Rip Kirby, The Caged Songbird (September-December 1950)

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It’s a domestic adventure for Rip this time. The most scenic Raymond gets is the lions outside the New York Public Library. This storyline opens with a strip announcing the story’s premise and the cast. It’s a definite change in format.

The mystery’s also different. It’s more of a thriller, with Rip racing against time to save someone. There’s the initial mystery, sure, but the change isn’t limited to an introduction.

What’s strangest about the story is the changing cast. Honey only shows up in the first couple strips, just to say hello. Desmond takes a role in the case, but it’s hard to remember him doing anything (though he’s around a lot). The first half has one primary supporting cast member, the second half a different one. The guy in the first half disappears without a trace.

While the narrative’s somewhat smoother narrative, it isn’t as engaging as usual.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.

Rip Kirby, Return of the Mangler (June-September 1950)

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The Mangler finally makes his comeback and it’s in maybe the worst story Greene and Raymond have done on Rip Kirby. Oh, Raymond’s art is still great—there’s some beautiful composition, particularly during the first quarter of the story—but the story’s so contrived. There’s this big setup to get the Mangler to Italy to meet up with Honey (and Rip), but there’s no reason he had to come back to the states. Except maybe to team up with his Nazi sidekick… except the Nazi sidekick’s pointless for the storyline.

It’s the first time Greene and Raymond haven’t made it feel organic. Worse, they repeat one of their earlier scenes—with Rip flying over Honey (on a ship) to her rescue ahead of time.

Once things are moving, it’s fine. The art helps get one past the rough spots.

It’s too bad Honey’s just a damsel in distress again though.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.

Rip Kirby, The Play’s the Thing (March-June 1950)

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This storyline, which is really short, finally puts the spotlight on Desmond. Rip’s butler and assistant is off to… well, it’s never accurately describe, but a small town in hopes of finding romance. All is not what it seems and eventually Des finds himself in a bit of trouble.

Well, wait, actually he doesn’t. Once Des does get into trouble, the focus goes to Rip so the reader has no idea how Des is responding to the situation. It’s a stretch already, with Des getting taken in by a “lonely hearts” blackmailer. Des used to be a thief of some kind and knows his way around. Apparently, too much time butling has made him soft.

There’s also a strange art error here. Three characters are leaving a house in one strip then Raymond draws them leaving through a hotel lobby in the next strip.

It’s okay enough, just too short.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.

Rip Kirby, Peril in the Snow (December 1949-March 1950)

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It’s a good thing Rip has Honey around or he’d never get new cases. This story is the second or third time he only gets involved in a case because of Honey (and her friends). He gripes about it but it turns out he’s needed.

This story also features the return of villain Fingers Moray, though I can’t exactly remember what he was doing the last time he made an appearance. Maybe he was blackmailing Pagan. Rip is surprised to see him as he’s just beat a murder charge. I was a little surprised by Rip’s lack of interest, but it’d make sense he doesn’t follow his cases once the arrest is made. Though I think he’d have to testify at a lot….

While there’s some great art and Rip does hang around for the whole story, it’s not particularly strong. Greene and Raymond don’t come up with anything compelling.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.

Rip Kirby, My Little Runaway (September-December 1949)

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This story guest-stars Rip. With him in it so little, I guess Honey’s five or six strips probably amount to a cameo. They’re just the entry into the actual story, which is a soapy bit about a long-lost mother and daughter being reunited. The secret relationship is obvious even before the glasses come off the mother, revealing she looks just like the daughter (or is it the other way).

But what the story does have—besides a basic, affable sense to it—is inky Raymond night scenes. More night scenes than any other Rip Kirby so far and they are glorious. Raymond’s black night, for the most part through a car window, is somehow completely full. It’s a beautiful sequence in the strips.

This story might have served better as a pilot for a soapy spin-off. All the characters have appeal.

It’s unexpected but perfectly good stuff.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.

Rip Kirby, Pagan’s Cheerful Summer (May-September 1949)

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This storyline shows exactly what I like so much about Rip Kirby—Greene and Raymond come up with interesting settings. Though maybe Rip doesn’t have enough New York adventures, at least they move him around (somewhat plausibly even) to different locales.

Pagan is doing summer stock and discovers the troupe leader isn’t just a dirty old man but a blackmailer too. Pagan’s underworld history has a tie with her new landlord and it adds a couple more supporting characters to the cast. Greene’s characterizations are all strong (I can’t think of another story so far where everyone except one villain is pleasant).

Rip and Honey eventually show up to save the day, though Honey barely has any lines once Pagan’s around. I do hope Greene and Raymond team the two of them up sometime. Honey’s disinclination towards romance (from two strips earlier) is unfortunately forgotten.

Overall, it’s a real charmer.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.

Rip Kirby, Like Flies to Honey (January-May 1949)

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Well, I got my wish and Honey’s back in Rip Kirby front and center. A young playboy has proposed to her and his family goes to Rip to break it up. Rip refuses, wanting to give Honey space to make her own decision (while internally conflict, of course).

They all end up at the family’s plantation in the South where the evil brother and mother conspire to break up the sort of happy couple.

Things should finish, after all the drama (a lot of localized action too), with Honey safely in Rip’s arms. Only she’s too conflicted over the events of the storyline and they’re maybe even more distant than when they started.

It’s strange to see Greene and Raymond manipulate and maybe I wouldn’t have reading it day to day, but this story’s just about quelling the Honey and Rip romance.

Hey, at least they’re not ignoring it anymore.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.

Rip Kirby, The Bandar Rubies (December 1948-January 1949)

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Heading home to New York from London, Rip and Desmond leave Honey—this issue might reveal the rather simple explanation for her absence… Greene and Raymond need to have Rip be flirtatious to move their plots. With Honey around, they can’t do it as cleanly. What’s so odd about her forced absences is how much the character seems to grow in them.

Anyway, this storyline is a short one, with Rip and Desmond on a ship and having to investigate a probable jewel thief. It’s so short, I don’t think Greene ever introduces one of the main supporting characters by name. It’s reveal in one of Raymond’s great summary panels.

Worse, they reveal the identity of the thief about halfway through instead of making the reader wait along with Rip for the big reveal. It makes the rest of the read tedious. It’s fine, but it’s a rather pedestrian effort.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.

Rip Kirby, Terror on the Thames (June-December 1948)

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This storyline, even longer than the last, again has Honey getting a smaller role than almost anyone else. She’s back, at least, even if it is just for the setup mostly. Since Rip’s been gone on his latest adventure, Honey has been apparently promoted at the modeling agency and is now organizing fashion shows in addition to modeling in them. A modeling auteur, as it were.

One of her models goes missing and Rip ends up investigating. But Greene and Raymond also take the time to show what’s actually happening with the model during her disappearance. It’s a nice narrative move—Rip Kirby’s plotting is getting more and more inventive, even if Rip himself is barely present anymore. He’s still a bigger character than Honey, but Greene and Raymond constantly shortchange him.

And that shortchanging seems to make a better strip.

Lots of great art (London, the models) from Raymond.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.

Rip Kirby, Bleak Prospects (October 1947-June 1948)

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For whatever reason, Greene and Raymond push Honey off panel for this entire storyline—and it’s a long one, running almost eight months. Pagan returns, bringing with her a friend who ends up as Rip’s client. There are two parts to the storyline. First, finding the villain, a woman who pretends to foster child but really sells them. Then finding the child of Pagan’s friend, who’s already been sold.

Greene and Raymond delicately weave all the details—during the first part, the child’s new “parents” are in the supporting cast so the reader always has more information than the characters. It’s a large cast for this storyline too. Maybe eight new characters.

Most of the second half—and the resolution to the first, when I think about it—is action. It’s chase stuff, Rip just missing finding the kid or getting in a scrap.

It’s compelling, but Rip’s barely necessary.

CREDITS

Writer, Ward Greene; artist, Alex Raymond; publisher, King Features.