Loren, eat your heart out! (U$ #40)
*The sorceress casts another spell, this time to summon a comet from the
heavens! (U$ #43)
*Magica's pet raven Ratface gloats at the seemingly defeated $crooge. (U$
#48)
*Magica's fly-fishing cast from the other side of the page is about to snag
Ol' #1 from a public display (foolish $crooge!) with that wad of stickum!
(WDC&S #265)
*How could I not include a generic potion-mixing scene? (U$ #48)
 
DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: look in the flames in the comet's head.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Sixty-ONE Christmases with Uncle $crooge
 
After the first 11 pin-ups, my problem was how to think up a "big finish"
for this series commemorating the 60th anniversary of the first appearance
of Carl Barks' Uncle $crooge McDuck? My first idea, in typical movie-buff
style, was a big ACTION SCENE! One topic I had not yet explored was to try
to highlight all of Barks' great action panels. In fact, I still think the
greatest single panel of comic book art of all time is the half-page of the
Money Dam breaking in "Only a Poor Old Man" in the very first issue of the
American UNCLE $CROOGE comic in 1952. I figured I'd make the 12th pin-up
double-size to span two pages, and enable me to fit in all the
Panavision-size scenes of leaping sea monsters and collapsing Seven-Cities.
But soon I realized that either publishers were *already* using my pin-ups
as double-page spreads or they were limited by their product and couldn't
use a double-size scene. So I needed a new idea...
In an e-mail exchange of ideas with Duckfan Sigvald Grøsfjeld, he mentioned
some famous Barks $crooge stories that I had not yet featured in the first
11 pin-ups, and I noticed that there were several Christmas stories on his
list. This got me to thinking... the 12th pin-up would appear at Christmas,
the true and exact 60th anniversary of $crooge's first appearance! The first
appearance of $crooge was in a Christmas story in a Christmas issue! In
fact, Barks' name for his new character (in the American originals) was
"Scrooge" after the character in Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol"... if
$crooge McDuck had first appeared in a story at any other time of year,
Barks probably would have named him "John Rockerduck" or a name indicating a
*wealthy* character. But Barks had given his character a Christmas name...
Dickens' "Ebenezer Scrooge" was not especially wealthy, he was just greedy
and sour. So my answer was to have the "big finish" pin-up spotlight $crooge
McDuck as a Christmas character created for a Christmas story. And this is
now his sixty-FIRST Christmas appearance!
 
*In the upper left & right corners of the page appear $crooge offering
Donald the Bear disguise worn in that first story "Christmas on Bear
Mountain" (DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #178).
*Spanning the entire page below that is the scene of $crooge leading his
parade of the "Twelve Days of Christmas" (though I cheated and only drew
about two-thirds of the participants) from the story "The Thrifty
Spendthrift" in UNCLE $CROOGE #47.
*Below the end of the parade, clockwise down the right side, is a horse
poorly disguised as a reindeer, pulling the rented sled seen on the opposite
side of the page -- more on that later.
*Next is a shot from the untitled Christmas story in WALT DISNEY'S COMICS
AND STORIES #148 where Donald tries to trick Uncle $crooge out of a free
Christmas feast by disguising himself as a fellow millionaire businessman.
*Below that is a special entry -- this is a combined scene from the LITTLE
GOLDEN BOOK #D84 published in 1960. Barks provided the art for this
illustrated children's storybook about $crooge's nephews disguising
themselves as the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present & Future and causing
their uncle to experience the Dickens story of his namesake character.
*In the lower-right corner is a scene from "Christmas in Duckburg", the
Barks story appearing in CHRISTMAS PARADE #9. Yes, that's a giant Christmas
Tree being hoisted atop a Ferris Wheel next to Duckburg City Hall; I won't
try to explain it! Read the story!
*Mid-bottom -- a special central spot had to be found for a scene from
"Christmas for Shacktown", many a Duckfan's favorite Barks story, from
DONALD DUCK FOUR COLOR #367.
*In the lower-left is one of my favorite Barks Christmas stories from
CHRISTMAS IN DISNEYLAND #1 when the Ducks enjoy a white Christmas (due to
volcanic ash) on a tropical island while hunting black pearls.
*Going up the left side we next have a scene from another Christmas treasure
hunt -- a submarine search for a sunken ocean liner in the untitled story
from WDC&S #172.
*Finally, to complete the scene started by the flea-bitten horse on the
opposite side, you see $crooge forcing Donald to dress up as a cut-rate
Santa Claus to fool Huey, Dewey and Louie in "A Letter to Santa" from
CHRISTMAS PARADE #1. You might recall that I also featured this very early
$crooge appearance way back in my first pin-up in this series, 11 months
ago!
*(There were only two U$ Xmas stories that I didn't include -- "You Can't
Guess" from CHRISTMAS PARADE #2, and "The Christmas Cha Cha" from CHRISTMAS
PARADE / DELL GIANT #26. But there were no usable scenes with U$ in either
one.)

DUCKHUNTER SPOILER: Check the whatchacallits on the drummers' hats in the
upper left.

And that completes my twelve 60th anniversary celebrations for Carl Barks'
creation of the great $crooge McDuck, my favorite character in fiction!





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