NGC
CGC
PMG
About
FAQs
Research
Contact
Registry
Chat Boards
Journals
Submit Comics
Join!
Members Sign In
E-mail:
Password:
Remember Me
Become a member >
Forgot Login / Password >
Request Support >
FIND MEMBERS
Recent Journals
View All Journals >
4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Four Color 714
Previous: Four Color 713
|
Next: Four Color 715
Back To Set Listing >
COMIC DETAILS
Comic Description:
Four Color #714 Universal
Grade:
9.4
Page Quality:
OFF-WHITE
Certification #:
0911059010
Owner:
4GEMWORKS
SET DETAILS
Winning Set:
4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Date Added:
10/21/2008
Research:
See CGC's Census Report for this Comic
Owner's Description
Walt Dibney's Spin and Marty (#1) 6/56 Tim Considine and David Stollery photo cover. A Mickey Mouse Club based comic. Dan Spiegle, penciler and inker.
Second best of just four comics graded to date.
Story: 1. Triple-R Ranch
Interesting information:
Spin and Marty
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spin and Marty was a popular series of television shorts that aired as part of ABC's Mickey Mouse Club show of the mid-1950s produced by Walt Disney. There were three serials in all, set at the Triple R Ranch, a boys' western-style summer camp. The first series of 25 eleven-minute episodes, The Adventures of Spin and Marty, was filmed in 1955. Its popularity led to two sequels – The Further Adventures of Spin and Marty in 1956 and The New Adventures of Spin and Marty in 1957.
It aired as re-runs on the Disney Channel until September 9, 2002.
The serials were based on the 1942 novel Marty Markham by Lawrence Edward Watkin.[1] The producer for Disney was Bill Walsh and the screenplay was written by Jackson Gillis.[2] The shows' success led to the Spin and Marty comic books of the late 1950s. The first season's 25 episodes with bonus material were released on DVD by Disney in 2005.
Western Publishing published comic book adventures of Spin and Marty beginning in 1956, first under Dell Comics Four Color title (#714, 767, 808, 826) , then under their own title (#5-9), then in Four Color again (#1026 and 1082).[6] The comic books continued even after the television series had ended, such as issue number 7 in September, 1958 (pictured): Stollery and Considine, by then 17-year olds, are depicted on the cover in their Spin and Marty characters, as they confront danger at the Triple-R Ranch. Disney included this cover with its 2005 DVD release. Gold Key Comics would later reprint some of these stories in their titles, such as the Walt Disney Showcase comic book issue of 1975, "The Treasure of Old Fort Resolute".[
Image #1
Enlarge
Image #2
Enlarge
To follow or send a message to this user,
please log in
Manage this user
Send Message
View Full Profile
Ignore
Ignoring