Wednesday, May 10, 2023

Fitch-Crandall-Willner on Robin Hood: Who Did What?


Here's another strip where the writer's style is so distinctive his identity just leaped out at me. Ken Fitch uses "Aiy-y-y-y" in any number of the stories in Brown Shoe Company's 7-issue Adventures of Robin Hood giveaway. This page is from the first story in #5, "How Will Stutely Walked into the Hands of the Sheriff's Men." Another clue to Fitch, seen on other pages, is his putting dialog in the captions every so often, in addition to balloons.

I entered the Robin Hood stories' artists because I've seen the attributions reversed: Ray Willner pencils and Reed Crandall inks (Willner signed most of these, with Crandall ghosting). You may recall years ago how Crandall and George Evans art (at Dell and Gilberton, for instance) was IDed as Evans pencils and Crandall inks; but the inker isn't the one who lays out the panels and the characters' poses (and the way Crandall has people pose is, in a word, distinctive).

A few Robin Hood stories at Brown are attributed to Crandall only, pencils and inks, but he has a story in a 1955 issue of the publisher's Buster Brown Comic Book, #41, for comparison--and there his inks look just like his inks at EC, Warren, and so on. I find the inking on these Robin Hood stories consistent throughout, which is to say Willner's.

The inside front cover featurettes in #2 and 3 and all the covers are, I think, Wilner's pencils as well as inks; or at least I don't see Crandall's pencils on them.

Adventures of Robin Hood

c. 1956 1-7  Robin Hood stories w: Ken Fitch  p: Reed Crandall  i: Ray Willner
    Little John stories w: Fitch