Friday, April 10, 2015

French Cartoons: Riotous Ribald and Racy

Here are some covers and cartoons from my "French Cartoons" collection. I think that in the 1950s French equaled sexy and racy. Well, by now, it all looks pretty quaint. I love these book covers!




Above is FRENCH CARTOONS, Dell 1954 paperback. "The best in saucy Parisian humor."




"You asked for more!" claims the back cover copy to the sequel published the following year.


And it goes on:

French comic artists lead the world in uncensored wit, satire, ribaldry, and -- most of all -- belly-laughs.

Last year Dell published the first crop (FRENCH CARTOONS, Dell No. 21).

We believe 160,000,000 Americans can't be wrong, so ... we now present -- MORE FRENCH CARTOONS
160,000,000??? Man oh man. French cartoons: once hot, now forgot! 

The cartoons in these books are a little risque, if you're still in a 1955 mentality.



FRENCH POSTCARDS, an Avon book from 1955, is full of wordless sight gags.



The Lion Library published CARTOONS THE FRENCH WAY the same year. Nice to see Sempe on the back cover. He is still drawing, and can be seen regularly as a New Yorker magazine cover artist.



LOVE FROM FRANCE "Featuring the Greatest French Comic Artists" is from the Popular Library, 1956.



FRENCH AND FRISKY, "a Lion Book," is also from 1956.



Above are 2 cartoons from LOVE FROM FRANCE. Silly little cartoons, hardly risque these 52 years later, but still nicely done.



A lot of the cartoons are just gag cartoons, like the above terrific Sempe cartoon. I love the look on those kids' faces.



So, you get some that are a little frisky, and some straight up gag cartoons.



There are a couple of French bathhouse gags in the books. Above is the woman who craves attention and gives comfort to the gawker.



And, above right, we see the opposite of the gag.

Again, a lot of the cartoons in the books tend to be wordless. The hardest kinds of cartoons to think up!


-- The above was an edited version of a blog entry from July 9, 2007.

1 comment:

joecab said...

Did you notice René Goscinny co-creator of Asterix and Obelix as one of the editors?