Showing posts with label Nobel Prize. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nobel Prize. Show all posts

August 14, 2025

The Birth of Li'l Abner ~ August 13, 1934

 ~     
 Li'l Abner - August 13, 1934
cartoon by Al Capp
 

Yesterday was the birth of Li'l Abner, so to speak. Written and illustrated by Al Capp (1909–1979), the strip was published on August 13, 1934, the strip ran for 43 years, from August 13, 1934, through November 13, 1977.            
 
The strip featured an amazing array of totally unbelievable but lovable (more or less) characters, the lead, of course, Li'l Abner, his sweetheart Daisy Mae Yokum, his mother Mammy Yokum, his father Pappy Yokum, Honest Abe Yokum Daisey and Abner's son, his brother Tiny Yokum, Salomey the pet pig, Moonbeam McSwine and her father Moonshine McSwine, Hairless Joe and Lonesome Polecat moonshine purveyors, Senator Jack S. (Jackass) Phogbound, Stupefyin' Jones: A walking aphrodisiac who is very dangerous on Sadie Hawkins Day, the tycoon Bashington T. Bullmoose, the cannibal Wolf Gal, the wrestler Earthquake McGoon, Evil Eye Fleagle (the name says it all) and there are dozens of many other characters as well as mythical creatures such as the Shmoos.    
 
 

 
One of the offshoots of  Li'l Abner was Fearless Fosdick, a comic strip-within-the-strip parody of the Chester Gould plainclothes detective, Dick TracyFearless Fosdick was licensed for use in an advertising campaign for Wildroot Cream-Oil, a popular men's hair tonic. Fosdick's profile on advertising displays became a prominent fixture in barbershops across America — advising readers to "Get Wildroot Cream-Oil, Charlie!" A series of ads appeared in newspapers, magazines and comic books featuring Fosdick's battles with Anyface, a murderous master of disguise. Anyface was always given away by his dandruff and messy hair. I used Wildroot Cream-Oil from the mid 50's until the mid 80's.             
 
 

 
The local for these characters, which includes every stereotype of Appalachia, is Dogpatch the impoverished community which consists mostly of ramshackle log cabins, turnip fields, pine trees, and hogwallows. Most Dogpatchers are shiftless, ignorant scoundrels and thieves. The men are too lazy to work, and Dogpatch girls are desperate enough to chase them. Those who farm their turnip fields watch turnip termites swarm by the billions every year to devour Dogpatch's only crop (along with their homes, their livestock, and all their clothing). Capp intended for suffering Americans in the midst of the Great Depression, to laugh at the residents of Dogpatch even worse off than themselves. In his words, Dogpatch was "an average stone-age community nestled in a bleak valley, between two cheap and uninteresting hills somewhere."        
      
The characters of Li'l Abner were brought to life several times in many ways: in 1946 Capp wrote a song for Daisy Mae, entitled, (Li'l Abner) Don't Marry That Girl!! and it was recorded by Frank Sinatra as well as Helen Carroll and the Satisfiers (their version was the best). The group also recorded the theme song for the television series, Little Lulu.    
 
With John Hodiak in the title role, the Li'l Abner radio drama ran weekdays on NBC from Chicago, from November 20, 1939, to December 6, 1940.              
 
In 1940, Li'l Abner was brought to the big screen with Daisy Mae played by Martha O'Driscoll and Li'l Abner Yokum  played by Granville Owen (aka Jeff York): it also featured Buster Keaton.        
 
 
 
Beginning in 1944, Li'l Abner was adapted into a series of color theatrical cartoons by Screen Gems for Columbia Pictures, directed by Sid Marcus, Bob Wickersham, and Howard Swift.          
 
Evil-Eye Fleegle makes an animated cameo appearance in the United States Armed Forces Special Weapons Project training film, Self Preservation in an Atomic Attack (1950).        
 
In 1952, Fearless Fosdick was incorporated into a short-lived TV series. The puppet show was created and directed by puppeteer Mary Chase, written by Everett Crosby, and voiced by John Griggs, Gilbert Mack, and Jean Carson. Fearless Fosdick premiered on Sunday afternoons on NBC; 13 episodes featuring the Mary Chase marionettes were produced.         
 
In 1956, the musical, Li'l Abner, opened on Broadway on November 15, 1956, at the St. James Theatre where it ran for 693 performances. The producers conducted a long search for the actor to play the title role: over 400 actors auditioned for the part, and at one time, Dick Shawn was reported to be their preferred choice. However, the producers eventually chose unknown singer Peter Palmer, who had been serving in an army entertainment unit; Panama and Frank saw him perform on a segment of The Ed Sullivan Show featuring talented American soldiers. Palmer was a trained singer with a music degree from the University of Illinois, where he had also played football; at 6'4" and 228 pounds, Palmer had the right "look" to play Li'l Abner.         
 
 
left: Peter Palmer, center: Stubby Kaye, right: Leslie Parrish 
 
 
It was adapted into a Technicolor motion picture at Paramount Pictures in 1959 by producer Norman Panama and director Melvin Frank, with an original score by Nelson Riddle.         
 
Lena the Hyena makes a brief animated appearance in the live and animated film, Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988).                          
 
In 1995 the United States postal service issued a series that featured some of the denizens of Dogpatch featuring Daisy Mae and Abner.
 
 
    

Sadie Hawkins Day is an American folk event and pseudo-holiday originated by Capp's hillbilly comic strip Li'l Abner (1934–1977). The annual comic strip storyline inspired real-world Sadie Hawkins events, the premise of which is that women ask men for a date or dancing. "Sadie Hawkins Day" was introduced in the comic strip on November 15, 1937; the storyline ran until the beginning of December. The storyline was revisited the following October/November, and inspired a fad on college campuses. By 1939, Life reported that 201 colleges in 188 cities held a Sadie Hawkins Day event. Capp finally set the date for Sadie Hawkins Day as November 26, in his last Li'l Abner daily strip on November 5, 1977.               
      
Fans of the strip include novelist John Steinbeck, who called Capp "very possibly the best writer in the world today" in 1953 and recommended him for the Nobel Prize in literaturemedia critic. Theorist Marshall McLuhan considered Capp "the only robust satirical force in American life": in his book Understanding Media, McLuhan called Li'l Abner's Dogpatch "a paradigm of the human situation". Comparing Capp to other contemporary humorists, McLuhan wrote: "Arno, Nash, and Thurber are brittle, wistful little précieux beside Capp!".          
 
John Updike called Li'l Abner a "hillbilly Candide" said that the strip's "richness of social and philosophical commentary approached the Voltairean." Capp has been compared to Fyodor Dostoevsky, Jonathan Swift, Laurence Sterne, and François RabelaisJournalism & Mass Communication Quarterly and Time called him "the Mark Twain of cartoonists". Charlie Chaplin, William F. Buckley, Al Hirschfeld, Harpo Marx, Russ Meyer, John Kenneth Galbraith, Ralph Bakshi, Shel Silverstein, Hugh Downs, Gene Shalit, Frank Cho, Daniel Clowes, and Queen Elizabeth are all reportedly fans of Li'l Abner.     
 
Li'l Abner characters were often featured in mid-century American advertising campaigns including Grape-Nuts cereal, Kraft caramels, Ivory soap, Oxydol, Duz and Dreft detergents, Orange Crush, Nestlé cocoa, Cheney neckties, Pedigree pencils, Strunk chainsaws, U.S. Royal tires, Head & Shoulders shampooGeneral Electric light bulbs and Fruit of the Loom.       
 
 

 
There were Dogpatch-themed family restaurants called "Li'l Abner's" in Louisville, Kentucky, Morton Grove, Illinois, and Seattle, Washington
          
Wildroot Cream-Oil: Fearless Fosdick was licensed for use in an advertising campaign for Wildroot Cream-Oil, a popular men's hair tonic. Fosdick's profile on advertising displays became a prominent fixture in barbershops across America — advising readers to "Get Wildroot Cream-Oil, Charlie!" A series of ads appeared in newspapers, magazines and comic books featuring Fosdick's battles with Anyface, a murderous master of disguise. Anyface was always given away by his dandruff and messy hair.      

Dogpatch characters were heavily licensed throughout the 1940s and 1950s: the main cast was produced as a set of six hand puppets and 14-inch (360 mm) dolls by Baby Barry Toys in 1957. A 10-figure set of carnival chalkware statues of Dogpatch characters was manufactured by Artrix Products in 1951, and Topstone introduced a line of 16 rubber Halloween masks prior to 1960. After the introduction of the Shmoos, they were licensed everywhere in 1948 and 1949. A garment factory in Baltimore made a line of Schmoo apparel — including "Shmooveralls", Shmoo dolls, clocks, watches, jewelry, earmuffs, wallpaper, fishing lures, air fresheners, soap, ice cream, balloons, ashtrays, comic books, records, sheet music, toys, games, Halloween masks, salt and pepper shakers, decals, pinbacks, tumblers, coin banks, greeting cards, planters, neckties, suspenders, belts, curtains, and fountain pens. In one year, Shmoo merchandise generated over $25 million in sales. Close to a hundred licensed Shmoo products from 75 different manufacturers were produced, some of which sold five million units each.      
     
Capp once told one of his assistants that he knew Li'l Abner had finally "arrived" when it was first pirated as a pornographic Tijuana bible parody in the mid-1930s.      
 
 
The Adventures of a Fuller Brush Man, published c. 1936 
      
 
Li'l Abner ran until November 13, 1977, when Capp retired. Capp, a lifelong chain smoker, died from emphysema two years later at age 70, at his home in South Hampton, New Hampshire, on November 5, 1979.         
 
 
      
Viewfinder links:     
           
Candide            
Charlie Chaplin           
Al Hirschfeld       
Buster Keaton          
Harpo Marx                       
Peter Palmer     
Queen Elizabeth           
Nelson Riddle          
Dick Shawn          
Shel Silverstein           
John Steinbeck     
Jonathan Swift         
Mark Twain          
John Updike      
 
Net links:    
     
     
    
     
     
    
    
     
     
YouTube links:    
     
Helen Carroll and the Satisfiers ~              
             (Li'l Abner) Don't Marry That Girl!!        
             Little Lulu            
Li'l Abner     
     
     
    
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, August 13, 2025     
    
       
       
        
       



















July 10, 2019

Nicola Tesla ~ Man Out of Time

~
 Nikola Tesla - 1898


Today is the birthday of Nikola Tesla; the overlooked scientist who originated the key tools of the age of power: the polyphase AC electric current we use every day and the system of electrical transmission, radio, RadioControl, computers, satellites, microwaves, beam weapons, nuclear fusion, etc., and the MRI (link below). Much of life as it evolved in the 20th century rested on the foundations that Tesla laid down. I have been fascinated by his story since I first heard of him at least 20 years ago.    
      
To celebrate his birthday, I've elected to feature this engrossing book, Tesla: Man Out of Time, published in October, 2001, by Simon & Schuster. It chronicles the life of Tesla, the Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer, physicist, and futurist. Once you start reading it, it's almost impossible to put down; I read it in nothing flat!      


front cover 
 front cover photo: Bettmann / Getty Images
 photo by Styrous®


The Margaret Cheney narrative details Tesla's childhood during the 1850s and 1860s in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, his 1884 arrival in New York, becoming an American citizen in 1891, his inventions and contributions to engineering, up to his death in New York at age 86 during the middle of World War II in 1943. The book is focused largely on Tesla's personality, not his inventions. There is information on his contribution to the MRI on the Viewfinder (link below).    
      
            
back cover
 photo by Styrous®


Tesla was born an ethnic Serb in the village Smiljan, Lika county, in the Austrian Empire (present day Croatia), on 10 July [O.S. 28 June] 1856. His father, Milutin Tesla (1819–1879), was an Eastern Orthodox priest. Tesla's mother, Đuka Tesla (née Mandić; 1822–1892), whose father was also an Orthodox priest, had a talent for making home craft tools and mechanical appliances and the ability to memorize Serbian epic poems. Đuka had never received a formal education. Tesla credited his eidetic memory and creative abilities to his mother's genetics and influence.                
   

photo by Napoleon Sarony
 photo by Styrous®


As a student, Tesla displayed such remarkable abilities to calculate mathematical problems that teachers accused him of cheating. During his teen years, he fell seriously ill, recovering once his father abandoned his demand that Nikola become a priest and agreed he could attend engineering school instead.         

The airplane (top of page below) patented in the 1920's by Tesla was intended to operate much like the vertical/short takeoff and landing (V/STOL) aircraft (bottom of page below) being considered in the 1980's by the U. S. Navy as "a subsonic aircraft of the 1990's." Tesla's plane was never built.   


Tesla's plane (top), subsonic aircraft (bottom)
 detail photo by Styrous®

   
Nikola Tesla worked with the leading scientists of his time and they were important influences on each other.


 
photographer unknown
photo by Styrous®

Albert Einstein (14 March 1879 – 18 April 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist who developed the theory of relativity, one of the two pillars of modern physics (alongside quantum mechanics). His work is also known for its influence on the philosophy of science. He is best known to the general public for his mass–energy equivalence formula E = mc2, which has been dubbed "the world's most famous equation". He received the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his services to theoretical physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect", a pivotal step in the development of quantum theory.


 
photographer unknown
detail photo by Styrous®

Charles Proteus Steinmetz (born Karl August Rudolph Steinmetz, April 9, 1865 – October 26, 1923) was a German-born American mathematician and electrical engineer and professor at Union College. He fostered the development of alternating current that made possible the expansion of the electric power industry in the United States, formulating mathematical theories for engineers. He made ground-breaking discoveries in the understanding of hysteresis that enabled engineers to design better electromagnetic apparatus equipment including especially electric motors for use in industry.


 
photo: L. Anderson 
photo by Styrous®

       
The 187 foot (57 m) transmitting tower Wardenclyffe wireless station, located in Shoreham, New York, was built by Tesla from 1901 to 1904 with backing from Wall Street banker J. P. Morgan, the experimental facility was intended to be a transatlantic radiotelegraphy station and wireless power transmitter, but was never completed. The tower was torn down in 1916 but the lab building, designed by noted New York architect Stanford White remains.        


Wardenclyffe plant, Long Island - 1904 
photo by Lillian McChesney 
photo by Styrous®


His inventions and ideas were astonishing. He had a concept for a "death ray" which he was terrified would be turned to the detriment of mankind so kept it secret. The government was interested in this and the papers on it mysteriously disappeared after his death (link below).  
       

photo: Gernsback Publications, Inc.
photo by Styrous®

     

back cover detail detail photo by Styrous®


In the photo below, Tesla demonstrating wireless power transmission, in his New York laboratory in the 1890s. The bulb is a prototype "fluorescent" light he invented consisting of a partially evacuated glass bulb with a single metal electrode. Nearby but not visible there is one of his Tesla coil high voltage oscillators which produces a radio frequency electric field. The electric field ionizes the gas in the bulb, causing it to glow similar to a neon light. Tesla invented a residential wireless lighting system in the 1889s.           
     
    
photo: L. Anderson
photo by Styrous®


A famous photograph of Tesla in his laboratory in Colorado Springs around 1899, supposedly sitting reading the Roger Joseph Boscovich book, Theoria Philosophiae Naturalis, in front of his giant "magnifying transmitter" high voltage generator while the machine produced huge bolts of electricity. The photo was a promotional stunt by photographer Dickenson V. Alley; a double exposure. First the machine's huge sparks were photographed in the darkened room, then the photographic plate was exposed again with the machine off and Tesla sitting in the chair. In his Colorado Springs Notes Tesla admitted that the photo is false:
"Of course, the discharge was not playing when the experimenter was photographed, as might be imagined!"
Tesla's biographers Carl Willis and Mark Seifer confirm this.
        
       
Tesla - ca 1888
  Colorado Springs laboratory     
photo by Dickenson V. Alley
photo by Styrous®


Although he was very handsome, six-foot two, suave and an impeccable dresser, Tesla was basically a loner, socially weird and never married. He claimed that his celibacy played an important role in his creativity. Tesla held that his greatest ideas came to him in solitude. Perhaps because of his nearly fatal illness as a teenager, he feared germs and practiced very strict hygiene, likely a barrier to the development of interpersonal relationships. He also exhibited unusual phobias, such as an aversion to pearls, which led him to refuse to speak to any woman wearing them.       


date & photographer unknown


In his early days in New York he often gave lavish dinner parties for his guests, taking them afterwards to his laboratories on South Fifth Avenue for an evening's entertainment. There he demonstrated to his guests thrilling electrical feats of such magnitude that men literally felt their hair rising straight up on their astonished heads.      


photo: Burndy Library
photo by Styrous®
 

Nikola Tesl was fascinated by the afterlife and metaphysical phenomenon and had other very strange beliefs (Tesla Society link below).       




A better scientist than money manager, Tesla died virtually penniless: he was found dead in a New York City hotel room by a hotel maid on the morning of Jan. 7, 1943. He was 86 years old.   

The biography, Prodigal Genius, by John J. O’Neill, science editor of the New York Herald Tribune appeared shortly after his death.            

In 1959 the Margaret Storm book, The Nikola Tesla Story (published by herself, printed in green ink and noting his longer than usual fingers and other physical features) was based on the assertion that Tesla was an embodiment of a superior being from the planet Venus! He once predicted that humans would "telephone the stars," and even graced the cover of Time magazine in 1931.          


Nikola Tesla, Time Magazine - July 20, 1931


In 1980 a Yugoslav biographical film, The Secret of Nikola Tesla, was made which details events in the life of Tesla, and a film was made in 2017 entitled, The Current War (links below).    

Tesla's work fell into relative obscurity following his death, until 1960, when the General Conference on Weights and Measures named the SI unit of magnetic flux density the tesla in his honor.    

He is remembered today on Serbian money ... at the Nikola Tesla Corner in New York City ... and by the Tesla electric automobile, which uses an induction motor of Tesla's own 1882 design (an AC motor).       
   
The rock group, Tesla, an American rock band formed in Sacramento, California in late 1981 by bassist Brian Wheat and guitarist Frank Hannon as Earthshaker, and later City Kidd, named themselves after him (link below).           
   




Tesla: Man Out of Time
Margaret Cheney
Softcover
Simon & Schuster   

ISBN 10: 038533382X ISBN 13: 9780385333825
Publisher: Delta, 1998             








Viewfinder links:    
      
Thomas Edison    
Albert Einstein       
Nikola Tesla     
     
Net links:    

Archive.org ~ Tesla Man Out Of Time (full text)           
CBS News ~ Almanac: Nikola Tesla       
City Kidd (aka Tesla)        
Dallas Observer ~    
     Jeff Keith: "Management Told Us Everything About Nikola Tesla"   
Smithsonian ~ The Extraordinary Life of Nikola Tesla         
Tesla Society ~ 1931 Tribute to Nikola Tesla on his 75th birthday 
       
YouTube links:    

10 Amazing Nikola Tesla Inventions and Innovations             
The Current War Official Trailer   
Edison Did Everything He Could To Stop Tesla Succeeding/Tesla's Death Ray   
ERB (Epic Rap Battles of History) ~ Nikola Tesla vs Thomas Edison  
Nikola Tesla: Great Minds (9 min., 13 sec.)            
Tesla: Man Out of Time by Margaret Cheney review (12 min., 49 sec.)
Nikola Tesla's Secret revealed ~ Theoria Philosophiae Naturalis        
Wireless Energy For The Entire Planet ~ Wardenclyffe Tower (12 min., 48 sec.)