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==Sunday strip==
==Sunday strip==
The [[Sunday strip]] began five months later, on June 27, with Godwin illustrating scripts written by Reed's brother, Harold.<ref name=toonopedia />
The [[Sunday strip]] began five months later, on June 27, with Godwin illustrating scripts written either by Reed's brother Harold,<ref name=toonopedia /> or Godwin's brother Harold.<ref name=karlen />


The strip was running in approximately 150 newspapers when Godwin died in 1959<ref name=toonopedia /> at his home in [[New Hope, Pennsylvania]].{{cn}}
The strip was running in approximately 150 newspapers when Godwin died in 1959<ref name=toonopedia /> at his home in [[New Hope, Pennsylvania]].{{cn}}
[[Image:Rustyriley120159.jpg|right|thumb|400px|Frank Godwin's ''Rusty Riley'' (December 1, 1959)]]
[[Image:Rustyriley120159.jpg|right|thumb|400px|Frank Godwin's ''Rusty Riley'' (December 1, 1959)]]
The final strips were drawn by [[Bob Lubbers]].{{cn}} <!--, who recalled, "In 1959 Frank Godwin, the artist who did ''Rusty Riley'', died. Sylvan Byck at King Features asked if I'd do the last two weeks in Godwin's style to end the series. I admired his book illustrations and was honored to have the privilege to do it."-->
The final strips were drawn by [[Bob Lubbers]].{{cn}} <!--, who recalled, "In 1959 Frank Godwin, the artist who did ''Rusty Riley'', died. Sylvan Byck at King Features asked if I'd do the last two weeks in Godwin's style to end the series. I admired his book illustrations and was honored to have the privilege to do it."-->

==Reprints==
==Reprints==
In 1952-53 [[Dell Comics]] reprinted four ''Rusty Riley'' stories in its Four Color Comics series.
In 1952-53 [[Dell Comics]] reprinted four ''Rusty Riley'' stories in its Four Color Comics series.

Revision as of 23:42, 14 April 2015

Rusty Riley
Rusty Riley (March 29, 1959)
Author(s)Frank Godwin, Rod Reed
Current status/scheduleConcluded
Launch dateJanuary 26, 1948
End date1959
Syndicate(s)King Features Syndicate
Genre(s)Adventure

Rusty Riley was an American comic strip which ran from 1948 to 1959. It was created and drawn by Frank Godwin for King Features.

The line work in Rusty Riley shows an obvious influence of James Montgomery Flagg and Charles Dana Gibson, although Godwin used a variety of styles in his book and magazine illustrations. Contemporaries such as Hal Foster, Milton Caniff and Alex Raymond continue to be reprinted with regularity, while Godwin's two strips are difficult to find. He receives more attention in Europe, specifically France, though even there it is quite sparse.

Characters and story

With art by Godwin and scripts by Rod Reed, the first Rusty Riley daily appeared on January 26, 1948.[1] The storyline follows the adventures of a redheaded orphan youth, Rusty Riley, who flees the orphanage with his faithful fox terrier, Flip. In the bluegrass region of Kentucky, he is hired as a stable boy by wealthy racehorse owner Mr. Miles, owner of Milestone Farm. Encountering crooks and corruption as he grows up in the world of horse racing and horse breeders, Rusty's goal is to establish himself as a jockey. Rusty's girlfriend is Patty Miles, the daughter of his boss.[2]

Godwin made research trips to Lexington, Kentucky, when he began drawing the strip, but complaints about the appearance of horses and farms led to a return visit, as described by comics historian Dave Karlen:

Instead of ignoring these complaints, as some cartoonists might have done, Godwin made another trip to Lexington to visit his critics. For more than a week, he toured the central Kentucky horse farms, took pictures and made numerous sketches of the horses, fences, gates, barns, farm homes, horse cemeteries, country lanes, trees, and other references necessary to make his strip correct. He talked with the thoroughbred horsemen, standard-bred horsemen, saddle horsemen, racetrack officials and newspapermen to get all the information he needed. He also took many pictures in and around the Keeneland and Lexington Trotting Tracks, which were a couple of the sites he later used frequently in his comic strip. Godwin was now ready to make his strip better than ever.[2]

Sunday strip

The Sunday strip began five months later, on June 27, with Godwin illustrating scripts written either by Reed's brother Harold,[1] or Godwin's brother Harold.[2]

The strip was running in approximately 150 newspapers when Godwin died in 1959[1] at his home in New Hope, Pennsylvania.[citation needed]

Frank Godwin's Rusty Riley (December 1, 1959)

The final strips were drawn by Bob Lubbers.[citation needed]

Reprints

In 1952-53 Dell Comics reprinted four Rusty Riley stories in its Four Color Comics series.

In 2013, Classic Comics Press started a hardcover reprint series, with a reprint of dailies from 1948-49.

References

  1. ^ a b c Rusty Riley at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on April 14, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Karlen, Dave (n.d.). "A Boy, A Horse and His Dog: The Story of Rusty Riley". Comicartville.com. Archived from the original on September 18, 2001. Retrieved April 14, 2015. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)