Steve Canyon

This article is about the comic strip. For the band, see Steep Canyon Rangers.
Milton Caniff's Steve Canyon (November 17, 1963)

Steve Canyon was a long-running American adventure comic strip by writer-artist Milton Caniff. Launched shortly after Caniff retired from his previous strip, Terry and the Pirates, Steve Canyon ran from January 13, 1947 until June 4, 1988, shortly after Caniff's death. Caniff won the Reuben Award for the strip in 1971.

History

By 1946, Caniff had developed a worldwide reputation for his syndicated Terry and the Pirates. However, the rights for the strip he had created, written and drawn (for Chicago Tribune newspaper syndicate editor Captain Joseph Patterson), were entirely owned by the syndicate. Seeking creative control, Caniff negotiated with Field Enterprises for a new strip on which he could retain ownership.[1] The last Caniff episode of Terry and the Pirates appeared in December 1946, and then George Wunder took over the strip. Caniff's new strip, Steve Canyon, debuted in 168 newspapers.

Many strip creators before and since employ uncredited assistants or ghost artists, and Caniff was no exception. In 1952, he hired comic book artist Dick Rockwell (nephew of famed illustrator Norman Rockwell) as his assistant. While Caniff scripted and drew the main characters, Rockwell penciled and inked secondary characters and backgrounds. Rockwell continued on Canyon until Caniff's death on May 3, 1988.[2][3]

Milton Caniff with film actress Carol Ohmart, the model for Copper Calhoon in 1947.

The last syndicated Steve Canyon strip was a tribute to Caniff in two panels, one drawn by cartoonist Bill Mauldin, the other containing the signatures of 78 fellow cartoonists.

On June 23, 1997, an authorized 50th anniversary Steve Canyon strip was published by the Air Force Times, a civilian weekly newspaper covering the United States Air Force. Steve Canyon and the U.S. Air Force having been created the same year, the shared anniversary was celebrated with Steve Canyon appearing as part of a 96-page insert, The First Fifty Years: U.S. Air Force 1947-1997. Drawn in the style of a Sunday strip, the story and art for this commemorative were provided by Air Force Master Sergeant Russ Maheras, with coloring by Carl Gafford. On Monday, September 24, 2007, Air Force Times published a 60th anniversary Steve Canyon strip by Maheras.[4] The color, Sunday-style strip depicts Brigadier General Steve Canyon in Afghanistan, investigating Taliban activity.[5]

Characters and story

Steve Canyon was an easygoing adventurer with a soft heart. Originally a veteran running his own air-transport business, the character returned to the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War and stayed in the military for the remainder of the strip's run.

Initially, his buddies were fellow veterans, and romantic interest was provided by Copper Calhoon, a kind of capitalist version of the popular Dragon Lady character Caniff had created for Terry and the Pirates. Eventually, Canyon developed a sometime-sidekick in crotchety millionaire adventurer Happy Easter, along with a permanent love interest in Summer Olson, Calhoon's private secretary (Canyon and Olson were pronounced "man and wife" in the first panel of the April 25, 1970 daily strip). General Philerie was based on legendary World War II hero Phil Cochran, who came from Erie, as noted in the character's name (Phil-Erie). Cochran had been the model for Flip Corkin from Terry and the Pirates and Canyon included a Terry-like major character called Reed Kimberley.

Caniff was intensely patriotic, and with Canyon's return to the military, the story began to revolve around Cold War intrigue and the responsibilities of American citizens. Despite this shift in tone, Caniff was able to maintain the picaresque quality of his globally set stories. In Steve Canyon, as he did in Terry, Caniff made a special effort to remind readers of servicemen's sacrifices at Christmas.[6]

Models

Steve Canyon as it was seen in Chile

Caniff was famous for colorful villains and intriguing female characters, such as Madame Lynx and the lovely exiled ruler, Princess Snowflower. Madame Lynx was based on Madame Egelichi, the femme fatale spy played by Ilona Massey in the Marx Brothers movie Love Happy (1949). The character stirred Caniff's imagination so much that he hired Ilona Massey personally to pose for him.[7] Besides casting Ilona Massey as Lynx, Caniff patterned Pipper the Piper after John Kennedy,[7] and Miss Mizzou after either Marilyn Monroe[7] or actress Bek Nelson-Gordon.[8] The character of Charlie Vanilla (who would frequently appear with an ice cream cone in hand) was based on Caniff's longtime friend Charles Russhon, a former photographer and U.S. Air Force lieutenant who became a technical advisor on five James Bond films.[9]

Other media

Comics and strip collections

Harvey Comics reprinted the strip in a half-dozen 1948 comic books, and Dell Comics published seven issues of original stories (1953–59) by former Caniff assistant Ray Bailey (who had anticipated Steve Canyon with his own Bruce Gentry about a charter pilot) in their Four Color series (#519, 578, 641, 737, 804, 939, 1033). Steve Canyon was reprinted by The Menomonee Falls Gazette, Kitchen Sink Press and Comics Revue,[10] with Hermes Press reprinting the comic book in 2011.

Steve Canyon (1950)

Kitchen Sink Press published Steve Canyon Magazine for 21 issues, until replacing it with trade paperback collections using the same numbering:

Kitchen Sink Press also published a one-shot Steve Canyon 3-D comic in June 1986 featuring an anaglyph 3D process by Ray Zone.

In 2006, Checker Book Publishing Group began releasing a year-by-year collection of Steve Canyon:

In 2012, IDW Publishing began a new hardcover reprint series in their "Library of American Comics".

Cinema

In the late 1940s producer David O. Selznick considered a Steve Canyon film series starring Guy Madison, with Madison's agent Henry Willson talking Selznick out of it.[11]

Television

The strip was adapted into a filmed, half-hour television series of 34 episodes on NBC in 1958–59 (with reruns on ABC in 1960). Dean Fredericks (1924–99), formerly the Hindu manservant on Johnny Weissmuller's 1955–56 Jungle Jim series, played Canyon—a troubleshooter for the United States Air Force, spending half the season traveling from base to base before becoming the commanding officer stationed at the strip's fictitious Big Thunder Air Force Base in California. With the exception of General "Shanty" Towne (in the pilot episode), none of the other supporting characters from the newspaper strip appeared in the series.

From 2008 to 2009, the first 24 episodes were released on DVD; the remaining episodes were released on July 28, 2015.[12]

Novels

A series of novels was published by Grosset & Dunlap in the 1950s. They were all written by Caniff, with illustrations by himself.

Real world depictions

Steve Canyon statue in Idaho Springs, Colorado

A statue of Steve Canyon was erected in Idaho Springs, Colorado, and a nearby mountain canyon was renamed "Steve Canyon." A mosaic of Steve Canyon's ward, Poteet Canyon, stands in front of the city fire station in the town of Poteet, Texas.[13]

The CIA/USAF covert air war in Laos during the Vietnam War was unofficially called the "Steve Canyon Program" http://www.ravens.org/history/history.htm

See also Raven Forward Air Controllers

References

  1. Holtz, Allan. "Obscurity of the Day: Hit or Miss", April 13, 2010.
  2. Miksch, Joe (February 13, 2003). "Rogues' Gallery: Courtroom Artist Richard Waring Rockwell Sketches Rogues from Gotti to Ganim". Fairfield County Weekly (Bridgeport, Connecticut). Archived from the original on January 25, 2004.
  3. Evanier, Mark (April 21, 2006). "Dick Rockwell, R.I.P.". News from Me (column). Archived from the original on June 28, 2011.
  4. "Updated 'Steve Canyon' Comic Coming Next Monday". Editor & Publisher. September 17, 2007. Archived from the original on March 15, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
  5. MilitaryTimes.com: Steve Canyon 60th-anniversary commemorative comic strip
  6. "(Not) Home for the Holidays: Milton Caniff’s Christmas Strips," Hogan's Alley, 2012
  7. 1 2 3 Pageant vol. 8, #11 (May 1953)
  8. Brown, Gary (November 21, 2005). "200 Helped Shape Canton". The Repository (Canton, Ohio). No. 83: Bek Nelson-Gordon was 'Miss Mizzou.' An actress who graduated from Lincoln High School in the 1940s, she was the woman 'Steve Canyon' comic strip artist Milton Caniff picked from a chorus line to be the trench-coated model for Miss Mizzou.
  9. "Charles J. Russhon dies aged 71". The New York Times. June 28, 1982. Retrieved March 15, 2011.
  10. Steve Canyon at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on March 15, 2012.
  11. p.123 Hofler, Roibert The Man Who Invented Rock Hudson 2005 Carroll and Graf
  12. David Lambert. "Steve Canyon at TVShowsOnDVD.com".
  13. "Poteet, Texas - World's Largest Strawberry, Water Tower, Festival". Roadside America. Archived from the original on July 16, 2010. Retrieved April 4, 2011.

External links

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