Lester Gaba, Michelangelo of the Bathtub

Posted by Harry McCracken on October 27, 2012

Lester Gaba Popeye Soap

I promise not to make a habit of showing items relating to non-Charles Mintz characters on Scrappyland. But the Popeye soap on a rope depicted above — which I recently found in an antique mall outside Seattle — isn’t just any Popeye soap on a rope.

Lester GabaIt was sculpted by Lester Gaba (1907-1987), the same fellow responsible for the wondrous soap figurines of Scrappy, Margy and Yippy. (Here’s the example in the Scrappyland collection, and here’s a photo of Scrappy’s pal Cora Sue Collins posing with the soap.)

Back in the 1930s, Gaba was everywhere. His soap toys, manufactured by a company called Kerk Guild, seem to have been very popular. And judging from how many of them survive today, many people treated them as prized collectibles rather than as cleaning products.

Here (from a Hake’s Americana auction) is his Shirley Temple(s).

Lester Gaba Shirley Temple Figures

And his Wimpy, Olive Oyl, and Popeye.

Lester Gaba Soap Figures

 

And a drawing from his patent for Dionne Quintuplets soap figures.

Lester Gaba quintupletsAnd here, from Gaba’s book Soap Carving, are some more of his figures — including Scrappy, Yippy, Wimpy, Shirley, and Charlie McCarthy plus a cherub and a little Dutch girl.

Lester Gaba soap figures

Gaba’s soap figurines also appeared on the cover of the old-old version of Life magazine, where they wore clothes fashioned from real fabric and posed in what amounted to three-dimensional cartoons.

Lester Gaba Life cover

Lester Gaba Life CoverBut Gaba’s greatest fame — and for a time, it was considerable — came from the Gaba Girls, the department-store dummies he designed. The next version of Life (the famous one) liked them so much that they devoted two extensive photo essays (and one cover) to them in 1937. (You can check out the stories here and here.)

The most famous Gaba Girl, and Gaba’s constant companion, was Cynthia, who he designed for Saks Fifth Avenue. In the 1930s, Cynthia went to fancy parties, attended shows, hobnobbed at nighclubs, and smoked and drank cocktails (or at least held cigarettes and sat near cocktails).

Here are Gaba and Cynthia at Manhattan’s legendary Stork Club, as photographed by Life‘s Alfred Eisenstaedt in 1937.

Lester Gaba and Cynthia

Cynthia also did radio and TV, and apparently appeared in at least one movie, Jack Benny’s Artists and Models Abroad (1938). Here she is in a publicity shot with Benny, Joan Bennett and a cop.

Artists and Models Abroad

Gaba may have been seen all around town with Cynthia, but latter-day scuttlebutt pairs him with another celebrity who, like Gaba, started out as a window dresser: Vincente Minnelli.

If you want to learn more about Gaba’s soap toys, read this spread from Soap Carving (click it for a larger version). Sadly, the man doesn’t seem to have been moved to carve a life-sized Scrappy…

Lester Gaba's Soap Carvings

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Truly, the Fourth Stooge

Posted by Harry McCracken on October 9, 2012

I own a copy of a photo of Scrappy with the Three Stooges which I like so much that I’ve posted it repeatedly. But I’ve never seen these additional two shots of Moe, Curly and Larry palling around with his Scrappiness, which were brought to my attention by Scrappyland reader Billie Towzer. Aren’t they fantastic?


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The Long-Awaited Return of Zadoc

Posted by Harry McCracken on October 8, 2012

Scrappy sketches

Say, I forgot I have another drawing of Zadoc. Actually, it’s a looser rendition of the same drawing–and it’s on a page with some sketches of Yippy, definitively establishing Zadoc as a denizen of the Scrappyverse. As for the gruff kid in the cap, he looks like the bully from Sunday Clothes. A cartoon which Zadoc doesn’t appear in.

I’ll let you know if I come any closer to figuring out just who Zadoc was.

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The Enigma of Zadoc

Posted by Harry McCracken on October 7, 2012

Zadoc

This is Zadoc. I don’t know for sure who drew him — on a piece of animation paper — but he’s a very Dick Huemeresque character, particularly in the way he’s waving his ginormous hands about. And he looks like he’s the love child of Scrappy and Harpo Marx.

He may have appeared in a Mintz cartoon I don’t know about. Or maybe he never got off the drawing board. Anyone know anything about him?

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First National Bank of Scrappy

Posted by Harry McCracken on October 7, 2012

Scrappy bank

This is a small metal bank, sculpted in Scrappy’s image and clearly based on the classic Scrappy stock drawing. It’s only a rough approximation, though: Whoever made it appears to have believed that Scrappy was born without arms or legs.

In real life, it’s rather imposing for its size — it’s the closest idea we’ll probably ever get of what a Scrappy statue would look like. And you can’t tell it from this photo, but it’s blue except for Scrappy’s eyes and tongue, of which have been painted red.

As with so much Scrappy stuff, this item is mysterious: I don’t know a thing about it. The one in my possession is the only one I’ve seen.

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Scrappy: Fun For the Whole Family

Posted by Harry McCracken on October 5, 2012

Scrappy Film

The Irwin company seems to have manufactured toy projectors which could play brief loops excerpted from cartoons. It acquired licenses to produce loops featuring Popeye, Betty Boop, Bimbo, Krazy Kat — and Scrappy.

The box art — click either or both of these images for bigger versions — featured a family watching the stock drawing of Scrappy that a gazillion Scrappy products used in varying forms. They find it entertaining, apparently. And so do I.

Scrappy Irwin Safety Film

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Yet Another Kid Who Loved Scrappy

Posted by Harry McCracken on September 28, 2012

Edith Fellows and Jack Moran

If you were a Columbia child star in the 1930s, you were also a part-time shill for Scrappy merchandise. It was true of Cora Sue Collins as well as Edith Fellows and Dickie Walters. And the above photo shows it was also the case with Jackie Moran.

That’s him on the right with Edith, fooling around with Scrappy handkerchiefs. This publicity photo was apparently released in April 1936, in conjunction with a Columbia film in which they both appeared, And So They Were Married. (It’s going to be on TCM in December.)

And So They Were Married was Jackie’s first movie. He also had a small role in Gone With the Wind, and played Huck Finn to Tommy Kelly’s Tom Sawyer. And IMdB says he eventually worked with with exploitation-movie master Russ (Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!) Meyer, although Wikipedia says that may (or may not) have been a different John Moran.

Moran — the one who posed with Scrappy hankies — died in 1990. Edith Fellows passed away just last year. Dickie Walters, I’m not sure about. And Cora Sue Collins, I’m pleased to report, is still with us. I wonder if she has memories — fond or otherwise — of her time as a Scrappy spokesmodel?

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Scrappy Mystery Art

Posted by Harry McCracken on September 28, 2012

Scrappy Goes Fishing
This may be the nicest Scrappy item I possess. It’s certainly the most tantalizing one. It’s by Dick Huemer itself, and seems to be an illustration for a story titled “Scrappy Goes Fishing.” Which was published–actually, I have no idea where it was published. Or even if it was published.

It looks a bit like what you’d might get if Scrappy starred in a short piece of fiction in The Saturday Evening Post, doesn’t it? Scrappy is very much himself, and his pose is a variation on a stock drawing you can see here. But the elderly gent is a wonderful example of Dick Huemer’s wonderful penwork. If Dick had never worked in animation, he might have become a noted magazine illustrator, I think.

The possibility that “Scrappy Goes Fishing” is out there somewhere where I’ve failed to look so far– possibly with additional Huemer drawings beyond this one — leaves me both giddy and frustrated. You don’t happen to know anything about it, do you?

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Another Scrappy Artifact of the Day

Posted by Harry McCracken on September 27, 2012

Scrappy Painting Book

If you can own only one Scrappy Painting Book — and really, life is incomplete without at least one — it should probably be this one, No. 54. The cover is similar to that of No. 52, but Oopy looks happy rather than ticked off. And the drawings on the inside are accompanied by Scrappy poems! I’ll show you some of them before long, I promise.

(The numbering system is misleading: As much as I’d like to think that Rosebud Art Co. published fifty-four Scrappy Painting Books, these are the only two I know about. See here for a photo of Scrappy’s friend Edith Fellows posing with No. 54.)

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Scrappy Artifact of the Day

Posted by Harry McCracken on September 24, 2012

Scrappy pin

Isn’t it beautiful? This is one of the earlier pieces of Scrappy merchandise, I think — and one of the few which credit Charles Mintz so prominently.

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