Super Duck
{{Short description|Comic book character}}
{{For|the Daffy Duck cartoon|Stupor Duck}}
{{Infobox comics character
| character_name = Super Duck
| publisher = MLJ Comics/Archie Comics
| debut = Jolly Jingles #10 (summer 1943)
| creators = Al Fagaly
| alter_ego = The Cockeyed Wonder
| species = Duck
| homeworld = Earth
| partners = Uwanna Duck
Fauntleroy Duck
Mushnoggin
| powers = Comics
| sortkey = Super Duck
| hero = x
| module = {{infobox comic book title | subbox = yes | italic title = no
| schedule = bimonthly
| format = standard
| issues = 94
| main_char_team = Super Duck
| ongoing = Y
| genre = humor, anthropomorphic
| startyr = 1944
| endyr = 1960
| startmo = Fall
| endmo = Dec.
| writers = Burton Geller, Dave Berg, Joe Harold
| artists = Al Fagaly, Red Holmdale, Burton Geller, Joe Edwards, Dave Berg, Joe Harold
| sort = Super Duck
}}
}}
Super Duck was a comic book character created in 1943 for what was then MLJ Comics (now Archie Comics) by staff artist Al Fagaly. As his name implies, Super Duck (nicknamed "Supe") was originally a parody of Superman, even down to a red and blue costume. But his time as a superhero was short, and by late 1944 his stories became more conventional, in the Disney/Carl Barks mode.{{cite book |last1=Castiglia |first1=Paul |last2=Cooke |first2=Jon B. |title=The MLJ Companion |date=2016 |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |isbn=9781605490670 |pages=110–111 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r22qDgAAQBAJ&dq=%22super+duck%22+mlj&pg=PA110 |access-date=14 April 2020 |chapter=Last... But Hardly Least... Super Duck!}}
Super Duck Comics ran from 1944 to 1960, featuring "Super Duck, the Cockeyed Wonder" in his most familiar attire: a black shirt, red lederhosen and often an Alpine hat.{{cite book |last1=Becattini |first1=Alberto |title=American Funny Animal Comics in the 20th Century: Volume Two |date=2019 |publisher=Theme Park Press |isbn=978-1683902218 |chapter=Super-Animals}} Regular contributors to Super Duck Comics included creator Al Fagaly, as well as Red Holmdale.{{cite web |last1=Markstein |first1=Don |title=Super Duck, the Cockeyed Wonder |url=http://www.toonopedia.com/suprduck.htm |website=Don Markstein's Toonopedia |access-date=14 April 2020}} Fagaly illustrated most covers up through the early 1950s.
Publication history
Super Duck's first appearance came in Jolly Jingles #10 (summer 1943),{{cite book |last1=Rovin |first1=Jeff |title=The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Cartoon Animals |date=1991 |publisher=Prentice Hall Press |isbn=0-13-275561-0 |access-date=8 April 2020 |url=https://archive.org/details/illustratedencyc00rovi/page/252/mode/2up/ |pages=252–253}} but his time as a superhero was short, and by Jolly Jingles #16 (the last issue) his stories became more conventional.
Super Duck Comics
The character's escapades would be reprinted in Archie Comics' digest series Jughead Jones (at least as late as 1979), Laugh Comics Digest, and Archie's Mad House. More recently (2013 onward), his stories have often been reprinted in the digests again.
The Super Duck character himself has also returned in modern times, most typically presented as a fictional comic book superhero within Archie's world. Various magic-themed stories have made this Super Duck temporarily "real" to have adventures with Archie and others. His role combines his early superhero stature with his later facial design, grumpy temper, and bad luck.
In March 2020, one issue of Super Duck was published. The comic was written by Ian Flynn and Frank Tieri and illustrated by Ryan Jampole. Unlike previous comics, this comic was not for children. It was planned to be a four-issue miniseries but it appears to have long since been canceled.{{Cite web|url=https://archiecomics.com/a-superhero-thatll-quack-you-up-super-duck-1-launches-march-25/|title = A superhero that'll quack you up! SUPER DUCK #1 launches March 25|date = 2 March 2020}}
Characters and storylines
- Super Duck ("Supe") — the "Cockeyed Wonder," hero of his adventures. Originally got his powers from a prescription for vitamins, much in the manner of Hourman, the Blue Beetle and other serious superheroes
- Uwanna, Supe's temperamental girlfriend
- Dapper, Supe's rival
- Fauntleroy ("Fluke" or "Faunt"), Supe's bratty nephew (sometimes identified as his younger brother)."{{cite book |last1=Nevins |first1=Jess |title=Encyclopedia of Golden Age Superheroes |date=2013 |publisher=High Rock Press |isbn=978-1-61318-023-5 |page=262}} From 1950–1952, Archie published three annual issues of Fauntleroy Comics, a spin-off from Super Duck that featured the artwork of Al Fagaly
- Mushnoggin, Supe's burly derelict friend
Stories from the superhero period of Super Duck's run involved Supe getting into hapless situations, such as:
- "Mopy Duck" — Supe yells at Faunt for thinking that someone could actually live inside a whale after reading the story of Jonah. Supe then accidentally falls off a cruise ship and, in short order, gets swallowed by a whale, meets someone living inside it, gets tossed around inside the whale, and manages to get out and land back on the ship after the whale throws him up in the air with his water spout. When Faunt sees that he's all wet and tells him so, Supe takes Faunt's book on Jonah and says, "Faunt, I'm all wet about a lot of things."Reprinted in Laugh Comics Digest #13 (Archie Comics, Nov. 1977).
- "The Nifty Thrifty Trip" — Supe and Faunt go camping in the country to save money, but Supe — against Faunt's advice — tries to steal apples and milk from farmers, and camps on private property. He is forced to spend money to pay for damages, pays exorbitantly when he and Faunt hitch a ride home in what turns out to be a taxi, and ends up with the worst case of poison ivy his doctor has ever seen. Even though he never wanted to hear about milk or the country ever again, Supe is forced to live on milk for a month per doctor's orders and then has to go to the country for a long rest.
- "Cool Water" — Supe ricochets himself across a farm in attempt to pull a bucket of water from a well to drink. He gets the water and starts drinking it only to find frogs and insects in the water.
- Supe and Faunt advertise that they'll travel anywhere for money. A huckster with a Southern accent takes them to "The great state of Textucky." There, he tricks them into boarding a three-stage rocket. In outer space, when the rocket breaks up, they drift around until they meet an extraterrestrial used-spacecraft salesman, who sells them a flying saucer (for Supe's glass marbles; glass is unknown on his home planet). They fly the saucer back to "Textucky," where the conman pays them the 50 grand —in Confederate money! It's worthless! Faunt says, "Aw heck! We won't be able to spend it anywhere except here in ol' Textucky!" Supe thinks about this. So that's what they do!
Parodies
Underground cartoonist Robert Crumb wrote and drew a sexual version of Super Duck and Uwanna in a seven-page story in Mystic Funnies #3, published in 2002 by Fantagraphics Books.Crumb, R. "Freak Show," Mystic Funnies #3 (Fantagraphics, 2002).
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{gcdb series|id= 13220 |title=Super Duck Comics}}
- [http://toonopedia.com/suprduck.htm Super Duck] at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. [https://archive.today/20240528053214/https://www.webcitation.org/6sKUOMdwu?url=http://toonopedia.com/suprduck.htm Archived] from the original on July 29, 2017.
- {{comicbookdb|type=title|id= 25658 |title=Super Duck Comics}}
- [http://www.misterkitty.org/extras/stupidcovers/stupidcomics136.html Stupid Comics on Super Duck]
{{Archie Comics titles}}
{{GoldenAge}}
Category:Archie Comics superheroes
Category:Comics characters introduced in 1943
Category:Male characters in comics
Category:Comics about anthropomorphic ducks