Sunday, February 21, 2010

Duffy

One week after Graves Inc. was dropped from my newspaper, it was almost immediately replaced by another similarly themed comic; Duffy.














As I mentioned in my last post, the humour in Duffy was much gentler compared to the harshness portrayed in Graves Inc. Although it took place in an officeplace, it didn't revolve around it. Much of it was told from Duffy's dry exasperation at what was happening around him.














For the sake of thematic consistency, I'll be posting the office humour strips instead, to give an idea of how different early versions of this kind of humour was done before Dilbert populized it. In addition to being well-drawn, it was also wittly written.














Even though this strip was published in the early 80s, many of the subjects are still relevant today. A good hallmark of success on the truthfulness of a strip is how well they're able to convey the feelings of the populace long after their sell-by-date, and the anachronism of their electronics.













Even though the secretary was stuck with the typewriters, the office workers had the benefit of using computers. Or maybe more of a curse. They were just being introduced around this time, and keep in mind, these computers were of the OLD school variety, where, instead of the monitor being shown in basic black & white, they were shown in black and green.














Like any other media faced with new technology, they do their best to try to understand it, while pointing out their failings... not without reason, of course.














An interesting tidbit - if you compare the screaming panel above with the snoring panel in the first comic, you're clearly looking up Duffy's nostrils. However, because his nose was so big that it practically took up most of his face when viewed head-on, and his hair was still visible from behind his gigantic schnozz, I thought his entire face was scrunched up every time he screamed. It wasn't until years later when I saw a daily strip where he was actually yelling in joy (a very rare experience) that I understood what I was looking at.

For those curious, the daily strip was published in another newspaper, and was the last part of a week-long story where Duffy was trying vainly to win one of those scratch 'n win tickets. Every time he bought one, he always lost, while the guy next to him constantly won. What made it even maddening was that, even after winning, the guy asked for another ticket. At the end of another failure, Duffy exclaimed,

"Augh! Not again! No one ever wins these things!"
"Hey, I won!"
"Except this guy", Duffy thinks.

There was a follow-up strip the next day where Duffy asked the man how he was able to win all the time. I don't remember the man's reply, but the very next day, Duffy was buying all the tickets he could get. The store owner warned him about possible addiction. Duffy flatly denied any possibility of that happening. Then asked how many tickets he could get for his watch.

At the end of the week, Duffy exclaimed, "FINALLY!! A WINNING TICKET!" with the joyous expression described earlier. "And the prize is..." wait for it... "Another ticket." And just to drive the point home, his feet were littered with losing tickets.













Given that this strip ran for several years without a collection, I'm wondering what's stopping Bruce Hammond to publish an omnibus collection of his work? Also surprising was that this wasn't the only comic strip Bruce worked on. He later worked on a Sci-fi strip that could give Spaceman Spiff a run for his money.

10 comments:

  1. Nice post Daniel. The last strip really made me LOL.

    I find this blog very interesting to read but hard to comment on. You don't leave me any thoughts to type as you've been very thorough.

    -Edward

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  2. Hehe I never paid attention to Duffy as a kid but it's surprisingly funny. Especially the last one. Keep writing! :)

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  3. You're mistaken on one point: There was at least one collection of Duffy strips published. It's called "This Wasn't In The Job Description" (ISBN: 9780836212112). It goes for either insane prices (as a collectable) or peanuts (remainder), depending on the vendor. (I got my copy for $2, plus postage).

    I used to travel a lot on business, and every time I had to go to some god-forsaken place (you'd go from the 727 to the commuter jets to the "Buddy Holly Specials"), I would think of East Overshoe and "Fred's Airline".

    --Woody

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  4. Wow,... I've been looking for that book forever and can only find super-expensive copies. I remember reading the strip as a kid and loving it, but it's hard to find any info about it. Thanks for posting this.

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  5. Thanks, Woody (Anonymous); I found two copies relatively cheap (needless to say, one is MINE now--bwahahahahaha) at Amazon.com by searching on the ISBN you left. I hope it has my favorite in it; the one where Duffy goes into a men's store to look at ties. A clerk comes along and asks if he could help. Duffy replies, "Yes. I'm looking for something in a deep ketchup." :-)

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  6. I loved this strip when it was first published! I do have the collection mentioned and after finding this blog I got it out and reread it. Too bad the strip didn't last longder.

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  7. I remember this strip. In one strip it lampooned the marketing strategy of certain prestige car makes by having one of the characters buy an "Absurditi" after going to the showroom and being shown a flower in a vase. Not the car, just a flower in a vase.

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  8. Could you list the name of the other strip he worked on and do you know if it was ever collected.
    Thanks.

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  9. The other strip was "Orbit," which was the name of the alien boy hero. It was never collected. Bruce Hammond is on Facebook. He's not doing any comic strips at the present time.

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  10. I remembered reading Duffy when I was younger and the artwork is the most striking part with the comic. It was too bad I didn't really read words since Duffy is a wordy comic. However, the fact that this comic disappeared from the papers means that I didn't get to experience Duffy.

    That is until I read some sample comics online, and wishing there's an online archive. There's one book but I am sure it's just a compilation of selected strips. The real pity is that obscure comics will never get to have a decent archive after they are taken down, especially ones that were released before the internet.

    Thank you for reading.

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