Sugar and Spike

Sugar and Spike

Cover to Sugar and Spike #1 (April/May 1956)
Art by Sheldon Mayer
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
Schedule Bimonthly
Format Standard
Publication date April/May 1956 - October/November 1971
Number of issues 98
Main character(s) Sugar Plumm
Cecil "Spike" Wilson
Creative team
Writer(s) Sheldon Mayer
Artist(s) Sheldon Mayer
Creator(s) Sheldon Mayer
Editor(s) Whitney Ellsworth #1-21
Lawrence Nadle #22-52
Murray Boltinoff #53-93
Dick Giordano #94
E. Nelson Bridwell #95-98

Sugar and Spike is a comic book series published by DC Comics from 1956 through 1971, named after its main protagonists. The series was created, written, and drawn by Sheldon Mayer.

Publication history

The series was launched in 1956 along with another Sheldon Mayer creation The Three Mouseketeers.[1] The Sugar & Spike series had 98 issues published in the United States through 1971,[2] when due to Mayer's failing eyesight that limited his drawing ability, the series was canceled.[3] Later, after cataract surgery restored his eyesight, Mayer returned to writing and drawing Sugar and Spike stories, continuing to do so until his death in 1991; these stories appeared in overseas markets[3] and only a few have been reprinted in the United States. The American reprints appeared in the digest sized comics series The Best of DC #29, 41, 47, 58, 65, and 68. In 1992, Sugar and Spike #99 was published as part of the DC Silver Age Classics series;[4] this featured two previously unpublished stories by Mayer. DC Comics writer and executive Paul Levitz has described Sugar and Spike as being "Mayer's most charming and enduring creation".[5] Novelist and Sandman creator Neil Gaiman has stated "Sheldon Mayer's Sugar and Spike series...is the most charming thing I've ever seen in comics."[6]

DC attempted to license Sugar and Spike as a syndicated newspaper strip but was unsuccessful.[7] Sales on the "Sugar and Spike" issues of The Best of DC were strong enough that DC announced plans for a new ongoing series featuring the characters. The project was never launched for unknown reasons.[8]

Mayer had an agreement with DC that no one else could write Sugar and Spike.[9] However, they have occasionally made cameo appearances in modern comic books. They are rescued by the underwater heroine Dolphin in Showcase #100.[10] They appear as theme park characters in Justice League Spectacular;[11] as being baby-sat by Cassie Sandsmark in Wonder Woman #113;[12] and as teenagers on the crowded cover of Legionnaires #43.[13] They have a cameo on a video screen in Planet Krypton in Kingdom Come #1.[14] The two made speaking cameo appearances in the first two pages of The All-New Batman: The Brave and the Bold #4, but they were not named.[15] In an issue of the digital-first series Adventures of Superman, the children are babysat by Superman in his secret identity as reporter Clark Kent.[16]

Featured characters

The comic featured the misadventures of two toddlers named Sugar Plumm and Cecil "Spike" Wilson, who possessed the ability to communicate via "baby talk" with each other and to other infants, but not to adults.[9][17] It shared ideas concerning baby-talk with P. L. Travers' Mary Poppins novel; one notable feature was that all babies spoke the same baby-talk "language", allowing Sugar and Spike to speak with not only human infants, but baby animals as well. Another popular recurring feature was paper dolls of the two leads, with outfits based on designs submitted by readers. Mayer used his own children, Merrily and Lanney, as inspiration for the strip.[18]

In addition to the toddlers and their parents (Bill and Barbara Plumm; Harvey and Peg Wilson), recurring characters included:

Revival

Writer Keith Giffen and artist Bilquis Evely brought back the characters as adults in 2016,[22][23] starring their own adventures (among other characters) in the new ongoing series Legends of Tomorrow.[24] At the time of announcement, Dan DiDio said of their Sugar And Spike series, "They're not spoiled kids anymore, but they're older and they're operating as private investigators handling problems and mysteries that the superheroes can't handle themselves".[22]

In other media

Collected editions

References

  1. Irvine, Alex; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1950s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. Two children's titles began: Sugar and Spike and The Three Mouseketeers.
  2. Sugar & Spike at the Grand Comics Database
  3. 1 2 Markstein, Don. "Sheldon Mayer". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on December 3, 2011. Retrieved December 3, 2011. He continued to write and draw Sugar & Spike until 1971, when failing eyesight forced him to abandon cartooning...Mayer's sight was restored a few years later, and he went back to producing new Sugar & Spike stories. But the American comic book market was no longer able to support such a feature, so these were mostly published overseas.
  4. DC Silver Age Classics Sugar and Spike #99 (1992) at the Grand Comics Database
  5. Levitz, Paul (2010). 75 Years of DC Comics The Art of Modern Mythmaking. Taschen America. p. 64. ISBN 9783836519816.
  6. Bender, Hy (1999). The Sandman Companion. Vertigo. p. 154. ISBN 1563894653.
  7. Wells, John (July 2012). "The Lost DC Kids Line". Back Issue! (TwoMorrows Publishing) (57): 47. Did you know that DC tried to sell Shelly Mayer's Sugar and Spike as a syndicated newspaper strip? [A] sample, ca. 1979-early 1980s was one of three DC concepts unsuccessfully pitched to papers.
  8. Wells p. 46-47: "In a 'Meanwhile' column in several Aug. 1984-dated titles...DC vice-president-executive director Dick Giordano tentatively announced Sugar and Spike #1 as appearing 'sometime this fall or early winter'...Ultimately, for reasons virtually no one recalls, DC quickly got cold feet on the project even as Marvel's Star Comics rolled out in 1985."
  9. 1 2 Markstein, Don. "Sugar and Spike". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on December 13, 2011. Retrieved December 13, 2011. Sugar Plumm and Cecil "Spike" Wilson had to make sense of their environment without assistance from those who already knew their way around it, because everybody but their fellow babies spoke in the incomprehensible gobbledygook of grownups...[Mayer] secured an agreement with DC that he would be the only one ever to write and draw those characters.
  10. Levitz, Paul; Kupperberg, Paul (w), Staton, Joe (p), Staton, Joe (i). "There Shall Come a Gathering" Showcase 100 (May 1978)
  11. Jurgens, Dan; Jones, Gerard (w), Jurgens, Dan; Randall, Ron (p), Burchett, Rick; Elliot, Randy (i). "Teamwork" Justice League Spectacular 1 (March–April 1992)
  12. Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Byrne, John (i). "Are You Out of Your Minds?!" Wonder Woman v2, 113 (September 1996)
  13. Moy, Jeffrey (p), Carani, W. C. (i). Legionnaires 43 (December 1996)
  14. Waid, Mark (w), Ross, Alex (p), Ross, Alex (i). "Strange Visitor" Kingdom Come 1 (May 1996)
  15. Fisch, Sholly (w), Burchett, Rick (p), Davis, Dan (i). "The Bride and the Bold" The All-New Batman: The Brave and the Bold 4 (April 2011)
  16. Nicieza, Fabian (w), Hester, Phil (p), Eric Gapstur (i). "The Coming of ... Sugar and Spike --?" Adventures of Superman 42 (February 2014)
  17. Daniels, Les (1995). "Keep Smiling Having a Sense of Humor Helps". DC Comics : Sixty Years of the World's Favorite Comic Book Heroes. Bulfinch. p. 240. ISBN 0821220764. The creations of editor and cartoonist Sheldon Mayer, Sugar and Spike were two tiny tots who were old enough to get into trouble but a little too young to talk. As a result, they conversed in baby talk, 'the only language that makes any sense.'
  18. Alger, Bill (January 2001). "Sugar's Daddy Talking with Merrily Mayer Harris, Shelly Mayer's Daughter". Comic Book Artist (TwoMorrows Publishing) (11). Archived from the original on May 17, 2012. Retrieved May 17, 2012.
  19. Mayer, Sheldon (w), Mayer, Sheldon (p), Mayer, Sheldon (i). "Meet Little Arthur" Sugar & Spike 17 (August 1958)
  20. Mayer, Sheldon (w), Mayer, Sheldon (p), Mayer, Sheldon (i). "Bernie the Brain!" Sugar & Spike 72 (August–September 1967)
  21. Wolfman, Marv (w), Pérez, George (p), Ordway, Jerry (i). "War Zone" Crisis on Infinite Earths 9 (December 1985)
  22. 1 2 "DC Reveals 8 New Limited Series - Metal Men, Sugar & Spike,Metamorpho, More by Chris Arrant on Newsarama, 16 Jul 2015
  23. Phegley, Kiel (July 8, 2015). "DiDio Shares First Look At Giffen & Porter's Reinvented Sugar & Spike". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on September 5, 2015.
  24. Legends of Tomorrow #1 on DC Comics website
  25. "The Sugar and Spike Archives Vol. 1". DC Comics. Archived from the original on November 13, 2015. Retrieved October 14, 2012.

External links

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