Number 592
"He counteracts our every murderous move with some new screwy gadget!"
Funnyman was a genuine attempt by Superman creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster to create a new character they would wholly own, and that would be as successful as Superman. The tale of woe over ownership of Superman is a tragedy, told many times in many places, and you've got to admire them for even trying to recapture that magic with another feature.
Too bad it didn't work. In 1948 Funnyman lasted just six issues in his own magazine, and a short time in a daily comic strip distributed by Bell Syndicate. I'm sure the failure of Funnyman had the effect of further crushing Siegel and Shuster's spirits.
This 10-page story is from Funnyman #2, March, 1948, published by ME Comics.
I'm not sure who came up with the idea for a superhero in a clown suit, but despite his creators' credentials it seems like an idea that was doomed from the start. Even so, I like this story because in appearance it reminds me of Joe Shuster's vintage Superman artwork, and I like the gimmick of the Jet Jallopy.
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Shuster's ghost identified?
Although Funnyman is signed Siegel and Shuster it's known that Shuster used several artists, including Dick Ayers, to assist him. But at least they used his style.
In Pappy's #578 I wrote of Joe Shuster's ghost artist on strips signed by Shuster but looking nothing like his artwork. Just recently I was looking at a 1951 comic book story identified as being by Bill Molno, an artist whose name I had not previously heard. I instantly recognized this artist's "tell", which is a character with a Vandyck beard.
The top picture is from the 1951 strip, the bottom from the 1954 story in Strange Suspense Stories signed by Joe Shuster and Ray Osrin.
If the attribution on the 1951 comic is correct then the solution to the mystery of Shuster's ghost is comic book artist Bill Molno, a longtime Charlton staffer.
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