Showing posts with label Paul Temple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Temple. Show all posts

Sunday, December 23, 2018

Paul Temple and the Erasers part 1

It's that time of year... in fact a little later than usual to start our Christmas trek through another serial featuring crime novelist and amateur detective Paul Temple and his delightful wife, Steve. We will be running a few episodes every day over Christmas and into the New Year, so if you need to get away from the kids, or the TV, or just need a couple of minutes of calm, you can pop by Bear Alley and read the latest episodes.

The art is by John McNamara, who had been drawing the strip for 12 years by the time this serial appeared in 1966. I don't know who was writing the strip but it probably wasn't Francis Durbridge, who wasn't even writing the novels at that point.

Anyway, here's episode one... enjoy!


Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Francis Matthews (1927-2014)

The actor Francis Matthews died on Saturday at the age of 86. Although he had a lengthy career in film and on stage, Matthews was best known for playing the role of Paul Temple and the voice of Captain Scarlet on TV.

Both characters also had lengthy careers in comics and the Paul Temple strip was greatly influenced by the 52-episode TV series broadcast in 1969-71. Artist John McNamara gradually revised the look of the character in the daily strip to look a little more like the Matthews, as can be seen in the example below from the 1970 serial 'Paul Temple and the Groomgate Killer'. Steve was also given a makeover and was styled after actress Ros Drinkwater, who appeared opposite Matthews in the TV show.

Obituaries: The Guardian (15 June 2014), Daily Telegraph (16 June 2014), The Independent (18 June 2014).

John McNamara

A self-portrait of the artist, lighting a pipe, a globe showing travel between Woking (England) and Wellington (New Zealand) to one side
John Joseph McNamara, born 20 April 1918, began his artistic career as a teenager around 1934, drawing caricatures of film, sporting and local personalities for numerous New Zealand publications, including Paramount Theatre of Stars (1935), Standard (1936), Radio Record, New Zealand Sporting Life and Referee, Junior for NZ, Boys and Girls (1937-38), Clarion (1938), Cappicade (1937-39) and Katipo (1940). By the late 1930s he was also a political cartoonist working regularly for the Southern Cross where his work continued to appear until at least 1951.

He drew hundreds of caricatures and illustrations of famous sporting figures of the era including footballers Jim Taylor, Jack Lee, Neil Franklin and Dennis Compton, rugby players Morrie Doyle, Billy Wallace, Stan Dean, Ken Jones, boxers Cyril Hurne, Time Tracy, Eddie Thomas and Don Cockell, golfer Zoe Hudson, snooker world champion Joe Davis, cricketers Freddie Brown and Len Hutton, jockeys Lester Piggott and Gordon Richards and others, including illustrations of the 1948 Olympic team and a series of portraits of rugby players involved in New Zealand's 1949 tour of South Africa.

At the same time he continued to draw political cartoons for Southern Cross and New Zealand Listener, including aspects of the 1949 election in which Peter Fraser was defeated by Sidney Holland. McNamara was critical of the latter's links with the British Conservatives.

McNamara travelled to the UK in March 1950 at the age of 31 and found work on British newspapers. Although the full extent of his work over here is unknown, he appears to have found work fairly quickly. Two early strips -- possibly both published in the Daily Herald -- featured "Bats" Belfry, which had a horse racing background and involved bet setting and detective work, and an adaptaion of C. S. Forester's character Horatio Hornblower. McNamara also found work with Amalgamated Press drawing issues of Thriller Comics, ranging from adaptations of Westward Ho!, The Red Badge of Courage and Hopalong Cassidy to the adventures of Dick Turpin and Robin Hood.

In 1958, McNamara took over the artwork for Francis Durbridge's "Paul Temple" comic strip, which had been appearing regularly in the London Evening News since 1950, originally drawn by Alfred Sindall and subsequently by others.

McNamara drew the popular strip until it came to an end on 1 May 1971, during which time Paul Temple underwent a change in appearance so that the character in the newspaper resembled Francis Matthews, who played Temple in the BBC TV series (1969-71). The strip came to an end shortly after the TV show's third season finished.

McNamara died in Surrey in February 2001, aged 82.

Artwork for sale at the Illustration Art Gallery by John McNamara can be found here.

(* The portrait of McNamara is from the archive of the National Library of New Zealand.)

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