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4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Four Color 1047
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COMIC DETAILS
Comic Description:
Four Color #1047 Universal
Grade:
9.4
Page Quality:
OFF-WHITE TO WHITE
Certification #:
0917588002
Owner:
4GEMWORKS
SET DETAILS
Winning Set:
4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Date Added:
5/8/2013
Research:
See CGC's Census Report for this Comic
Owner's Description
Walt Disney’s Gyro Gearloose (#1) 11/59-1/60
Cover Art: Carl Barks
Script: Carl Barks
Pencils: Carl Barks
Inks: Carl Barks
Letters: Garé Barks
This is second best of six issues graded to date. A single 9.6 lies atop the census. 05/13. I originally bought this graded, as is, from Heritage Auctions.
Table of Contents
1. 0. [Feets Don't Fail Me Now]
Gyro Gearloose
2. 1. Inventor of Anything [Gyro's Workshop]
Gyro Gearloose
3. 2. The Gab-Muffer
Gyro Gearloose
4. 3. The Stubborn Stork
Gyro Gearloose
5. 4. Milktime Melodies
Gyro Gearloose
6. 5. The Lost Rabbit Foot
Gyro Gearloose
7. 6. The Bird Camera
Gyro Gearloose
8. 7. The Odd Order
Gyro Gearloose This appears to bean alternate back cover with a single page story.
9. 8. Thios copy has a 7-UP Ad on the back cover.
Some data courtesy of the Grand Comics Database under a Creative Commons Attribution license. http://www.comics.org/
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
http://www.comics.org/issue/15314/
Don Markstein's Toonopedia has some additional commentary on Gyro Gearloose:
Superman had Professor Potter. Alvin & the Chipmunks had Clyde Crashcup. Herbie had Professor Flipdome. But none of those whacky inventors can hold a candle to Gyro Gearloose, the whacky inventor who inhabits the world of the Disney ducks.
Gyro was first seen in Walt Disney's Comics & Stories #140 (May, 1952), but only briefly — he was there to deliver a single gag, then get out of the way so Donald Duck and his nephews could get on with their story. But his star potential was clear from the start, as evidenced by the fact that the following issue's lead story revolved around one of his inventions. Both stories were written and drawn by Carl Barks, the legendary cartoonist who created Uncle Scrooge, Gladstone Gander and many other important members of the cast.
Barks used him frequently after that, and so did the other writers and artists who handled Duck comics. Gyro himself wasn't a Duck — in fact, his exact species was never specified, tho it's generally assumed (and confirmed by Barks in interviews) he's a chicken — but that's the set of characters he's always been associated with.
Starting in its 13th issue (March, 1956), Dell's Uncle Scrooge comic book carried a four-page feature in its back pages, with Gyro as its main character. Two issues later, his helper, whose name is Helper, debuted, and he's been Gyro's only prominent supporting character ever since. Helper is a tiny, non-speaking robot with a light bulb for a head. Barks wrote and drew this series, as well most of the stories and all of the covers of the four issues of Dell's catch-all series, Four Color Comics, in which Gyro was the cover-featured star. Gyro was in #s 1047 (November 1959), 1095 (April 1960), 1184 (May 1961) and 1267 (December 1961).
Barks stopped doing Gyro's stories in 1964, but they continued in the back pages of Uncle Scrooge, as well as in specials, anthologies and elsewhere, done by other cartoonists. The first to do him after Barks was Vic Lockman, who introduced Gyro's seldom-seen nephew, Newton, as well as Gyro's "thinking cap" — a bizarre conglomeration of junk with three living "hmmm-ing" birds in it, which supposedly helped him concentrate on problems. Gyro has continued to star in his own stories, and to appear as a supporting character in other Duck stories, ever since.
He was first animated in 1987, when Disney launched DuckTales, a daily half-hour based on Barks's comic books. There, his voice was done by Hal Smith, whose credits run from Clutch Cargo to Smurfs, and points beyond. Aside from DuckTales reruns, he's occasionally seen in House of Mouse, where just about any Disney character is likely to show up.
Gyro hasn't been a prominent part of the American comic book scene in recent years (owing mainly to the paucity of Disney comic books in the U.S.). But wherever Disney comics actually are available, he and Helper are a familiar sight to their readers.
Copied and used with specific permission from GiGi Dane, the widow of the late Don Markstein. Please visit their site: http://www.toonopedia.com/articles/susie-q.htm
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