Showing posts with label Disney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disney. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2013

A "Frozen" Rita?

A 1998 Sample of My College Newspaper Comic Strip Bill & Rita
© 2013 by Dan Cunningham

Frequent readers of this blog likely observe a distance from an editorial directionnor does I Can Break Away maintain much account of personal life beyond presenting original artwork, or minor anecdotes on the topic at hand. This post will place itself somewhere in the middle of that framework, due to the tenuous connection of the subjects in this post.

One-Sheet Teaser Poster for Walt Disney Animation's Upcoming Feature Frozen
Image Courtesy of moviepilot.com
© Disney

Initial marketing and advertising campaign has commenced for the forthcoming animated feature Frozen from the Walt Disney Animation Studio (slated for U.S. release on Thanksgiving week of 2013.) Having witnessed Frozen preliminary art and teaser trailers that trickled out over the course of the summer, I was impressed with the scope and charm of the animated film, but never lingered enough to take a good look at the design of one of the lead characters until about a week ago.

 One-Sheet Poster of Elsa the Snow Queen From Frozen
Image Courtesy of fanpop.com
© Disney

An online image of Frozen poster art centered on one of the female lead characters stopped me in my tracks. I recognized a design I quite liked, for reasons I wasn't sure of. It soon hit me that Elsa the Snow Queen looked remarkably familiar to something linked to my own past...

A Good Look at Elsa From Frozen Sparked Warm Memories of Rita

Can you can see why? Not just in the design of an attractive girl, but the hairstyle? Minus the braid, Elsa bears a striking resemblance to the female lead character of my own Bill & Rita. Of course, this is a coincidence of design choice, not a "lift" by anyone at Disney Animation.

In fact, that's downright impossible: each Bill & Rita strip was only published oncewell over a decade ago to a tiny audience, via a minimal-circulation campus newspaper. Nor has it had a public presentation since. But seeing Elsa inspired me to share a bit about the conception of the strip, and some thoughts about character design in general.

Who Are Bill and Rita?

In 1996, a decision was made to transition from art school to complete my college education at an actual University. The timing would be my only opportunity to do so at an appropriate age: continuing an art degree by way of broadening my academic horizons and more intellectual pursuits. The bohemian atmosphere of an art-focused college was unique, but couldn't replicate the experience of large ivy-covered halls, school Football games, or the opportunity to get involved in a college newspaper.

Bill & Rita Appeared in C.W. Post's Student Newspaper, The Pioneer From Fall 1996 to Spring 1998

Orientation day at Long Island University's C.W. Post campus found me leaving a message in the mailbox of the Editor of their campus newspaper The Pioneer, requesting a meeting to discuss providing some kind of comic art on a bi-weekly basis. My request was received with success, and I was given carte blanche on the subject of a traditional, four-panel comic strip. My notion was that, naturally, college students would be be most interested in reading  about college students. But satire on college life featuring a bunch of eighteen-to-twenty-somethings seemed like the type of thing that's been done in a lot in college newspapers (most notably Garry Trudeau's Doonesbury predecessor Bull Tales at Yale and Jeff Shesol's Thatch at Brown University.) 

Garry Trudeau's Doonesbury Began Life at Yale as Bull Tales
Image Courtesy of The Hipster Dad Bookshelf 
 © 2013 G.B. Trudeau

The concept that I decided on was a campus setting surrounding new characters, incorporating an anthropomorphic dog character named Bill, intended for another comic strip idea. A few years before "prequel" became a part of the pop culture lexicon, I slimmed down his appearance and dialed back the dog's age to be college appropriate, keeping the forthcoming timeline of the intended later comic strip intact.

Bill, My Faithful Canine Character Became An Unlikely, But Loveable Lead For a College-Centered Comic Strip
© 2013 by Dan Cunningham

Now I had an upbeat, cute, talking animal character and some yet-to-be conceived twenty-somethings. Why not give more texture to the thing and make one of them Bill's human girlfriend? If the species thing isn't the one-note joke every week, there could be comedic conflict there. So Rita was conceived as Bill's significant other.

I Used Them With RestraintBut When You Set Up a Premise Like This, Species Compatibility Gags Are Inevitable!
© 2013 by Dan Cunningham

What Kind of Girl Dates a Dog?

From the start, I knew Rita shouldn't be too prissy, nor overly brusqueshe had to be a strong, wise girl coming of age in the 1990s. She also had to be open-minded enough to date a talking dog (which wasn't necessarily a new idea: Berke Breathed's Opus the penguin frequently dated human females in Bloom County, and we all know Gary K. Wolf's Roger Rabbit married the buxom, human Jessica Rabbit.) But Bill and Rita's personal dynamic and campus life would be the focus of the strip.

 Despite The Many Odds Against Them, It Had To Be Clear Bill and Rita Genuinely Adored Each Other
© 2013 by Dan Cunningham

Knowing that much about who she needed to be, Rita's design process was based on an technique long-used by professional cartoonist and animation artists: the "silhouette test" which is used in two capacities:

To enable a character with designs rendering their contour shape recognizable, even in silhouette...

Instantly Recognizable and Clearly Defined Silhouettes of Famous Cartoon Characters
Image Courtesy of Frederator Studios

... and establish poses clear enough that a character's action is readable.

 Figure A Shows Jiminy's Action Clearly, and Reads Better as Both a Standard Line Drawing and in Silhouette
Image Courtesy of Animator Mag Library
© Disney

Using this method led to Rita's slim frame, shorter hairstyle, and the up-lifted spit curl at the center of her hairline. She'd stand out as female in silhouette, but slightly askew of more fashionable girls her age. Though the strips never appeared in color, Rita's hair is platinum/bleach blonde to the point of pure white with the slightest tint of pale yellowin my mind, it set Rita further apart from her peers as a level-headed, but quiet, rebel. This design process helped define her personality, before any actual writing began.
 

An Early Strip From 1996 Shows Easy-to-Read Profiles of the Main Characters (Preceding a Slow Climb Towards Better Drafting, Steadier Line Art and Clear Hand-Lettering)
© 2013 by Dan Cunningham

Bill & Rita was an early effort on my part, and the early strips are hard to look at without extreme scrutiny, despite the strong personalities of the characters. However, as each strip progressed, I figured out more about using a nib pen with a jar of Windsor-Newton ink, attempting clearer hand-lettering, placement of line weights and trying zipatone screens. By 1997, things became more polished and proved true the advice of Charles M. Schulz on starting a new comic feature: "Draw fifty strips, throw them away, and then start again."

Bill & Rita Today


These Days, Bill Provides Hi-Jinks in My Annual Holiday Card (Along With the Slightly Less Hairy Chap Pictured Above)
© 2012 by Dan Cunningham 

Bill & Rita had a definitive conclusion once I received my diploma, and the artwork largely laid in a envelope as something of an afterthought as I quickly paved my way into the professional world of commercial art. Of course, the dog continues to play a role of canine mascot in my annual custom Holiday Card, and it's possible I'll post the entire college run of Bill & Rita here someday, most likely via a remarkable online book format recently directed to me by none other than renaissance man and friend of the blog, Joseph Cowles.

Beyond revisiting the original strips, there may be a future for the cast of Bill & Rita: for once their personalities and relationships solidified, I found they often wrote themselves. I've sporadically toyed with the idea of a new graphic novel in strip format:

 Thumbnail Concepts For a New, Book-Length Story: Bill & Rita in Abnormal Spring Formal
© 2013 by Dan Cunningham 

Should such a project come to pass, you'll certainly hear about it here. For the record, I'd still place it in those years of the mid-1990s, the final era to depict college life before technology commanded primary social interactions. All done with a promise of much-improved artwork/drafting, and the benefit of color.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Behind the Scenes of The Rescuers

One Sheet Poster for The Rescuers (1977)
Image Courtesy of I.M.P. Awards
© Disney

A search for an item stored in the bedroom of my youth prompted the opening of a mailing envelope, steel-clasped well over a decade ago. Of the contents within, one remarkable item was an issue of Disney Magazine: a gift-with-purchase premium publication sponsored by Proctor and Gamble between May 1975 to April 1977.

The Final Issue (April 1977) of Proctor and Gamble's Disney Magazine
Image Courtesy of eBay
© Disney

The magazine ran for 19 issues, and was free with purchase of rotating P&G products at supermarkets and drugstoresinside was an all ages affair, featuring true-life and fantasy stories, puzzles and feature articles on themes relevant to Walt Disney Productions at that time, further enhanced by special artwork from Disney Studio artists.

 Legendary Studio Director Wolfgang "Woolie" Reitherman Offers
Decades of Experience to New Employees During the Transitional 1970s
© Disney

A two-page spread on the then-upcoming 1977 release of The Rescuers set off a spark, and I thought the article was unique enough to share here on the blog. While the text contains nothing revelatory, the true treasures are the photos provided showing Studio employees during production of the animated feature.

Before Leading the Infamous "Exodus" From the Studio in 1980,
Don Bluth Rose Up to the Rank of Key Animator on The Rescuers
© Disney

The (staged) photos feature the production team amongst models, sketches and storyboards, and fans of Disney history will likely get a kick out of seeing familiar faces, furniture and fixtures. Though small, they're a nice snapshot of the "old guard" transitioning the art of the craft to the "new guard." Animator Don Bluth is shown three times, a few years before his notorious exit from Walt Disney Productions in 1980, taking several members of the staff along with himBluth forged ahead to direct a string of animated features to become a serious contender to the Walt Disney Studio for much of that decade.

Click the text below to
view/download the 3.8MB PDF:

Though Attractions Never Evolved From The Rescuers, Bernard and Bianca
Greeted Guests at Disneyland and Walt Disney World for Many Years
Image Courtesy of Stuff From the Park
© Disney

While not considered a true "classic" today, the film was extremely well-received during its initial release in 1977. Compared to the Disney Studio's animated features of the 1970s, which leaned toward a method of longer segments framed within a thin plot, The Rescuers benefited from the refreshing return to a more linear and narrative storyline. What made the film further attractive was the invitation of original, full animation from a U.S. studio (a rarity during this time.) It should be noted The Rescuers was the swan song for several longtime employees of Walt Disney Productions, most notably, master animator Milt Kahl who animated the film's heavy, Madame Medusa.

Video of an Early Rescuers Story Meeting
Video Footage © & Courtesy of Andreas Deja

Current-day master animator Andreas Deja has been sharing several blog posts on Kahl's work, and his lasting influence to animators around the world. Read a bit of analysis and insight into the character animation for Madame Medusa HERE

Milt Kahl's "Performace" of Madame Medusa is a Highlight of the Film
Image Courtesy of YouTube User jeorje90original
© Disney

Like Captain Hook in Peter Pan, it is extremely difficult to successfully portray an antagonist with comical notes, while maintaining a true sense of menace. By virtue of his animation "acting" alone, Kahl's Medusa scenes are frequently studied frame-by-frame by professionals and students alike. 

Another slice of media has surfaced in the past year stemming from the early development of the film via Huston Huddleston, the son of songwriter Floyd Huddleston. In 2011 Huston posted several original song demos by his father in early development for The Rescuers—songs tailored around the talent of Louis Prima, who portrayed the memorable voice over/singing for King Louie for the Studio in The Jungle Book a decade earlier. Floyd recorded several demos tracks, some of which were laid down by Prima himself, in character... the earliest drafts of the script featured Prima as a zoo critter, Louis the Bear.
 
Post-Orangutan, Louis Prima Nearly Performed Another Louis In The Rescuers
Image Courtesy of Jazz Profiles
© Disney

That draft of the film fell apart when Prima began experiencing persistent heath issues*, prompting story evolution to the final film. Huddleston's demos were scrapped for new songs by Carol Connors, Sammy Fain, Shelby Flint and Ayn Robbins. The new song writers heralded a shift to songs played over montage scenes, departing from the traditional "musical" style of on-screen characters singing outright, which aided in skewing the film as slightly more contemporary.

Album Art for The Lost Chords: The Rescuers
Image Courtesy of Amazon.com
© Disney

Since then, several of the original Huddleston demo recordings have seen an official digital release by Walt Disney Records as part of a larger audio project of unreleased tracks entitled The Lost Chords. The Prima material is fun and polished, but it's clear they'd be largely out of place with the tone of the final version of The Rescuers. You can sample these lost tracks on Amazon HERE and iTunes HERE


* Prima passed away in 1978, one year after The Rescuers premiered in theaters.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

A Rare Citrus Treat

The Orange Bird
Illustration by Dan Cunningham, © Disney
Medium: Vector Art in Adobe Illustrator

When Walt Disney World opened in late 1971, the resort could claim many unique featuresmost notably in the categories of size, transportation and recreational offerings compared to the original Disneyland in Anaheim, CA.

Florida Residents and Tourists Could Preview a Detailed Scale Model of the Walt Disney World Resort Prior to the October 1971 Opening
Image © & courtesy of Flickr user BestofWDW

However, much of the content within the theme park was a reflection of those found in Anaheim. The initial plan was for Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom to feature a similar layout to Disneyland, debuting new, different attractions mixed with a selection of shared ones. During construction, time and budget crunches weakened the brew, leaving Florida only a handful of unique attraction offerings.


A Preoccupied Hollywood Legend Debates Original Attractions vs. Clones While Surveying Construction Progress
Image © & courtesy of Flickr user BestofWDW

Over the decades, with the global sprawl of Disney's domestic and international theme parks, a homogenization of elements became de rigueur. This, plus the accumulated experience of customer trends and market research aided a justification for overall consistency with fewer touches proprietary to a single area.

What marketing surveys and polls can't always nail is the nostalgia factor. User-controlled media the likes of fanzines, message boards, podcasts and blogs wield the ability to raise eyebrows and awareness of even the most trend-savvy analysts. It is largely due to the breadth of the internet that some things, deemed worthless, regain their capitalization potential and find their way back into the public consciousness.

 Demographic Surveys Rarely Factor in Kitsch or Nostalgia
Image courtesy of snapsurveys.com

Those of us who watched television commercials and spent time at Walt Disney World during the 1970s have recently been reunited with a familiar friend. Spring 2012 restored a seemingly simple and largely forgotten icon from the tangerine-hued ether, as the Florida Orange Bird resumed his place behind the Magic Kingdom's Sunshine Tree Terrace snack counter.


Over 25 Years Later, The Orange Bird is Back Where He Belongs
Image courtesy of Eating WDW Blog

Despite the burgeoning homogenization factor, the Orange Bird's restoration signaled an stabilizing modicum of individuality to Walt Disney World. He is one of the only unique icons of the resort's history: a distinct identity that was never copied anywhere else.

Beyond being represented on a sampling of new merchandise, the loveable avian/citrus hybrid adorns a large attraction poster under a main entrance tunnel into the park, and atop the "throwback" marquee, with proper font restored in place of the prior (and rather generic) interim typeface.


A Visual History of The Sunshine Tree Terrace Marquee
© Disney

The cost and effort behind the return of something as unremarkable as a long-discontinued, 40-year old Florida Citrus Commission mascot speaks volumes on the impact of user-based media. Minus the online recognition by those who simply remembered the character fondly, the formal reestablishment of The Orange Bird at Walt Disney World would never have surfaced*.

I won't go into a great deal of background on the character here, as there have been a multitude of resources online over the past few years chronicling the Bird's history and return. The most notable and informative of these you can discover in the following links:

Widen Your World was the first website to provide a solid, well-researched overall history of the character:

Jim Korkis, Disney Historian and author of the excellent The Vault of Walt and Who's Afraid of Song of the South & Other Forbidden Disney Stories, placed his research efforts and eye for detail on the Bird's notoriety with three posts, spanning five years via MousePlanet:

Mr. Korkis has also put up another post at Jerry Beck's Cartoon Research site, with information on the Bird's singular animated short film Foods and Fun: A Nutrition Adventure for Walt Disney Educational Media, produced by Rick Reinert Productions (including a full video of the short):

The eloquent Michael Crawford at Progress City U.S.A. provides further history with a thoughtful essay on the impact of the character's relationship to Walt Disney World during the resort's challenging early years**:

FoxxFurr's Passport to Dreams Old and New covers more in-depth history and provides intelligent insight on the practical character design aspects, and the character's overall aesthetic appeal upon the 2012 return of The Orange Bird:

Over at Miehana, the talented Kevin Kidney briefly recounts his participation in uncovering the hidden location and restoration of the original Orange Bird figurine, and a good look at the improved paint finishing bestowed upon it:

My own early online efforts were on display in 2007, when I created custom desktop wallpaper for Jeff Pepper's exemplary 2719 Hyperion blog:

A Rare AUDIO Citrus Treat


 Magical Memories Magazine #1
The Premiere Issue of Jesse Guiher's Audio Fanzine, Photo © by Dan Cunningham

Nearly a decade ago, I was fortunate enough to purchase a rare gem of the aforementioned user-based media. At that time, a search on the subject of The Orange Bird garnered scant results, save for a few crumbs of information and a heaping teaspoon of items on eBay. One afternoon, I noticed a message board posting with an ad for the premiere issue of Magical Memories Magazine, an audio fanzine consisting of 2 CDs with narrated content about a particular theme park attraction. Here was user-based audio which predated the podcast explosion to come, about a year later. MMM #1 was themed to The Enchanted Tiki Room of Disneyland (Disc 1) and Walt Disney World (Disc 2), with ornate packaging and inserts.


MMM #1 Was a Feast of Visual & Audio Ephemera
Photo © by Dan Cunningham

The 'zine did not feature attraction audio, opting for original content: in-depth history on the mid-century tiki craze, stories and recollections from those who'd worked and maintained The Enchanted Tiki Room on both coasts, an exclusive interview with Disney Legend X. Atencio, and... a thirteen-minute audio history of The Florida Orange Bird.

All this was constructed and offered by a gentleman named Jesse Guiher: an ambitious Oregon-based artist and designer. I contacted Jesse earlier this year, and got a bit of background on the history of his Magical Memories Magazine project (two other issues followed before he ceased production, MMM #2 focused on the Disneyland Haunted Mansion Holiday overlay, and MMM #3 looked at the myriad attractions inspired by 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea).
"I only had one other person to help with the 'zine, so it was a long, laborious process to do each issue, as I did everything from interviews to editing to graphic design and art, it was a lot of fun but such a great deal of work that I didn't have time for anything else. [I]ronically, it was the beginnings of success that killed the 'zine: I couldn't fulfill the orders fast enough [or] on time, once they started pouring in on the third issue."
– Jesse Guiher, May 2012
Jesse also very generously gave me permission to post the long out-of-circulation Orange Bird History audio (note: history covers the years 1970–2004) here for everyone to enjoy. All participants on MMM #1 used pseudonyms, with the exception of Jesse himself, who took on the role of host and interviewer throughout the 'zine. The author and narrator of The Orange Bird History audio is known as "Howard"hit the play button to listen right here:


Or download the MP3 HERE

Jesse is currently working on a new kids noir web comic, and you can see samples of his artwork over at TigerTailArtmake sure you tell him thanks for sharing! 
* To be fair, the only other potential factor was a merchandise push of the character in the early 2000s to Japanese consumers (be sure to read the Widen Your World article for details.)
** Crawford's post speaks of the loss of the character: his post was published in November 2011, unknowingly foreshadowing the Bird's return to the Sunshine Tree Terrace in April 2012.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Got Donald Duck Adventures #5? WHICH ONE?

Joe Torcivia's The Issue At Hand Blog featured a fascinating post last week, on the many U.S. versions (11 total) published of a Mickey Mouse comic strip-turned-comic book tale, the well-researched details of which you can (and should) read here: Comic Book Letter of Comment: “Island in the Sky"

Joe Torcivia's The Issue At Hand Blog

I left Joe a comment or two, and mentioned I was working on my own post about the "Jekyll-and-Hyde" era in which the Walt Disney company decided to try out self-publishing their own comic books during the collector's boom of the early 1990s. That article will be featured here in the future
while I'm still doing a bit of research to put that together, I knew there was a particular aspect to the marketing of those books that required some explanation, had one not been around to witness the transitions. I felt it constituted it's own post, to clear up the confusion.

PROLOGUE by Cap'n L'Orange*


Cap'n L'Orange Appears Courtesy of 1StopRetroShop
& Speaks Whilst Marinated With BlackBeard Spiced Rum
"Aye, mates: bite off a cork, and settle down on th' bulkhead... 'tis a grand, sweeping yarn of confusin' back and forth, ta hear told. From publisher, to new publisher, back again, to yet another new publisher. Ancient shipping routes be easier to foller, sez I."
– Cap'n L'Orange
He's speaking, of course, of how in the world you can keep track of collecting the comic book Donald Duck Adventures.

GLADSTONE SERIES I (1985 to 1990)


In 1985 the (dormant) U.S. license to publish Walt Disney comic books was granted to Another Rainbow Publishing, to be published under the imprint of Gladstone** comics. After two Disneyland-themed prestige and digest specials, the monthly titles first appeared in July of the following year, consisting of the "core four"  U.S. Disney comic books: Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Uncle Scrooge and Walt Disney's Comics and Stories. Each book resumed the issue numbering from the point the prior run ended in 1984 through Western Publishing's Gold Key/Whitman line. So Mickey Mouse #218 (July 1984) published by Whitman, resumed two years later with Mickey Mouse #219 (July 1986), under Gladstone.



Don't Worry, Donald: Soon You'll Understand Exactly
Which Issue of Donald Duck Adventures #5 is Which
©Disney

It was an outstanding presentation of comic books with both the casual fan and the collector in mind
. The core four started out with Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge title rotating formats from month to month: if Donald Duck had a full-length adventure tale, Uncle Scrooge featured two or three shorter stories, the following month, Donald Duck contained several shorter stories and Uncle Scrooge showcased a book-length adventure. This was the cycle for the first year of Gladstone comic books, and it worked well. By the summer of 1987, DuckTales was set to premiere on worldwide syndicated TV, with much marketing hoopla. Through Gladstone, a new comic book was planned to be released to tie into the show, which, though featuring several new characters, shared much connective tissue with the world of Walt Disney comic books.


DuckTales Was a Partial Impetus for the Genesis of Donald Duck Adventures
©Disney, Image Courtesy of TV Shows on DVD

Since the DuckTales comic focused on the TV animated version of Uncle Scrooge sans Donald Duck, it was decided to give Donald a companion book as well. Not long before the first issues were supposed to hit the stands, a decision was made to add a third new title, delaying the DuckTales comic book (possibly due to brand-new stories featuring Scrooge with the DuckTales cast were not ready to print?), prompting a shift from the format cycle mentioned earlier.


Gladstone's DuckTales #1 Became Uncle Scrooge Adventures #1
©Disney, Image Courtesy of Joakim Gunnarsson's Sekvenskonst Blog

All Gladstone titles would become bi-monthly, allowing each issue of the original Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge titles to contain multiple, shorter stories, giving the longer-form stories a permanent showcase in the two new titles: Uncle Scrooge Adventures and Donald Duck Adventures.



 The Original Donald Duck Adventures #1 (1987)
Published by Gladstone Comics
©Disney, Image Courtesy of comicvine.com

It was around this time that Gladstone had expanded their format offerings, having done away with digest-sized books, and beginning a series of large, square-bound books: the Gladstone Comic Albums. Rotating themes and characters throughout the anthology series, issues #5, #10, #13, #16 and Giant Album #5 were titled Donald Duck Adventures.



Gladstone Comic Album Series #10
Donald Duck Adventures: Ancient Persia (1988)
©Disney, Image Courtesy of amazon.com

The Gladstone comics were a solid hit, and The Walt Disney Company noticed this, along with all the growing attention the comic book collector's market had been receiving in the past few years. Disney had established and begun grown their own publishing arm, and by late 1989 had informed Another Rainbow/Gladstone they would not renew their license to publish Walt Disney comic books: Disney had decided to publish the comic books themselves.


DISNEY COMICS (1990 to 1993)


Gladstone's Donald Duck Adventures ran from issue #1 to #20, and the final Gladstone comic books were released at the start of 1990. By Spring, the new, Disney-published books debuted under the imprint "Disney Comics," boldly launching eight monthly titles.



* O.K. folks: right here's where you need to start keeping track of things *

With the exception of the long-running Uncle Scrooge and Walt Disney's Comics and Stories, all the Disney-published titles reset their issue numbering to #1, for consistency's sake and (more likely) to capitalize on the collector's market. The Mickey Mouse and Goofy books officially added "Adventures" to their titles, justifying the issue #1 designation. BUT Gladstone had already been publishing a Donald Duck Adventures comic in addition to the standard Donald Duck book! In spite of this, Disney Comics chose to start again at issue #1. Disney Comics did the same #1 numbering reset for the DuckTales comic book, which had reached issue #13 by the end of Gladstone's run.



The Reset Donald Duck Adventures #1 (1990)
Published by Disney's Own "Disney Comics" Imprint
©Disney, Image Courtesy of mycomicshop.com

This is where the confusion for collectors and completists really began!


Halfway through the course of the Disney Comics years (1990-1993) their infamous "implosion" took place, and a new license was granted to Another Rainbow/Gladstone to publish an affordable, prestige format album collection of the entire comic book work of Carl Barks: The Carl Barks Library in Color. The title of the portion reprinting the work from the Donald Duck segment of the collection? The Carl Barks Library of Donald Duck Adventures in Color. This was the signal that soon heralded the liquidation of the self-published Disney Comics line, and a return of the standard comic book license to Gladstone in 1993.



Gladstone's The Carl Barks Library of
Donald Duck Adventures in Color #17 (1995)
©Disney, Image Courtesy of INDUCKS


GLADSTONE – SERIES II (1993 to 1998)

The Disney Comics issues of Donald Duck Adventures ran to issue #38. Gladstone quickly re-launched their core titles in the Summer of 1993. Armed with a re-worked logo and higher-quality white paper, Gladstone resumed their original numbering system of Donald Duck Adventures title with issue #21 (rather than continuing the Disney Comics independent numbering system).


Gladstone Resumed Publication (and Their Numbering System)
With Donald Duck Adventures #21 (1993)
©Disney, Image Courtesy of comicvine.com

This series of books has been come to be known as "Gladstone II" in collector's circles. The Carl Barks Library in Color album series was completed in 1996, and the monthly Gladstone II comics ran until mid-1998, when the publishers decided not to renew their license due to a continually strained relationship with the licensing department at The Walt Disney Company.


GEMSTONE PUBLISHING (2003 to 2008)


The U.S. Walt Disney comic book license laid dormant once more until 2003, when it was negotiated and acquired by high-profile Baltimore comic book distributor Steve Geppi. The "core four" monthly titles returned under the new imprint of Gemstone Publishing. Gemstone's 2003 give-away title for the annual Free Comic Book Day was... what else? Donald Duck Adventures!



 Gemstone's 2003 FREE COMIC BOOK DAY Offering
Donald Duck Adventures: Maharajah Donald
©Disney, Image Courtesy of comicvine.com

The Gemstone line was supplemented by two smaller "take-along" digest-sized books, with a higher page count capable of containing longer stories from overseas creators. The tiles of these "take-along" books : Mickey Mouse Adventures, andyup... Donald Duck Adventures.



Gemstone's Compact "Take-Along" Version
Donald Duck Adventures #14 (2005)
©Disney, Image Courtesy of Library Thing

 During the course of the Gemstone years, several well-done seasonal annuals and one-shots specials were produced, including an interesting notion passed down from the Gladstone days: an anthology series printing a Carl Barks tale, followed by the sequel to that story by Don Rosa. Thus began a series of prestige comics titled The Barks/Rosa Collection. Volume 2 (and the scheduled, but never published) Volume 5 of The Barks/Rosa Collection were sub-titled... all together, now: Donald Duck Adventures



Gemstone's The Barks/Rosa Collection Vol. 2: Donald Duck Adventures 
Donald Duck's Atom Bomb / The Duck Who Fell to Earth (2008)
©Disney, Image Courtesy of Amazon.com

The Barks/Rosa Collection Volume 5 and several other previously announced comics never made it to the printer's press: due
to Geppi's myriad investments, his company faced serious financial problems. By the close of 2008, the Gemstone line of Walt Disney comics quietly disappeared.

Thus ends the saga of Donald Duck Adventures as of late 2012. It becomes clear why collectors may have become misguided their search and/or distinction of which is which, especially since there are multiple issue #1s. But the capper is that there are SIX DIFFERENT instances of Donald Duck Adventures #5 —and we can unofficially count SEVEN, as the unpublished Barks/Rosa Collection Vol. 5 shows up frequently on Internet searches. Click to enlarge and observe:



Six (or Seven) Ways to Enjoy Donald Duck Adventures #5
©Disney, Infographic by Dan Cunningham

Man, it's enough to drive a comic collector/completist to stick his own head in a mylar bag and board it. Hopefully, they find their way here before that goes down.


Epilogue: BOOM and Beyond (Present Day)

BOOM! Studios was the latest publisher to publish under the Walt Disney standard comic book license, but they have spared us a lengthy entry in this post, since they chose NOT to use Donald Duck Adventures as a title during their run, opting for Donald Duck and Friends, Donald Duck Classics, or just plain ol' Donald Duck. BOOM! has since moved forward with other licenses, leaving the future for U.S.Walt Disney comic books wide open.

That day will come... and once they've restored the "core four," I'll bet whomever the next Editor-in-Chief is, they'll peruse the list of options, and swiftly select Donald Duck Adventures as an upcoming title in the newest line-up.


* During the course of writing this, I've become fascinated by the potential of Cap'n L'Orange... he'll very likely show up here again.


**  Another Rainbow named their comics line Gladstone after Donald Duck's first cousin with insufferable good luck: Gladstone Gander.