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American comic strip by Will Gould From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Red Barry is a detective comic strip created by Will Gould (1911–1984) for King Features. The daily strip about two-fisted undercover cop Barry began Monday, March 19, 1934,[1] as one of several strips introduced to compete with Dick Tracy by Chester Gould (no relation). A Sunday strip was added on February 3, 1935.[1] The daily strip ran for three years, until August 14, 1937, and the Sunday page ended almost a year later, on July 17, 1938.[1]
Red Barry | |
---|---|
Author(s) | Will Gould |
Current status/schedule | Concluded |
Launch date | March 19, 1934 |
End date | July 17, 1938 |
Syndicate(s) | King Features Syndicate |
Publisher(s) | Big Little Book series Fantagraphics Books IDW Publishing |
Genre(s) | Crime |
In 1929, Gould began as a sports cartoonist for the Bronx Home News where he also drew the comic strip Felix O'Fan. For the New York Graphic he created Asparagus Tipps (1926–1929).[1] Relocating to California in 1930, he freelanced to several syndicates before creating Red Barry, which he wrote and drew from 1934 to 1938. Gould drew Red Barry in a crisp, clean line style. His assistant on the strip was Walter Frehm. Contract disputes between Gould and King Features brought Red Barry to an end in 1939.[2][3][4]
New York Evening Graphic journalist Frank Mallen wrote:
In Toonopedia, comics historian Don Markstein described the characters:
Leaving Red Barry, Gould became the cartoon editor of Writer's Forum, and he drew the series The Schnoox.[3] Gould left comics in 1940 for screenwriting and work as a radio reporter. He scripted episodes of Racket Squad and Lassie.[3]
Buster Crabbe portrayed Red Barry in "13 cyclonic hair-raising chapters" of the 1938 serial, Red Barry adapted from the comic strip. It was the third of five serials from Universal starring Buster Crabbe. The actor William Gould (1886–1969) who portrayed the Commissioner in the serial was not the Will Gould who created Red Barry. In the serial story, Barry attempts to recover two million dollars of stolen bonds intended for Allied war planes while international spies and ruthless underworld gangsters fight to acquire the bonds. The DVD of the serial from Hermitage Hill Media includes comic strip excerpts.[6]
After Red Barry, Ace Detective was published as a 1935 Little Big Book, it was praised by critic Anthony Boucher, who stated that Red Barry was "vigorously in the Hammett tradition."[7][3] Rick Marschall edited Will Gould's Red Barry (1989) for Fantagraphics Books. The collection features a foreword by Walter Frehm. Bill Spicer's Graphic Story Magazine #11 (Summer 1970) was a full issue covering Red Barry in depth, including a lengthy interview with Will Gould.
In November 2016, IDW Publishing published Red Barry Undercover Man, Vol. 1 under their Library of American Comics imprint. The second and final volume has yet to be announced.
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