In an interview with Irv Ziemanns, Gaylord was asked twice who Omar was, since it appears in his account books. He said he couldn't remember but knew the comics were small promotional freebies included in cereal boxes and other food items. Omar, pictured here, was for the Omar Bread Company.
Sunday, October 27, 2024
Who was Omar
In an interview with Irv Ziemanns, Gaylord was asked twice who Omar was, since it appears in his account books. He said he couldn't remember but knew the comics were small promotional freebies included in cereal boxes and other food items. Omar, pictured here, was for the Omar Bread Company.
OMAR SUPER BOOK OF COMICS 20 (vol 2)
OSWALD THE RABBIT
OMAR BREAD/WESTERN PUBLISHING
1946
Tuesday, October 01, 2024
Hurricane Kids - and pseudonyms
Gaylord DuBois’ background and the mystery of Albert Hartje:
Gaylord DuBois: Born on August 24, 1899, in Winthrop, Massachusetts, and passed away on October 20, 1993, in Orange County, Florida.
Albert Hartje: A pen name credited from Popular Comics #46 onwards, associated with “The Hurricane Kids.” The question of Albert Hartje’s identity revolves around
Evidence:
Mid-1930s: Editor Oskar Lebeck’s policy had artists providing scripts. Once Lebeck
DuBois’ Contribution: DuBois likely began writing “The Hurricane Kids” from
Albert Hartje Byline: First appeared in issue #46. It is concluded that DuBois
In essence, "Albert Hartje" was a pseudonym created by DuBois for its meaning and
word play.
From The Grand Comics Database™ (GCD) at Comics.org
Name:
- Gaylord Du Bois Type: Common Alternative Name
Given name: Gaylord Family name: Du Bois
Other Names:
- Gaylord McIlvaine Du Bois Type: Name at Birth
Given name: Gaylord McIlvaine Family name: Du Bois - G. Ellerbrock Type: Pen Name
- Howard R. Garis Type: None
- Bob Gaylord Type: Pen Name
- Albert Hartje Type: Pen Name
- Buck Wilson Type: Pen Name
Stanley Stories - Our Gang Comics #4, 1943
from Saturday May 14, 2016
"This story is not written by Stanley. The prolific Gaylord DuBois penned thousands of stories for Western Publications, from its early years in the comics industry through its transition from Dell to Gold Key Comics in the 1960s. This was one of his typical early '40s jobs."
Tom and Jerry first appeared in 'Our Gang" comics No. 1, 1942. Written by Gaylord DuBois. Tom was a brown cat in this issue.
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