THE MEDIÆVAL CASTLE
Transcription
THE MEDIÆVAL CASTLE
HAL FOSTER’S THE MEDIÆVAL CASTLE: IN THE DAYS OF PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT Foreword by Brian M. Kane I n his “footer” strip The Mediæval Castle which begins partway through this volume, Hal Foster invites readers into the daily lives of Lord and Lady Harwood. Harwood? Wait, where did that name come from? Did Foster ever refer to the “lord of the castle” by name in the strip? No, he didn’t, in fact—but he did name the family “Harwood” more than a dozen years later in his spin-off book, The Medieval Castle (Hastings House, 1957). Not naming your lead character is an interesting device in any medium, and not much trouble to pull off in the show-don’ttell medium of comics, but more difficult to achieve in a more prose-oriented iteration of the material; so when the story was converted into an illustrated book, the editors at Hastings House wanted a name. And Foster apparently had trouble coming up with names: After all, young Arn in The Mediæval Castle is not the same Arn we know and love from Prince Valiant—who would after all not be born until three years later. (Remember, when The Mediæval Castle premieres, Val has yet to abduct— um, “woo”—Aleta.) Yes, it might confuse loyal readers, but suffice it to say, Foster really liked the name “Arn.” The Mediæval Castle, complete with the snazzy “ae” ligature in its title (not found in the book’s title), begins shortly before the First Crusade, which was launched in 1095 C.E. This is distinctly different from the time frame of Prince Valiant: In the Days of King Arthur, which takes place in the late 5th/early 6th century C.E., half a millennium earlier. Note the vast differences in the architecture, in the clothing, in the weaponry between the two strips. Okay: There are none. Well, at least it’s not your basic war-between-two-houses-add-in-alove-story plot, right? Wrong: It is, and at only three panels a week, it is not long on character development. So why did Foster create it? Why did he take a full tier away from Val’s trek through the Arab world, dragging Aleta around by her hair like a caveman, for such a secondary strip? Because, at the time, America was in the middle of World War II, and there was a paper shortage. The Mediæval Castle (“A New Exciting Story”) began on April 23, 1944 (it would run for a little over a year and a half). At that point, the United States had been at war for a little more than two years. Foster’s son, Arthur, was a soldier. Rationing was a way of life. Food, clothing, fuel, and even paper were rationed to aid in the war effort. The first three rationed items are easy to understand in terms of aiding the troops, but paper? Why paper? The answer is, the Army needed paper because it did not have an ample supply of cotton linters to produce guncotton for small arms and artillery. Have you ever watched a Civil War movie, and heard someone mention “guncotton?” The scientific term is nitrocellulose, and it is a highly nitrated explosive used in the making of “smokeless pow- der.” (Think TNT.) In 1940, before the U.S. entered the war, the Anglo-French Purchasing Board formed the Tennessee Powder Company in order to produce munitions. (Foreign countries owning a munitions production plant on American soil? Go figure.) With the fall of France, Britain took over the company, and contracted DuPont to build and manage a six-thousand-acre site north of Memphis. Utilizing a workforce of over nine thousand black and white workers, on a roundthe-clock schedule, the plant was built in less than a year. (King Arthur would have loved to have that crew when he was building Camelot!) In May 1941, the U.S. government acquired the plant, and changed the name to Chickasaw Ordnance Works. At its height, the plant employed more than eight thousand women. Yet even with a good crop of cotton, and the facility running at full capacity, the supply of linters for guncotton fell short of the needed requirements for munitions. So an alternative had to be found. Actually, the use of wood fibers or “pulp paper” as a substitute for cotton linters predates Christian Friedrich Schönbein’s invention of guncotton in 1846 by over a [above] trapped in the grid: Samples #1 and #2 above (pages 122 and 140) show how, when unencumbered by grid considerations, Foster could dynamically vary the format of his panel layouts for special sequences. Samples #3 and #4 (760 and 761), the first two pages under the new strictures, feature the same beautiful art but with far fewer options —although the “grid” format did still allow for a big splash panel/two smaller panels as shown in sample #5, the birth of the twins (767). decade. The problem was that it was unstable, which is not good for an explosive. This problem was soon solved, however, and by the fall of 1941, the Army had substituted bleached sulphite pulp for cotton linters in the manufacture of smokeless powder. It was also around this time that the Army determined there was going to be a paper shortage. Under Norbert A. McKenna, Chief of the Pulp, Paper, Printing and Publishing Section, Office of Production Management (OPM) paper became America’s number one critical wartime material, according to Will Murray in his article “Black Market Comic Books of the Golden Age!” in Comic Book Marketplace. As reported in TIME magazine, “Paper Policeman McKenna” estimated that the military’s consumption of available paper in 1942 was 30% of the available supply, which was potentially devastating news for publishing. Publishers were understandably nervous. In 1943, paper allotments were frozen at 1942 levels, but were later cut by 10%, and then, in 1944, cut by another 25%. To make room for new titles, book and periodicals publishers had to cut or trim healthy, top-selling titles, and thus in newspaper comics sections, full-page comics such as Prince Valiant came under editorial scrutiny. William Randolph Hearst had originally promised Foster a full page but “the war was on,” and concessions had to be made. In Foster’s case the concession was The Mediæval Castle. Besides, who wants to be considered un-American, especially when your own son is a soldier? In this way Foster could keep his full page, not lose any newspapers that needed the space to run a single-tier comic below it, and not have Val’s story interrupted. (To my knowledge, no North American paper ever cut The Mediæval Castle strip, so it turned out to be a moot gesture.) The dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and 9 of 1945 effectively ended World War II. With its end also came the termination of paper rationing and the return of the full-page Prince Valiant: In the Days of King Arthur. Val’s broadsheet escapades would continue unaffected until Hearst’s death on August 14, 1951. Less than a month after Hearst’s passing, Foster’s freedom to creatively design pages and panels was curtailed—again, for space-saving reasons. In order to allow papers to reformat Prince Valiant into a twotier horizontal strip, one of the three tiers had to be evenly divided. This also meant that vertical three-tier action shots like the one in which Val jumps off the castle parapet into a moat could never again grace the Sunday page (see Vol. 1, strip #35, 10-9-37). Thus with strip #760, September 2, 1951, the Prince Valiant page was forever locked into the restrictive format that continues to this day. Though it continued to be beautifully crafted by a master artist, from this point on the Prince Valiant page appears less flamboyant, less dramatic then the pages that preceded it. Perhaps this is why many people have a skewed perception of Foster as a storyteller, and part of the reason why today’s audience is surprised to find Val’s early adventures so—adventurous. (Readers who happen to have a copy of the 17th volume of Fantagraphics’ earlier Prince Valiant reprint series can see the change as it occurs.) Similarly, another Hearst prop- erty, George Herriman’s Krazy Kat (which was famous for its idiosyncratic layouts), also suffered through a period of format constriction. The Mediæval Castle spawned two reprint books. The first, The Young Knight: A Tale of Mediæval Times, published by John Martin’s House in 1945, was a young readers book containing panels from the strip. The cover for The Young Knight, a panel from Prince Valiant page 444 (8-12-1944) depicting Val before King Alfar, actually has nothing whatsoever to do with the text. This 24-page story focuses only on Arn’s time as a pageboy with Sir Gregory, and his budding romance with Melisande. In this story Arn is not one of Sir Gregory’s sons, but rather the exchanged son of another noble—as was the custom of the day. The story ends with Arn saving Melisande from a young lion that bounds out of the forest and attacks them. “Fear was in her eyes as she looked at Arn. But young Arn was already in action. He fitted an arrow to his bow. The lion was still a good distance away. Taking careful aim, he let fly the arrow. It caught the animal squarely between the eyes. The lion gave a leap of agony and fell dead, a full fifty yards from them.” If you believe that lions roamed England, or that seven-year-old Arn can hit a moving target between the eyes at fifty yards, you will have no problem with Sir Gregory immediately knighting Arn for saving his daughter. The story ends with Arn riding off to “seek adventures,” but before he goes, he promises the five-year-old Melisande that he will return soon and “ask Sir Gregory for her hand.” Even for Foster completists this book is a disappointment. Finally, in 1949, just four years after The Young Knight appeared, Wilcox & Follett Co. published Page Boy For King Arthur by Eugenia Stone (1879-1971). Though it cannot be claimed that the Foster book inspired the Stone volume, the cover of Page Boy is a reversed swipe of Prince Valiant page 97, panel 8 (1218-1938; see Vol. 1). The second spinoff book was The Medieval Castle (1957). Beginning in 1951, Hastings House partnered with King Features Syndicate to produce seven volumes [left] borrowing from himself: Foster would re-use the stance of the character on the right in this panel from The Medieval Castle (Hastings House version—note the black-and-white-withgray-tones format, and the typeset text) in an editorial cartoon drawn years later. [below] contrasting endings: The 1945 “Mediæval Castle” story ends on a note of sad uncertainty; in a similar storyline in the main Prince Valiant story six years later, the mood is that of outright tragedy. in their Prince Valiant reprint series. The Prince Valiant books were novelizations of the strip, lavishly illustrated with re-purposed, re-arranged, and sometimes redrawn panels printed in black, white, and gray tone. The Medieval Castle was smaller, but designed in the same fashion as the other Hastings House volumes. This begs the question whether or not The Medieval Castle was written solely by Foster, or ghosted by Max Trell (1900-1996), who adapted volumes 1 through 5 of the Prince Valiant books (volumes 6 and 7 were adapted by James Flowers). Trell was a screenwriter, a children’s story author, Shirley Temple’s ghost-writer for her book My Life and Times (1936), and the writer on Secret Agent X-9 after Dashiell Hammett left. The Medieval Castle is a faithful adaptation of the strip, but it also fleshes out a few of the missing details. For example, as mentioned earlier, the proprietors of the castle, who were never named in the strip, are finally christened Lord and Lady Harwood. Additionally, the story flows more easily because the reader is not hindered by the three-panel weekly format. On November 25, 1945, The Mediæval Castle concluded, with its 84th installment. A few years later, Foster would reuse the basic war-between-two-houses-add-in-alove-story plot in Prince Valiant strips #722729 (12-10-1950 through 1-28-1951). In the Prince Valiant iteration of the plot Foster substituted Sir Gregory with Black Robert, Lord Harwood with Ruy Foulke, Hubert with Adrian, and Alice with Ruy Foulke’s daughter—whom Foster never got around to naming (again!). Even though you will have to wait until our next volume to read the conclusion of The Mediæval Castle, I must tell you about its final panel because it is interesting, and telling, and reflective of a country that had just seen an end to a major war. This should not ruin the end for you—but perhaps it will make it a bit more poignant. As with so many women during World War II whose loved ones went off to war, the story concludes with Lady Harwood dealing with not knowing what the future will bring. (The John Martin’s House book edition, as we saw above, skipped this ending entirely.) By contrast, the conclusion to the similar Black Robert/ Ruy Foulke war story from the main strip, drawn seven years later, shows a widow and her children grieving the loss of their husband and father. The ending to The Mediæval Castle was appropriate for its time, while the ending to the Black Robert/Ruy Foulke story may have been more in line with what Foster had witnessed among his friends during World War II. The first is a story of budding romance and the honor of fighting for a cause, while the second, while romantic in its own way, is a harsher look at the consequences of war, and those who have “no appreciation of poetry!” ^ acknowledgements The author wishes to thank Will Murray, Brian Walker, Jeff Lindenblatt, and Mark Johnson for their help in preparing this article. selected bibliography Anonymous (1941). TIME. “The Press: Paper Shortage,” New York: TIME, Monday, Oct. 13, 1941. Frank, Ed. The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History And Culture: Chickasaw Ordnance Works. Mississippi Valley Collection Version 2.0. http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entry.php?rec=245 accessed March 17, 2011. Murray, Will (2000). “Black Market Comic Books of the Golden Age!” Comic Book Marketplace. Walker, Brian (2004). The Comics: Before 1945. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.