Tootsie Roll Theatre Now Open!
I've
renovated brand new gallery space and, though work is not complete, I'm
pleased to announce the Grand Opening of the Museum of Comic Book Advertising's
Tootsie Roll Theatre.
The exhibits you find there are inspired by the comic book ads that mimic
the content of the comic books that surrounded them. These ads were all
presented as comic strips, mini-adventures where entertainment and marketing
merged. If superheroes saved the day, they needed energy, and what better
source for that energy than a delicious Tootsie
Roll.
Currently featured in the Tootsie
Roll Theatre are several comic book ads created by legendary golden age
artist, C.C.
Beck. Beck's work on Captain
Marvel helped define the comic book industry in the 1940's. These
ads, featuring a blond Captain
Marvel clone, produced in the same era as Beck's most important work
with Fawcett Publishing, demonstrate Beck's talents at their commercial
best. We also display a couple of installations from the "Tootsie
Roll of Honor." These short "morality plays" present
the stories of young heroes who were able to save the day thanks to the
energy that Tootsie Rolls provided.
By the 1940's, Tootsie Rolls had
already been distributed
for over 40 years. Tootsie Rolls pioneered this unique form of advertising
and became a familiar product to all Americans. It became a part of the
rations given to American troops in WWII and in its honor, we dedicate
new gallery space. Please click on the picture above. I hope you enjoy
this glimpse of a unique form of comic book advertising.
Other New Comic Book Ad Exhibits
I’ve reached back to True
Comic’s eighth issue from January 1942 to look at the movies
of the day as presented in the True
Comic Movie Guide. Most of us look fondly on at least one movie released
to theaters that month. Disney’s Dumbo leads off the reviews that
cover offerings from Laurel and Hardy, Bob Hope, and William Holden. You
will recognize many of them if you’re an old movie buff. If you're
not, you may find an interesting rental for your next lazy weekend.
Since I pulled out that issue of True, I felt compelled
to construct an exhibit for the
Red Ryder Saddle Carbine ad from the back cover. Daisy Air Rifles
would become a advertising staple for the growing comic industry and this
ad from early 1942 was among the first. The ad introduced us to the toy
that every boy wanted for Christmas, a highly realistic Daisy Air Rifle.
In the light of the ongoing control debate, this advertisement from the
Daisy Manufacturing Company, in Plymouth Michigan takes on new meaning.
I also found time to put together an exhibit for
an ad from Target Comics,
January 1947. Schwinn Bicycles were a regular advertiser and providing
stable income to the comic book industry. This ad is a very early example,
and its stilted copy reflects an uncertainty of how to connect with readers.
In the downtime, I noticed several web sites linking
to the Museum, and we always appreciate the promotion (it really helps
in search rankings). In particular, I noticed several hits coming from
the comicqueens blog,
and from a mention in the X-Ray
Specs blog spot. Many thanks to both for helping spread the word.
We still get a lot of hits from a press release posted for us on the International
Comic Arts Association web site. Any support in the form of links
from web sites is always appreciated. Please contact me via email if you
can help.
Thanks, again, for coming back. Enjoy the new exhibits
or go back and look at displays that you may have passed by the first
time. Check back often, I hope to be putting up exhibits with increasing
frequency.
_____
Visit the War
Ads Display. Please take some time to wander around.
_____
The History and Art of
Comic Book Ads!
Welcome to a unique place on the web. This virtual
museum is designed to bring you history, insight into American culture,
and, most importantly, enjoyment. For some, what you will find inside
will be nostalgic. For others it will be a look at a time in America they
have never seen. The Museum of Comic Book Advertising contains exhibits
of interest to those who love comic books, as well as those who may never
have read one.
If you have an interest in the art of comic books,
we hope that you will find the Museum of Comic Book Advertising to be
a great comic book resource about a unique aspect of comic book art; the
art found in the thousands of ads that supported and sustained the industry.
However, even if comic books are of no interest
to you, we hope you'll find our museum entertaining and informative. Comic
books are a unique American art form and the products and ads that supported
this mass medium demonstrate the lifestyles, mindset and concerns of Americans
over a 65 year history. This museum tries to place all the ads depicted,
and the comic books that published them, into a historic perspective,
relating them to current events from the era in which they were produced.
Many of the ads you will find inside are from the
"golden age" of comic books, 1938-1955, when the comic book
art form was in its commercial infancy. Those ads describe products and
services long since forgotten. Those ads, and how they marketed to an
eager reading public, form a chronicle of a nation as it moves into World
War II, on to victory, and through post-war prosperity.
Inside this museum, you'll find a look at the products
and service that claimed to amuse, improve life, inform and entertain.
Through this comparison and contrast of the products and ideas that appeared
in comic books over the years, we hope a unique picture of the dramatic
changes in American society over the last 65 years, begins to emerge.
A Modern Way to Present Old Ideas
This site designed to be "hands-on" and
is highly interactive. To take full advantage of the displays in here,
please enable javascripts and pop-up windows. No ads, only museum displays,
will ever be displayed in pop-ups.
Like a bricks and mortar museum, there is no one
correct, linear way to explore this museum. Navigation is not conventional,
but allows you to wander about the museum as you see fit, finding some
of the best exhibits tucked away in nooks and crannies. So explore and
let yourself wander. The Hall of Covers provides a convenient way to begin,
but if a poster for a particular exhibit attracts your attention, click
on it and see what that exhibit has to offer. Wander about, get lost in
the displays, but most of all, have fun. Check back periodically as new
ads and new exhibitions are being added constantly.
This virtual museum is under construction,
and you may find dead ends or blind alleys. Not to worry. The museum is
a large place with many exhibits to be found so click your way through.
The museum is currently open for testing and feedback. If you have a comment
or problem, please email
the curator. Please include information about your browser type, operating
system as well as your asthetic comments.
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