Good Time Guy

American comic strip by Frank Smiley From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Good Time Guy is a humorous syndicated comic strip that was distributed by Metropolitan Newspaper Service from June 27, 1927, to December 6, 1930.[1]

Illustrator(s)Mel Cummin (1927–1928)
Dick Huemer (1928–1929)
Fred Fox (1929)
Current status/scheduleSunday comic (1984–1999)
Daily comic (1999–present)
Launch dateJune 27, 1927
Quick facts Author, Illustrator(s) ...
Good Time Guy
The debut comic of Good Time Guy, published June 27, 1927
AuthorFrank Smiley
Illustrator(s)Mel Cummin (1927–1928)
Dick Huemer (1928–1929)
Fred Fox (1929)
Current status/scheduleSunday comic (1984–1999)
Daily comic (1999–present)
Launch dateJune 27, 1927
End dateDecember 6, 1930
Syndicate(s)Metropolitan Newspaper Service
GenreHumor
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It was begun by prolific screenwriter William Conselman under the pen name of Frank Smiley, and well-established artist Mel Cummin.[2] Cummin was succeeded the following year by Dick Huemer (1928–29), who was in turn followed by Fred Fox (1929).

Characters and story

Ron Goulart wrote of Good Time Guy in his book The Funnies:

This one was about a hefty, freckle-faced small town young man, a 'well-meaning bumpkin,' with 'a heart as big as a pumpkin, only softer.' Guy had two big ambitions: 'To see everyone has a good time and to give uke lessons in Hawaii.' Guy Green lived with his widowed mother in Cornhay City and was too shy to pursue pretty, blond, Mary Laffer, even though 'she has eyes only for Guy — and what eyes![3]

Conselman's script was dense with "puns and complicated word-play".[4] There was a strong element of serendipity in the strip, with Green's naive missteps leading unexpectedly into good fortune.

References

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