Template:Short description Template:About Template:Italic title Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Plug was a British comic magazine that ran for 75 issues from 24 September 1977 until 24 February 1979, when it merged with The Beezer. It was edited by Ian Gray.[1]
A spin-off from The Bash Street Kids comic strip in The Beano, the comic was based on the character Plug who was a distinctively ugly member of the Bash Street Kids. His dog (Pug) from Pup Parade, and a new character called Chunkee the Monkey (Plug's pet monkey) accompanied him. Vic Neill mainly drew the title character's strip. The comic also had its own fan club, the Plug Sports and Social Club. The comic was inspired in part by Mad.
The Plug comic was never a big hit, possibly because, at 9 pence, it was too expensiveTemplate:Speculation inline compared to other D. C. Thomson comics at the time, which were priced at around 5 pence. According to the 2008 book The History of the Beano, for a while there were rumours of a "curse of Plug", fuelled by the fact that a number of celebrities featured in Mad magazine-style caricatures on the comic's cover died soon after, most notably John Wayne. However, the strip's use of gravure painting is still used in comics today.Template:Page needed
List of Plug comic strips
Strip Title | Artist | First Appearance [2] | Last Appearance [2] | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Antchester United | John Geering | 1 | 75 | The adventures of an insect football team. Survived merger with the Beezer. |
Ava Banana | 1 | 18 | Ava was a female athlete "strong as an ox, gentle as a lamb". Her trainer was Charlton Veston, their names being plays on Ava Gardner and Charlton Heston | |
The Bandshees | 1 | 42 | Creatures playing in a band, "fresh from their successful tour of Mars". Readers were invited to send in funny songs that they had written | |
Bedtime Story | 36 | 50 | Text story | |
Crazy Horse - The Nutty Nag | 19 | 75 | The adventures of a talking horse | |
Digby the Human Mole | Gordon Bell | 1 | 75 | A prisoner who constantly failed to escape from jail by digging tunnels. He had a huge mole-like nose and an enormous appetite. |
Doctor Rotcod and Drib | 44 | 75 | ||
D'ye Ken John Squeal and his Hopeless Hounds | 44 | 75 | A daft celebration of fox hunting. Its title parodied an 18th-century Scottish ballad. | |
Eddie Daring | 27 | 43 | A boy obsessed with rugby league, with Randolph, his pet rat (The Original Dirty Rat). His name was a play on Eddie Waring, a popular TV sports commentator at the time. | |
Eebagoom | 1 | 75 | The ancient British settlement of Liverpool invaded by Julius Sneezer and his Roman legions. Survived merger with the Beezer. | |
First Ada | Gordon Bell | 1 | 75 | Always willing to practise her first aid on any unsuspecting passer-by. Ada also had a St. Bernard dog as her companion. Survived merger with the Beezer. |
The Games Gang - They're Game for Everything. | 1 | 43 | Starred Meltem John, Bee-Bop, Fuzz, Rocky, Mooriel, Magnus Spike and Rollerball, a gang who invented games to play amongst themselves. (Meltem John and Magnus Spike are plays on Elton John and Magnus Pyke.) | |
Gnoo Faces | 1 | 25 | A strip about "three screwball Gnoos, trying to break into showbiz!" The judging panel was made up of Mickie Musk (the skunk), Lionel Bear, Arthur Aardvark and Tony Scratch (the tiger). The name was a play on New Faces, a popular UK talent show at the time.[3] | |
Gulp - The Galactic Goon with the GIGANTIC Gullet | Joe Austen | 58 | 75 | Back cover strip to complement Plug front cover, Gulp (Plug backwards) ate everything in the universe. |
Hugh's Zoo | Gordon Bell | 1 | 75 | The adventures of Hugh and his backyard menagerie. Survived merger with the Beezer. |
The Invasion of the Plug Bugs | 26 | 75 | A strip about a group of aliens | |
Jockey | 44 | 75 | ||
Lumpy Gibbon | 1 | 25 | Starred Lumpy Gibbon (a huge gibbon), Colonel Podgy Whiner (a hunter), Little Gibbon and Man Eating Tiger Moth. The title was a homage to the 1975 song "Funky Gibbon", by The Goodies | |
Luncheon Vulture | 26 | 57 | The adventures of a hungry vulture. The name echoes luncheon voucher | |
The Nutcase Bookcase - Guidebooks for Goons | 19 | 75 | Plug would star in a 'guide' to doing something, usually with disastrous results | |
Plug | 1 | 75 | Survived merger with the Beezer. | |
Sea Urchin | 1 | 18 | An amphibious boy who had underwater adventures with his friend Roger, the flying fish. The main antagonist of the strip was Silas Sharke, the underwater rotter | |
Supporting Life | Bill Ritchie | 1 | 43 | Starred Elvis, Plug's little brother, looking at a different football team each week. The first was Arsenal F.C. |
Tony Jackpot | John Dallas | 1 | 74 | A boy obsessed with golf, whose name was a play on that of British golfer (and 1969 British Open winner), Tony Jacklin. |
Violent Elizabeth | 44 | 75 | Her name was a play on Violet Elizabeth Bott, a well-known character from the Just William books by Richmal Crompton. |
See also
References
External links
Template:D. C. Thomson Comics Template:DCThomson
- ↑ Paul Gravett, "Obituary: Ian Gray", The Guardian, 20 September 2007
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite news