Flook (comic strip)
Flook was a British comic strip which ran from 1949 to 1984 in the Daily Mail newspaper. It was drawn by Wally Fawkes (of the jazz group Wally Fawkes and the Troglodytes), who signed the strips as "Trog".
It was the first newspaper comic strip to be published by the New Zealand newspaper Otago Daily Times, where it ran from 1952 to 1979.
Characters and story
The central characters were a young boy called Rufus and his magical animal friend, Flook. According to the strip 'The Coming of Flook', which forms part of the cartoon book Rufus and Flook v. Moses Maggot, we learn that Flook, who vaguely resembled a furry pig walking on his hind legs, was a creature from the age of the dinosaurs whom Rufus, in a dream, rescued from cavemen and who then came back to waking reality with him. Flook was able to talk (in six languages) and was blessed with a fine sense of irony with which to temper Rufus' innocence and enthusiasm. He was also able to change shape into all manner of objects, though not much was made of this power after the first couple of years of the strip. They inhabited a satirical and socially-perceptive fantasy world not unrelated to contemporary Great Britain, populated by larger-than-life characters, mostly bearing a striking resemblance to leading politicians and celebrities.[1] Many of their adventures starred their principal adversaries, the villainous Moses Maggot and his sidekick the gaolbird Bodger, whose sister – the overweight teenage witch Lucretia Bodger (a play on Lucretia Borgia), with her cat, Gobstopper – also appeared quite frequently, as did a mad retired colonel.
Scripts
Storylines were written by the singer and writer George Melly, the comedian Barry Took, the musician Humphrey Lyttelton and the film critic Barry Norman. In 1953 some were written by Compton Mackenzie.[2] Several book-length episodes and compilations were separately published, and the Daily Mail also marketed a Flook toy.
The ironic and bohemian ethos of the strip was notably at variance with the conservatism of the Daily Mail,[1] which finally discontinued it after some 10,000 episodes, reportedly because the editor David English objected to its repeated jabs at the then Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher[3] (though she is said to have enjoyed it), and the strip's covert criticism of the Mail's championing of the cause of Zola Budd.[2] After it was dropped by the Mail, Flook ran in the Left-leaning Daily Mirror and Sunday Mirror in 1984–85, scripted by Keith Waterhouse (ironically, shortly before he himself moved to the Mail).
Flook was adopted as a mascot by 831 Squadron, Fleet Air Arm, and the character was painted on the squadron aircraft.
Books
- The Amazing Adventures of Rufus and Flook 1949
- Rufus and Flook v. Moses Maggot 1950
- Rufus and Flook at School 1951
- Flook 1958 (collection of three stories)
- Flook: Flook's Eye View of the Sixties, with an introduction by Laurie Lee, 1970 (collection of four stories)
- Flook and the Peasants' Revolt 1975
- Trog: Forty Graphic Years 1987 (features one complete “Flook” story)
- I, Flook: An Autobiography by George Melly, 1962 (not a strip collection)
- Trog at 30: A Celebration, Centre for the Study of Cartoons and Caricature, University of Kent at Canterbury, 1979 (catalogue accompanying an exhibit, with essays by most of the writers of “Flook” up to date)
- The Pataphysical Flook 2007 (an essay about Melly’s references to the works of Alfred Jarry in Flook)
References
- 1 2 Hobsbawm, Eric. "Diary", London Review of Books, 27 May 2010.
- 1 2 "Biography: Wally Fawkes – The British Cartoon Archive – University of Kent". Cartoons.ac.uk. Retrieved 2014-01-22.
- ↑ "Newspaper Comics: Trog's Rufus and Flook « AnimationResources.org – Serving the Online Animation Community". Animationresources.org. 2013-02-13. Retrieved 2014-01-22.