Eagle 21 April 1962 Vol.13:16 p.1 |
The first of appearance of Bellamy's 'Montgomery' |
Dan Dare drawn by Keith Watson in Eagle Vol. 13:10 (10 March 1962) |
Fidosaurus by Reg Parlett in Eagle Vol. 13:10 (10 March 1962) |
But back to Bellamy...
The first episode of Montgomery of Alamein written by Clifford Makins Eagle Vol. 13:10 (10 March 1962) |
Look at the panel below. Bellamy seems to have loved doing crowd scenes. He could have emphasised one man in close up and blurred, or intimated a crowd beyond through the use of perspective colouring. He knew what he was doing so why the detail? I think it was pride in his work. I have never claimed to be able to handle Photoshop but I wanted to have a go at showing how Bellamy's panels could be wild in shape when looked at alone!
One panel by Frank Bellamy from "Montgomery of Alamein" Eagle 19 May 1962 |
Here's another whole double page (of 18 episodes) for your delight.
Eagle 4 April 1962 Vol.13:15 p10-11 |
Eagle 4 April 1962 Vol.13:15 p10-11 |
Eagle 4 April 1962 Vol.13:15 p10-11 |
Eagle 4 April 1962 Vol.13:15 p10-11 |
Eagle 4 April 1962 Vol.13:15 p10-11 |
Eagle 4 April 1962 Vol.13:15 p10-11 |
My other favourite part of this strip is the visualisation of troop movements and battles. I often wondered if the title sequence from the British comedy series Dad's Army was inspired by Bellamy's drawings.
Eagle 19 May 1962 Vol. 13:20 p10-11detail |
Eagle 26 May 1962 Vol.13:21 p10-11detail |
Bellamy appeared in a lost BBC programme called Edition where he was interviewed by Barry Askew (broadcast on Friday 30th November 1973):
BA: With something again for the Eagle, like "Montgomery of Alamein", there’s an interesting example there of the way that you use frames and shapes in different ways.
FB: Well, there once again is breaking up this square frame, one on top of another and to bring out important frames. For instance, the one in the centre there, was just to give a monochrome look to associate with the monochrome films of the Second World War.
Montgomery of Alamein, written by Clifford Makins, ran in the Eagle comic from Vol. 13:10 - 13:27 (10 March 1962 -7 July 1962). The following covers had Bellamy content (usually a third of quarter of the cover) during the run of this story:
Vol. 13:12 (24 March 1962)
Vol. 13:13 (31 March 1962)
Vol. 13:14 (7 April 1962)
Vol. 13:16 (21 April 1962)
Vol. 13:18 (5 May 1962) half cover
Vol. 13:19 (12 May 1962)
Vol. 13:22 (2 June 1962)
Montage of the Eagle covers with Bellamy's "Montgomery of Alamein" |
The whole story has been reprinted in High command: the Stories of Sir Winston Churchill and General Montgomery [Netherlands]: Dragon's Dream, 1981 and as a fan effort by Desmond Shaw (2010). Here's what Norman Wright and David Ashford (the former I met many years ago in a Comic fair, and the latter I met just recently!) said about this series:
Frank Bellamy’s first full-colour centre-spread for Eagle was Montgomery of Alamein, an eighteen episode biography which began in March, 1962. As with “The Happy Warrior”, it required a great deal of research and a degree of co-operation from Montgomery himself. Unlike the Churchill strip, Frank began it with confidence and a determination to make it something outstanding. Once again he experimented with colour, conveying the feel of individual frames with carefully-chosen tints and tones. He became even bolder in the way he broke up his pages, using shaped panels to depict movement, wide panoramic frames to portray battles and jagged-edged illustrations to draw reader’s attention to important events. If anything the work was an even greater success than “The Happy Warrior” and ranks as one of the best strip biographies of all time. [Norman Wright & David Ashford, (2002)."Frank Bellamy" (Great British Comic Artists No. 5) Book And Magazine Collector No 222]
Eagle 7 July 1962 Vol.13:27 p08-09 The last of the 18 episodes |
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* The picture of the cover for the new Eagle appeared a week before on the inside cover of the Eagle
** https://sites.google.com/site/gbstamprolls/queen-elizabeth-ii/machin
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