4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Four Color 871

COMIC DETAILS

Comic Description: Four Color #871 Universal
Grade: 9.4
Page Quality: OFF-WHITE TO WHITE
Pedigree: File Copy
Certification #: 0910811012
Owner: 4GEMWORKS

SET DETAILS

Winning Set: 4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Date Added: 6/29/2009
Research: See CGC's Census Report for this Comic

Owner's Description

Curly Kayoe 1/58 File Copy, painted cover (Ernest Nordli). Based on the 1946-60 "Curly Kayoe" newspaper strip by Sam Leff.

Script: Ben Brown Pencils and Inks: Joe Certa

This is the single best copy of three graded to date. 10/12

Of particular interest is the back cover story called “The Long Count” which recalls the Dempsey-Tunney championship fight in 1927.

Stories/features include:

Sparring With Curly Kayoe
Knockout
Ring Tactics
Keeping Fit with Curly Kayoe
Fit to Fight
History of Boxing
The Long Count (also the back cover of this issue)

Don Marksteins Toonpedia provides us with some addedinteresting thoughts about Curly Kayoe:
Curly Kayoe wasn't the most successful comic strip about a boxer the world ever saw — that would undoubtedly be Joe Palooka. Nor was it second — that would probably be Big Ben Bolt. But it was a strip about a boxer, and it did keep a sizeable audience entertained for a goodly number of years.
It didn't start out as a strip about a boxer. In fact, it didn't even start out as a strip about a character named Curly Kayoe. Its original title was Joe's Car, and the star was a short but determined man named Joe Jinks, whose main focus had nothing to do with boxing. Joe became a fight promoter in the late 1920s, and hooked up with Curly during September, 1944.
At the time, Sam Leff was signing the strip (which had long since been retitled Joe Jinks), and United Feature Syndicate (Gordo, Ferd'nand) was distributing it. Leff, whose other credits in comics are sparse, was writing and inking it, with his brother Mo (who had assisted Al Capp on Li'l Abner and done a children's fantasy Sunday page called Peter Pat on his own) doing the pencil art.
Curly Kayoe was a big, blond-headed guy, good-hearted but not extremely bright — very much like Joe Palooka, who by that time was well established as the #1 boxing strip star. And the resemblance is no coincidence, because even as he came onto the scene, Mo Leff was ghosting the Palooka strip for its creator, Ham Fisher (which may be why Sam was the one signing Jinks).
Curly became such a prominent character that on December 31, 1945, the title of the strip was changed to Curly Kayoe. Early in 1947, Joe moved out west, and Curly was the star indeed. (He never did, however, take over the Sunday version, which remained focused on Joe's home life.) From 1946-50, United Feature published eight issues of a Curly Kayoe comic book; and in 1958, Dell Comics published an issue as part of its Four Color Comics series.
His adventures continued for well over a decade, but then the same thing happened to him as had happened to Joe — a secondary character named Davy Jones, a seaman, became more and more prominent; and in 1961, the title was changed once again. Under Davy's name, the strip continued until 1971, but during its last decade, Curly Kayoe was no longer a part of it.
Copied and used with specific permission from GiGi Dane, the widow of the late Don Markstein. Please visit their site: http://www.toonopedia.com/kayoe.htm
 
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