Derek, Son of Thane –
Hal’s Foster Son
by Rick Marschall
You
probably do not know Derek, as a character or as a strip title.
But that
was the name of the eponymous King Features proposal that the world knows today
as Prince Valiant.
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Overhead view of Foster at the drawing board in
his Redding CT studio, reference at his side, drawing his Prince Valiant page
typically from the bottom up. Most pages took him a full week to produce.
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Creator
Hal Foster was born this week in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1892. My “mind” raced
back in time to several stops along the way with the elegant, distinguished
master Harold Rudolf Foster. He once told me that he learned to draw fast in
those northern climes because the frigid air obliged him to slip mittens on
every few minutes. Good anecdote, especially from a usually reserved man.
In 1921
Hal rode a bicycle to Chicago, where he studied art and drew (and painted) for
advertising agencies. It was in Kansas, I think, about a decade later, that Hal
was offered the job of illustrating Tarzan,
not for books or magazine, but for serialized newspaper installments. He was
less than enthused, but the Depression’s grip was colder than Canada’s wintry
blasts; and – paraphrasing the Bible’s account of Esau selling his birthright
in Genesis 25 – he said he sold his soul for a mess of pottage. “But pottage
tasted pretty good at that moment.”
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Advertising painting by Harold R Foster, 1931.
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Hal was
not the first cartoonist to tackle the strip, which was a substantial hit
especially when his Sunday pages attracted attention. Eventually he wrote his
own jungle (and non-jungle, for instance Egypt) tales. I once owned – in fact I
technically still own – a multi-page typescript account How I Came to Create
the Tarzan Stories not by Foster but by Edgar Rice Burroughs. The founder
of ERBdom and a keeper of the Burroughs flame, Camille Cazdessus, agreed
to trade a Sunday Foster Tarzan for that manuscript. I sent it to him
but, for decades, he has not honored the trade nor returned the manuscript.
Tracked down in Illinois, no longer Louisiana, he admitted to still having it;
and asked that I provide the postage for its return – an infantile and perhaps
desperate condition, I thought. But I agreed… and still have not received
either element of the transaction. A Crowded Life of Rogues, unavoidable.
Foster
put the strip, and himself, on the map along the way. King Features, that
vacuum-cleaner of talent, lured Hal with the promise to own his own creation
(he received only a salary, no percentage or royalties, from Tarzan) and
editorial freedom. Proud of his heritage and a student of history – and an
admirer of the storytelling illustrator Howard Pyle – he staked a claim for a
Medieval epic.
Its
original title was Derek, Son of Thane, as attested here in this King
Features promotion from 1936 (long buried in my archives). Myself, I will not
attest to the fact that King ever published the strip under that title
(although I have seen a reprint page, not a contemporary tearsheet with a Derek
title-bar) nor that Foster’s second choice was Prince Arn.
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A paragraph from an inside page of the “King
Pins” brochure, announcing the new strip by the pride of Topeka.
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The
full-page Sunday (first a tabloid page) commanded attention, and had immediate
impact, a prestige feature for American newspapers. In its early years Hal
infused fantastic elements – Merlin was a regular character – and was exacting
with visual references like furniture, castles, weapons, and clothing. He bent
or condensed history, however, over approximately 600 years.
All that
really mattered to readers, about a timeline, was every next Sunday.
The first
fan letter that ever produced a response when I was young was Hal Foster’s
polite, elegant explanation to me that he could not respond with an original
Sunday page. I was making a scrapbook of Val Sundays (with my own
running captions beside his!), and told him so. In later years we were
Connecticut neighbors – he in Redding; I in Bethel – and was surprised to learn
that Wayne Boring, whose work on Superman I considered stiff and klunky,
did backgrounds on Val.
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A letter from Hal Foster to a 12-year-old fan,
1961…
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Around
1971, age and arthritis caught up with Hal and his lovely wife Helen, and they
moved to Florida. I still have letters and Christmas cards from them, a long
run. My wife and I visited them in their retirement in Spring Hill FL. On one
of those visits I asked Hal what he thought – how he would assess – the work of
his successor on Tarzan. In probably the most critical but diplomatic
statement this gentleman could make, he thought and said, “It always interested
me how Hogarth managed to draw all the muscles on top of the skin.”
In my old
Nemo magazine I recruited two old European friends to address Hal
Foster. Fred Schreiber dusted off an old interview with Hal; and Prof Giulio
Cesare Cuccolini analyzed the influence of Howard Pyle. For the German
publisher Carlsen I helped produce (with my friend the historian and publisher
Andreas Knigge) The Big Hal Foster Book (never yet appearing in the US).
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The cover of the book treatment of Foster’s
career and Prince Valiant’s place in history. With Andreas Knigge;
Carlsen Verlag, Hamburg, Germany.
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Hal
passed off the production of Prince Valiant to his Fairfield County
neighbor John Cullen Murphy. Jack was predisposed – culturally, racially,
politically – to be the simultaneous heir to Foster and the good Prince
himself. Other artists auditioned, but there was no real competition. At first
Foster provided the scripts and penciled layouts; and he finally surrendered
all aspects. Murphy, and eventually other family members including his writer
son Cullen, valiantly sustained the epic. In recent years other hands have
continued.
When
Foster died, my friend Bill Crouch proved that he was more than a Pogo
fanatic. He and his brother Miller, when younger – I am not sure how much
younger; but that might be another column. Or not – used to dress in licensed Prince
Valiant pajamas and have mock sword fights. He felt a proprietary interest
in Val, and somehow got Helen to share Hal’s King Features’ contract when she
was a fresh widow. It turns out that Foster still owned the strip – and its
rights and royalties – a rare situation that the syndicate somehow neglected to
reference in their Good-byes; and that Helen actually did not realize. How long
thereafter she received the surprising royalty checks, or what settlement was
reached, I have forgotten.
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A detail from “King
Pins,” a King Features Syndicate mailer, in 1936. Hal Foster is #9. |
Movies
(including a 1950s epic with Robert Wagner in pageboy coiff), many reprint
books, board games, costumes and, um, pajamas, flourished through the years. At
times the strip was more popular overseas, for instance in Germany, than in the
US. For me, I remember the first reply from a cartoonist; a warm friendship and
visits; a few projects together; and material for a book of my own, the
memories of a Crowded Life in Comics.
Also, Prince
Valiant is where I first read and learned the meaning of the word Synopsis.
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