Showing posts with label Al Hubbard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Al Hubbard. Show all posts

Saturday, November 30, 2013

The Disney Comics Story (1990-1993): Ready to Launch


The Striking Cover Art For Mickey Mouse Advenures #1 (April 1990)
Pencil Art by Todd Kurosawa, Inked by Gary Martin
© Disney

We concluded our Prologue with the Walt Disney Company's revocation of the formal comic book license from Another Rainbow Publishing's Gladstone imprint at the close of 1989. Shifting cultural influence and an surprisingly aggressive speculation market had re-invigorated the comic book industryin a likewise parallel, The Walt Disney Company was experiencing a renewed interest in their library of animated characters, both new and old. These events sparked the notion in Burbank that new comic books published in-house would logically trump the popularity of the Gladstone books, whose cornerstone was firmly placed in classic comic material of the 1930s through the 1960s. By self-publishing their own comic books, the Walt Disney Company would:

  • no longer have to share the profits with an outside licensee;
  • depict their I.P. as they deemed appropriate, dispensing with creative and editorial battles over classic vs. contemporary content; and
  • gain the freedom to promote new projects and franchises to the comics page, without having to negotiate individual licenses per project

Corporate Expansion in a New Decade

Walt Disney Pictures and Touchstone Pictures Was Restored As a Strong Presence in Hollywood By the Start of the 1990s
Image Courtesy of Trend Wallpaper
© Disney

The road to the 1990s was paved with gold as far as the Walt Disney Company was concerned: domestic theme parks were well-attended and expanding, as new resorts were being developed around the world. A strong film slate during the second half of the 1980s kept Studio coffers healthy via their new Touchstone Pictures label, with hits such as Down and Out in Beverly Hills, Good Morning Vietnam, Who Framed Roger Rabbit? and Dead Poets Society.

 1989's The Little Mermaid Was an Immediate Success, and Re-established the Animation Division's Reputation For Feature Animated Fare
© Disney 

Walt Disney Pictures was bouncing back as well: 1989 brought box office gold with the family comedy Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, followed by the wildly successful animated feature The Little Mermaidthe animated film that placed Disney animation back on top of the heap.

Walt Disney Domestic Television Had Developed an Impressive Lineup of Quality Programming During the 1980s
© Disney 

The television market was sewn up too, with no less than a 24-hour premium cable channel, prime-time network hits like The Golden Girls, Empty Nest, and original syndicated animated series such as DuckTales and Chip n' Dale: Rescue Rangers, with each outlet seeded with significant plans for rapid growth.

The media empire was back on the riseas its prominence and projects grew more ambitious, so did the departments within.

The Success of the Late 1980s Had It's Price: The Once-Familial Atmosphere of The Walt Disney Studios Had Grown Formal and Corporate
Image © & Courtesy of Reuters.com

Like in so many periods of corporate growth, the arrival of new management sometimes arrived in unwanted forms to existing and new departments: eager, but less than creative executives who knew profits had to justify their salaries. With awakened success, more of this management style permeated the companythe price to pay was that the familial, campus-like atmosphere of the Walt Disney Studio was dissipating into the ether of memory.

Merchandising, Merchandising, Merchandising!

 Studio Co-Founder Roy O. Disney Poses Amongst a Plethora of Official Disney-Licensed Merchandise, Circa 1953
© LIFE Magazine Photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt
Photo Courtesy of Viewliner Ltd.

For decades, licensing had always been the most profitable arm of the company, even during the leanest years. Classic properties like Cinderella and Peter Pan and new properties like The Little Mermaid covered their production costs many thousands of times over in ticket sales, home entertainment, soundtrack recordings and all manners of related merchandise produced by approved licensees.

By 1990, the licensing division was known as Walt Disney Consumer Productsthis subsidiary had grown exponentially due to the company's new prosperity. In fact, the consumer products division had expanded so much that sub-subsidiaries needed to be established to manage particular lines of merchandise. Products such as preschool toys, collectibles, soft goods, timepieces, and (of course) the publishing of books and magazines.


A Sampling of Recent Titles From Disney Editions
Image Courtesy of Steven Miller
© Disney

Thus, several imprints for diverse publishing endeavors were formed (later carried under the banner of The Disney Publishing Group): Disney Editions, Disney Press, Hyperion Books, and Hyperion Books for Children. A fifth imprint, W.D. Publications, Inc., was formed especially for Disney's self-published comic book line, set to launch a month after the final issues of the original Gladstone comics hit the stands.

Setting Up Shop

In 1988, a full year prior to the termination of the Another Rainbow/Gladstone license, the plan had already been underway to bring the Disney comic books in-house. The proposal was spearheaded by Michael Lynton, the successful and influential marketing head of Walt Disney Consumer Products. Lynton reached out to Jim Shooter, the somewhat controversial Editor-in-Chief of Marvel Comics from 1978 to 1987, and soon-to-be founder/publisher of the Valiant Comics line of books in 1989.

Former Marvel Comics Editor-in-Chief Jim Shooter Nearly Held The Same Title For the Disney Comics Line
Image © & Courtesy of Jim Shooter

Shooter was selected by Lynton as a consultant, and as the first choice to be Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Disney's new comic book line. This grand opportunity was torpedoed by Lynton's due diligence: when references were requested, prominent comics professionals described Shooter as a "monster" and claimed they, nor other creators would ever want to work for the company with Jim Shooter at the helm. 

The duties became divided: in a questionable move, the title of Publisher was awarded to Randy Achee, who held no comic book publishing experience (his background was in the publishing of controlled circulation magazines and the sales of ad space within.) The more logical appointment was that of Len Wein as Editor-in-Chief. Wein was a prominent writer and editor for both DC Comics and Marvel Comics. Project founder Michael Lynton became the Executive Editor.


Disney Comics Founders Pose With Gladstone and International Walt Disney Comic Books (October 1989)
Pictured, Left to Right:
Len Wein (Editor-in-Chief), Sally Prendergast (Marketing Manager),
Randy Achee (Publisher), Bob Foster (Managing Editor), David Seidman (Editor)
Below Center: Michael Lynton (Executive Editor)
Photo © & Courtesy of Bob Foster

With the polarizing appointments of the less-qualified Achee as Publisher and the industry-experienced Wein as Editor-in-Chief, it was clear the aforementioned unwanted executive interference was already present at W.D. Publications, Inc. More names joined the roster, thankfully closer related to the field of comic books and animation: Bob Foster became Managing Editor, David Seidman and David Cody Weiss as Editors, and Cris Palomino as their "peerless one-woman Production Department."

Floyd Norman (Left) Worked on Animation Storyboards During Walt's Time, and Did Significant Work Re-Establishing the Mickey Mouse Comic Strip for King Features Syndicate
Photo © Disney

Since comic books had become big business, the new publishing effort was to be touted as a major force entering the marketplace from the outset. Longtime Disney artist and writer Floyd Norman was working within the publishing department at that time, and recalled the initial crunch to prepare for the aggressive launch of eight monthly, ongoing titles:
"Big shot executives from New York took charge of the prestige units but our comic book company was given little regard. I honestly believed they would have given us more respect if we had been publishing sleazy girlie magazines. I do not joke when I say our editors did a lot of their early work on packing boxes. Disney had given the artists and editors a firm deadline on getting the books to press yet there was no furniture available. In spite of these challenges, Disney entered into the world of comic book publishing with their usual snotty attitude. The company not only paid the lowest page rates but refused to allow the artists to retain their original art. Word of Disney's arrogance spread throughout the comics industry and before long many were eagerly anticipating our doom."
– Floyd Norman, February 2013

The First Publications? P-P-P-Please!

Surprisingly, the initial release from W.D. Publications, Inc. was not a comic book proper, but an slick, oversized, prestige format book under the banner of A Disney Movie Book, employing still frames of actual animation as comic panels, with dialogue balloons added. The first Disney Movie Book was an adaption of the Roger Rabbit short subject Tummy Trouble, which preceded the hit Walt Disney Pictures release Honey, I Shrunk the Kids in June of 1989.

Intended as an Ongoing Series, Disney Movie Book #1: Roger Rabbit in Tummy Trouble Was The First Book Published By W.D. Publications, Inc. in Early 1990
© Disney/Amblin

From a marketing standpoint, it made perfect sense: Roger Rabbit was a hot property, with Tummy Trouble as the first in a series of theatrical shorts. Two more shorts, Roller Coaster Rabbit (1990) and Trail Mix-Up (1993) were produced, but never adapted into future Disney Movie Books. This first volume sold well but failed to break even, leaving Tummy Trouble as the lone entry in an attractive, abandoned series. Tummy Trouble even included the premium of a fold-out movie poster—a scheduled Roller Coaster Rabbit adaption (presumably Disney Movie Book #2) was intended to include a flexible, vinyl record containing the wild musical score for that short.

 A Tie-In to the Upcoming Walt Disney Pictures Release, DIck Tracy: Big City Blues Was a Prestige Format Graphic Novel With Bold Art By Kyle Baker
© Disney/TMS News and Features, LLC

The next release in February 1990 was a touch closer to a traditionally-sized comic book. The original graphic novel Dick Tracy: Big City Blues was the first of a three-issue prequel and comics adaption of the upcoming Walt Disney Pictures release Dick Tracy. The prequel mini-series was written by John Francis Moore, with the film adaption written by Len Wein. All three books were dynamically drawn by Kyle Baker, who took the art in a more dynamic, independent comic book style (rather than emulating the comic strip style of Tracy creator Chester Gould and his successors.)

But these were not "official" releases under the Disney Comics imprint. Those titles were in preparation, and about to show up in a matter of weeks: featuring new content, bright white pages and vibrant computer coloring to take place of the traditional newsprint and four-color presentation that had long been the norm for traditional Walt Disney comic books...

April 1990: Disney Comics Launch

April 1990: The First Month of Disney Comics, Featuring (Mostly) #1 Issues
© Disney/Amblin

"We are going to produce an expanded line of comics, to broaden the audience beyond the collector's market. We'll be going with both updated and brand-new titles. We're looking for the Carl Barks and Floyd Gottfredson of the future."
Publisher Randy Achee to Disney Magazine, Spring 1990

The rigors of setting up, hiring staff, commissioning artists and overcoming stumbling blocks behind them, the Disney Comics line launched on schedule in April of 1990, with an ambitious slate of eight monthly, ongoing titles featuring classic Walt Disney characters and newer Disney properties of that era. The eight titles at launch were:
  • Mickey Mouse Adventures
  • Donald Duck Adventures
  • Goofy Adventures
  • Uncle Scrooge
  • Walt Disney's Comics and Stories
  • Roger Rabbit
  • DuckTales
  • Chip n' Dale: Rescue Rangers
With the exception of the long-running Uncle Scrooge (issue #243) and the even longer-running flagship title Walt Disney's Comics and Stories (issue #548), all the Disney-published titles reset their issue numbering to #1, for both consistency's sake and to capitalize on the collector's market.

 Editor-in-Chief Len Wein Welcomes Readers to Disney Comics in The Inaugural Edition of His Monthly Between The Lines Column
(Click to Enlarge)
© Disney 

The traditional Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and Goofy books officially added "Adventures" to their titles, justifying the issue #1 designation. Justified, except that Gladstone had already been publishing a Donald Duck Adventures title in addition to the standard Donald Duck bookhowever, Disney Comics chose to start again at issue #1. The same numbering reset was done for the DuckTales comic book previously published by Gladstone, which has caused confusion for collectors and completists ever since! (Read my post on the ongoing confusion this caused HERE)

There Was a Desire to Jump-Start New Collectors Via a Box Set of Disney Comics #1 Issues Through The Disney Store and Catalog
Image © & Courtesy Funmerica Comics

To reach out beyond the collectors' market, a special edition box set of the six #1 issues was offered via The Disney Store and its companion mail catalog: the comics were shrink-wrapped and accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity. The set retailed around $75, which may have been a touch too highthe six books were not unique or variants, simply the direct market editions sold at comic books stores (no UPC bar code) that could still be purchased for $1.50 apiece.

Even corner identifiers and logo treatments were conformed to show a unification and identification that these books were the stamp of a new regime. The initial Disney Comics output featured brand new commissioned material, plus European stories that had never been printed in the U.S., as well as classic content from the Western Publishing era to round out the books (and satisfy former Gladstone readers).

In a Cheeky, Satirical Format Similar to MAD Magazine, Goofy Adventures Placed The Goof Throughout History and in The Guises of Legendary Figures
Panel Detail From Goofy Adventures #4, (July 1990)
Art by Rick Hoover
© Disney

Of the new offerings in particular, Mickey Mouse Adventures and Goofy Adventures boasted some impressive new content by Stephen DeStefano and Rick Hoover that strengthened and re-invigorated those characters in comics form. The new Mickey Mouse Adventures material had several references to Floyd Gottfredson comic strip serials, as well as nods to the later years of Western Publishing, while being fully unique and entertaining in their own right. Goofy Adventures contained some of the outright funniest new content, not keeping the Goof chained to any one continuity, but allowing him to step into history and fictiontaking a typically goofy approach to the roles of figures like Genghis Khan in one issue, Dr. Frankenstein in the next.

Early Pre-Order Numbers for the Roger Rabbit Title From Disney Comics Were Promising, Even With New Detective Rick Flint Standing in for Eddie Valiant
Panel Detail From Roger Rabbit #4 (July 1990)
Art by Cosme Quartieri, Robert Bat, Ruben Torreiro, and Carlos Valenti
© Disney/Amblin

As newer titles go, initial orders for the new comics showed that the Roger Rabbit title was the strongest contender in the new line. The comic took place after the events of film, with a caveat that would impact the continuity of the stories: the likeness rights of actor Bob Hoskins as Detective Eddie Valiant were not in place for the series beyond issue #1. This led to Valiant leading a new human detective character, Rick Flint to pair with Roger for new capers in 1940s Los Angeles. The format wisely contained a live-action and 'toon adventure, with a back-up story set in the cartoon district of Toontown.

Like Many Contemporary Publishers, Comics Based on TV Series DuckTales and Chip N' Dale: Rescue Rangers Ran Storylines Across Multiple Issues During Their Disney Comics Run
Panel Detail From Chip N' Dale: Rescue Rangers #3 (June 1990)
Art By Hector Savedra and Nestor Torreiro
© Disney

Most kids who came home from school at that time quickly settled in to watch a full hour of syndicated Disney animation with new episodes of DuckTales and its companion Chip N' Dale: Rescue Rangers, which always garnered high ratings in their local time slots. It was a natural to bring both into the Disney Comics fold as individual titles. In a new format for domestic Walt Disney comic books, both titles carried plots across multiple issues, a prolonged method of sales via storytelling that DC, Marvel, and others had found success in. This was just prior to the premiere of the Fall 1990 two-hour programming block known as The Disney Afternoon... and Disney Comics already had plenty of plans for that, too.

Early Efforts Were Made To Satisfy Fans of Classic Walt Disney Comics Content Via the Disney Comics Album Series, to Varying Degrees of Success
© Disney

The pages of Walt Disney's Comics and Stories, Donald Duck Adventures and Uncle Scrooge held closest ties to the Gladstone content: fan favorites William Van Horn, Don Rosa and Carl Barks could be found there, albeit with some new twists. The format of  the squarebound Gladstone Comic Albums remained with the numbering also reset and re-christened as Disney Comics Albums, which served to further cater to the classic comics collector. Unfortunately, the contents were often uneven, and thoughtful/contextual commentary from Editors such as Geoffrey Blum were sorely missed.

The First Prestige Format Graphic Novel Under the Disney Comics Imprint Was the 1968 Comics Adaption of The Jungle Book by Carl Fallberg and Al Hubbard
© Disney

As was the marketing team's intent, comics adaptions of classic and new Disney films were planned to be published in both standard and graphic novel formats to coincide with the release of the films in theaters or VHS. By the Summer of 1990, the first graphic novel under the Disney Comics imprint was a dual prestige format and traditional softcover reprint of the 1968 Gold Key comic book adaption of Walt Disney's The Jungle Book, drawn by Al Hubbard and written by Carl Fallberg. Many brand-new film adaptions were already in various stages of development.

Gateway to "The Disney Explosion"

There was no starting small, and the first few months were the gateway to what would be dubbed "The Disney Explosion" when MUCH MORE than these eight monthly titles would become available: annual specials, graphic novels film tie-ins and and several other projects were in stages of development. Next time, we'll look at what those encompassed.

Detail Art From June 1990 Disney Comics "Reach For The Stars" Ad
© Disney

Click the title below to continue to the next installment:

The Disney Comics Story (1990-1993):
The Disney EXPLOSION!!!


NOTES AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS


IT WAS TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY...
Joe Torcivia's Round-Up of the First Month of Disney Comics

I'd also like to give a BIG thank you to Joe Torcivia, who shined a spotlight on our Prologue a few weeks ago at his own blog The Issue At Handnot just by way of links, but an ENTIRE POST titled Dan Does Disney Comics!

The Gracious Joe Torcivia Bestows the Highest Junior Woodchuck Honor
Praise & Screen Grab Courtesy of The Issue At Hand

Joe's got some material relevant to our next few chapters in the Disney Comics story which we'll be linking to, and I can't say enough good things about his own posts... if you enjoy hanging around here, you'll certainly like spending time over at TIAH.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Disneyland, Inc. and the Business of Western Publishing's Disneyland Comic Books

 Cover Art for Dell Giant Comic Vacation in Disneyland (1958)
Art by Frank McSavage, © Disney
Image Courtesy of MyComicsShop.com 

The conception of Walt Disney's original Disneyland was the stuff of dreams, but the harsh reality of bringing it to physical completion could only be fueled by a a financial engine far bigger than the growing Walt Disney Productions could support. Walt Disney himself invested much of his own personal finances to get the new project rolling. However, that strategy (as well as the patience of his wife, Lily) could only be stretched so far. Outside resources were needed to propel dreams to reality.

Large, cash-healthy corporations balked at the idea of Walt Disney crafting a "crooked, dirty amusement park" and flatly refused the proposition to share ownership in the new enterprise. Many of the more amicable businessmen Disney approached tried to talk him out of the idea altogether. Fortunately for Walt, two outside companies bought into the vision, and by late 1952 (two years before the park was announced to the public) Disneyland, Inc. was incorporated as an investment pool to manage and construct the Anaheim, CA theme park. Only one of these two outside companies participating was already invested in a prior relationship with Walt Disney Productions.



The ABC Television Network
Image Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

The first was an unlikely candidate. The fledgling ABC television network (American Broadcasting Company) dwelled in the shadows of established giants NBC and CBS. Meanwhile, Walt Disney bucked the trend of motion picture studio heads snubbing television outrightinstead, he produced two hour-long Christmas specials to air on network television. One Hour in Wonderland (1950) sponsored by Coca-Cola and The Walt Disney Christmas Show (1951) sponsored by Johnson & Johnson. Both featured Walt Disney himself in hosting segments framing clips of prior and upcoming animated films.


One Hour in Wonderland Coca-Cola Sponsorship Title Card
Image Courtesy of Today in Disney History

Respected Author and Disney Historian Jim Korkis has generously provided details for what occurred during Walt's initial foray into television:
"The two Walt Disney Christmas TV specials did not run on ABC. The first ran on NBC, and the second on CBS. With the success of the specials, both of those networks wanted Walt to produce a weekly TV series. Walt insisted that he would do so only if they invested in Disneyland. NBC briefly flirted with the idea but when David Sarnoff missed an important meeting, Roy O. Disney was so incensed he went to ABC... who quickly signed on. ABC was at the bottom of the ratings. Milton Berle joked, 'If the Russians ever drop a bomb, let's all run to ABC because they have never had a hit.' The weekly Disneyland television show which originally aired on Wednesday night became an overnight hit pushing an ABC show into the top ten for the first time ever."
Jim Korkis
ABC used an influx of cash from their recent merger with United Paramount theaters and signed an agreement to invest $500,000 in the risky Disneyland venture, sealing the deal to broadcast a weekly hour-long show on the network. Aptly titled Disneyland, the anthology program premiered in October of 1954, grudgingly hosted by Walt himself. The exchange for capital investment in the park gave ABC a significant bump in credibility amongst an otherwise limp lineup of programming. 


 Original Opening Title for ABC's Disneyland Television Show
Image © Disney, Courtesy of Mouseplanet.com

The premiere episode entitled The Disneyland Story gave the world the first look into what Disneyland the Park would be, as Walt stood before a huge concept map (by master artist and matte painter Peter Ellenshaw) and boldly announced the official grand opening would take place in 10 short months. This was no doubt a frightening public claim to the ears of investorsat that point, the Anaheim acreage more closely resembled a razed orange grove than a magic kingdom.


Walt Disney Introduces Disneyland to the Television Public in October of 1954
Image © & Courtesy of O.C. History Roundup

Of course, things worked outDisneyland the television show not only amassed ratings to garner ABC their first entry into the Nielsen Top 20, but prompted an order for two more original series from Walt Disney Productions the following year: the weekly adventure series Zorro, and the hour-long, daily Mickey Mouse Club. Both were smash hits, and elements of each soon found their way into the new park in Anaheim, CA.


Western Printing and Lithographing Company
Image Courtesy of Joakim Gunnarsson

The other outside partner in Disneyland, Inc. was Western Printing and Lithograping. Western (the parent company of Whitman Publishing and Simon & Schuster, Inc.) already had a successful, long-standing relationship with Walt Disney Productions. In 1933, Disney's canny licensing and marketing head Kay Kamen signed the initial contract granting Western the exclusive book rights to all the Walt Disney licenses characters. By 1937, Kamen negotiated a deal for Western to take over production and publication of the popular children's periodical Mickey Mouse Magazine. These deals were a springboard to a publishing bonanza, for in the ensuing half-century, Western published near-uncountable licensed Walt Disney items including (but not limited to) storybooks, coloring books, tray puzzles, games, kiddie records, stamp books, craft kits... and comic books. Lots and lots of Walt Disney comic books, released under the Dell comics imprint from 1940 to 1962, under a separate deal with Dell Publishing in which the comics were financed and distributed.


 Throughout Their History, Western Publishing Signed and Maintained a Remarkable Variety of Well-Known Licensed Properties
Image Courtesy of Joakim Gunnarsson

The Disney deal struck a ripple effect of good fortune and prosperity for Western: it set a standard that quickly attracted other prominent licenses. Western's high quality output and success record secured them nearly every major entertainment license in publishing, this was particularly beneficial in the booming days of comic books. It was hard to go wrong, offering a wide variety of titles with characters everyone knew from movie and television screens: from Mickey Mouse to Bugs Bunny to Roy Rogers to Lassie. To put things into perspective, an article from the Fall 1999 issue of The "E" Ticket magazine reported:
"In a special June 1954 ceremony, Walt Disney himself purchased the 2 1/2 billionth Dell comic for ten cents. The 1955 output of Dell comics represented more than 50% of all comic books printed that year."
Mickey Mouse Magazine, the publication that ignited the Disney/Western newsstand relationship slowly began to feature more comic strip art, and less text-only stories, prompting the periodical's makeover to an official comic book under the Dell imprintWalt Disney's Comics and Stories premiered in October of 1940, resetting the numbering to issue #1 to reflect the change in title and format.


 By the End of 1940, the Original Mickey Mouse Magazine
Became the Immensely Popular Walt Disney's Comics and Stories
Cover Art © Disney

Sales soared and the mouse magazine turned comic collection was a fitting talisman for success to come: Walt Disney's Comics and Stories holds the distinction of being the highest selling comic book title of all time, with a circulation of over three million copies per month at it's zenith in 1953. The ledgers didn't lie, and Western Publishing understood talking mice, cantankerous ducks and seven dwarfs were a good business strategy.

Western Publishing's $200,000 investment (a considerably large figure in 1952 dollars) in Disneyland, Inc. equaled out to 13.8% of the pool, making them the smallest investor. That status notwithstanding, the partnership provided Western a significant quid pro quo in the stake of the new enterprise: the rights to unlimited merchandising potential of the Disneyland name for their own products and the benefit to Disneyland of their printing presses and know-how to produce high quality press kits, guide maps, brochures, menus, premiums and plenty more on behalf of Walt's new park, with the benefit of refreshing said materials on a frequent basis. Their existing financial success with the Disney license and the phenomenon that Disneyland quickly became proved Western's gamble a wise one.


In-Park and Nationwide Merchandising Opportunities Abound
Between Disneyland and
Western Publishing
Cover Art © Disney

Not only did Western Publishing have a stake in Disneyland itself, they would be provided retail space on Main Street U.S.A. to showcase and sell their publications. Located within the Crystal Arcade behind the Upjohn Pharmacy, the Arcade Bookstore stocked a dazzling assortment of books, comics, games, puzzles and other Western-produced output. The deal was not limited to Disneyland or Walt Disney Productions items, either: for many years, Little Lulu and The Lone Ranger* comic books were available for purchase and displayed on the same shelves as Lady and the Tramp and Chip n' Dale comics within the railroad-circled berm of 1313 Harbor Boulevard.


 A Main Street Arcade Bookstore Attendant Readies Shelves for Opening Day
(Note: Copies of the Dell Giant Donald Duck in Disneyland are Plentifully Stocked!)
Image © & Courtesy of The "E"-Ticket Magazine

The framework and entryway of the Arcade Bookstore exists today: entering from the Center Street entrance to the left of the Carnation Cafe, the original intent of the space as it's own area is easily evident.

The Yellow Plaque Beneath the Canopied Doorway Notes the Entry to the Crystal Arcade, Which Led Guests to The Arcade Bookstore
Image © & Courtesy of Vintage Disneyland Tickets

The space that once occupied densely-stocked shelves of Walt Disney's Comics and Stories and large Disneyland coloring books now displays toys and dolls beneath a decorative turn-of-the century children's nursery tableau. The area is now considered part of a whole that is the expanded Emporium shop, which has swallowed nearly the entirety of the interiors of the southwest portion of the Main Street facades.

The Former Arcade Bookstore Space, Now Part of the
Disneyland Emporium Shop (Photo Taken April 2013)
Image © & Courtesy of Guy Selga

As July 1955 drew near, Walt used the Disneyland television show to provide frequent updates on the construction of the park. To further whet the appetite of a curious public, news articles and print advertising began to appear around the country. Preliminary concept art was prepared and submitted to licensees to ensure Disneyland merchandise would be ready for purchase as souvenirs by opening day. Western Publishing's editors and artists readied items for release that July to be available not only in the park, but in newsstands, drug stores and book shops across the country. Their presses hummed, running out colorful fare such as Disneyland Souvenir Guides, coloring books, Little Golden Books, Big Little Books, and, of special note to this article: the Dell Giant comic book Donald Duck in Disneyland a 100-page special busting at the seams with fun, beneath sturdy covers, retailing for 25 cents. Due to it's nationwide availability and a healthy lifespan of the Dell Giant series on newsstands and drugstore racks, this comic likely provided the most widespread introduction of Disneyland to Baby-Boom America.


 Walt Requested That His Biggest Stars Preview the New Park 
in Walt Disney's Donald Duck in Disneyland (1955)
Art by Al Hubbard, © Disney

Despite a rocky opening season, Disneyland was a a hit and became a household name by the close of '55. The identification of the theme park became synonymous with Mickey Mouse himself, and Western Publishing did their part to maintain that status, spreading the word by way of their books, games and through the Dell comics imprint.


Disneyland Contests and Promotions Such as This One
Could Often Be Found Within the Pages of Dell Comics
Image Courtesy of Flickr User Neato Coolville

Promotional contests were showcased across multiple comic book titles: "WIN A TRIP TO DISNEYLAND!" became an ubiquitous headline in post-1955 youth and family periodicals. Interestingly, this early park synergy didn't carry over to the actual content or stories in the standard Walt Disney licensed books. Forthcoming Disneyland-focused tales were showcased in 80-100 page Dell Giant specials following the same structure as Donald Duck in Disneyland.


A Typical "Linking" Page Transitioning One Story to the Next
From Walt Disney's Disneyland Birthday Party (1958)
Art by Tony Strobl, © Disney

The format for nearly all of the Dell Disneyland comics were set up within a basic framework of "separate tales within a tale" in which central characters visit the park and either join in or recount adventures of inhabitants and environments based on the various realms. For instance, a park-touring Minnie Mouse and Goofy might run into several characters within Fantasyland and help solve a conflict, while Scrooge McDuck strolls through Frontierland and regales Grandma Duck with an adventure he had in the days of the wild, wild west.


 Santa Claus Brings Two Children to The Park as a Special Christmas Gift
in Walt Disney's Christmas in Disneyland (1957)
Art by Tony Strobl, © Disney

Of course, 80 to 100 pages of content is a tall order for any single artist or writer to undertake. To efficiently break up creative duties, the framing sequences were often drawn by one artist, with the stories within taking up a larger share of each section by other artists. The most frequent and reliable cartoonists utilized for these specials were the top Disney artists that Western employed. Regular Dell Disney comic book readers could recognize the work of
their usual favorite artists, such as Carl Barks, Paul Murry, Tony Strobl, Al Hubbard, Carl Fallberg, and Harvey Eisenberg, amongst others.


When Carl Barks Crafts a Tale For a Dell Giant... Buckle Up
Splash Panel From Walt Disney's Uncle Scrooge Goes to Disneyland (1957)
Art by Carl Barks, © Disney
Image Courtesy of Vintage Comic Book Art & Artists

The lone exception to the Disneyland-themed comics as Dell Giants was a standard size (36 pages with a slick cover) issue of Vacation in Disneylandissue #1025 of Dell's long-running Four Color series. The Four Color Series were a showcase for one-shot properties, such as movie adaptions, or a testing ground for potential new ongoing titles. Most Walt Disney comic titles began life through several issues of Four Color over a few years, before graduating to their own, independently numbered title. It's interesting to consider the prospect of Vacation in Disneyland as a standard, bi-monthly title.


 Games and Puzzles Like This Attraction-Themed Rebus Filled Out Every Book
Example From Walt Disney's Disneyland U.S.A. (1960)
Art by Tony Strobl, © Disney

Between 1955 and 1960, Dell produced 10 Disneyland comics books containing nearly 1000 pages of new, original content. This level of output was likely dictated by the worldwide success of the park and their own financial stake. The dawn of the 1960s brought many changes to the business of comic book publishing and distributionin the case of our story, the Dell Giants shrunk from 100 to 80 pages to maintain a 25¢ cover price. By the end of 1961, Dell's Giant-size format would fade away completely. The cessation of Disneyland comic books probably had more to do with the fact that, around this time, Walt Disney Productions bought out Western Publishing's share from Disneyland, Inc.



By 1961, The Disneyland Comic Books Had Ended, But Their National Influence
Persisted Through Western's Whitman Line of Coloring and Activity Books
© Disney 

While amicably continuing their licensing relationship with Western post-Disneyland, Inc., the Studio's relationship with ABC turned sour due to clashing stances on contracts and programming content. Walt Disney Production acted on their option to buy out ABC in 1960. The Studio honored their original television contract commitment, for the '60-'61 season, then boldly transitioned the television anthology show to NBC for the start of the '61-'62 season. Where they could control more of the content, and Walt continued his hosting duties... this time, in living COLOR. 

Of course, forty-plus years later, a much larger Walt Disney Company acquired Capital Cities/ABC Television Inc. for $19 Billion! But that's another story...


With That Kind of Endorsement, Who WOULDN'T Want to Visit?
Conclusion From Walt Disney's Donald Duck in Disneyland (1955)
Art by Al Hubbard, © Disney
 
With Walt's share of Disneyland, Inc. bought out by his own company, Disneyland became a wholly-owned part of Walt Disney Productions by 1961. The theme park's realization and success was due to some wise business deals, primarily funded by the shareholders of Disneyland, Inc.while ABC television furnished more cash and occasional television exposure, Western Publishing kept the name Disneyland present in the eyes of the public nearly everywhere they went in those early years.


COVER GALLERY
The Complete Dell Disneyland
Comic Books in Order of Release Date
(19551960)

 Dell Walt Disney's Donald Duck in Disneyland #1
100 Page Giant Comic (July/September 1955)

Dell Walt Disney's Mickey Mouse in Frontierland #1
100 Page Giant Comic (March/May 1956)

Dell Walt Disney's Mickey Mouse in Fantasyland #1
100 Page Giant Comic (March/May 1957)

Dell Walt Disney's Uncle Scrooge Goes to Disneyland #1
100 Page Giant Comic (June/August 1957)

Dell Walt Disney's Christmas in Disneyland #1
100 Page Giant Comic (October/December 1957)

Dell Walt Disney's Donald and Mickey in Disneyland On Tom Sawyer's Island #1
100 Page Giant Comic (March/May 1958) 

 Dell Walt Disney's Vacation in Disneyland #1
100 Page Giant Comic (June/August 1958)

Dell Walt Disney's Disneyland Birthday Party #1
100 Page Giant Comic (August/October 1958)

Dell Four Color #1025: Walt Disney's Vacation in Disneyland
36 Page Standard Comic (August/October 1959)

Dell Giant #30: Walt Disney's Disneyland U.S.A.
84 Page Giant Comic (April/June 1960)

Click the links below to read the next installments in this series:

PART 1.5: The Disneyland Comic Art of Carl Barks
& Q&A with Joseph Cowles, Author of Recalling Carl

PART 2: Western Publishing's Disneyland Comic Books,
Post-Disneyland, Inc. & Walt Disney World
 

NOTES AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS


Vintage Disneyland Tickets frequently posts fascinating rare photos, articles and scans of Disneyland ephemera, with an emphasis on the wide variety of paper tickets through the decades. I visit the site daily, and dig through the archive of posts—which never fails to produce something undiscovered and unique.

There's even a post with some more full-page scans of the 1955 Dell Giant Donald Duck in Disneyland #1, which you can see HERE



Guy Selga of Touring Plans was kind enough to take the current-day photo of the Arcade Bookstore for me. His Angry AP blog is also packed with a great selection and commentary of ephemera and photos about Disneyland, the Walt Disney World resort, and then some.

Guy is also very active daily on Twitterhe writes some funny stuff throughout his day working at Disneyland... I understand he's obtained quite a following for people interested in pictures of sandwiches.

* This was long before The Lone Ranger was a Disney feature film starring Armie Hammer and Johnny Depp. The comic book mentioned here were based on the long-running television series starring Clayton Moore and Jay Silverheels. In a bit of tangential irony, The Lone Ranger was a property owned at that point by Jack Wrather, whose company owned and managed The Disneyland Hotel from 1955 to 1989.