Monroe’s 1952 Calendar & Miss Mizzou

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IMAGE: Steve Canyon daily comic strip, September 30, 1952 – Copyright 2014 the Milton Caniff Estate. Miss Mizzou makes a joke about Marilyn Monroe’s calendar.

Milton Caniff had various influences going into the creation of Miss Mizzou. One of the largest was rising film star Marilyn Monroe who had a nude calendar released in 1952. Caniff even got a little “meta” with the comic strip above September 30th, 1952, where he has Miss Mizzou joke about a “Marilyn Monroe calendar fan club.” What influence did Marilyn Monroe’s 1952 nude calendar have on the creation of Miss Mizzou? Let’s examine the creation of the calendar further.

Marilyn Monroe’s career had been stalled somewhat during the later 1940’s. She had been let go from her studio contract in 1947, but still landed film roles here and there. She approached photographer Tom Kelley in the spring of 1949 for modeling work, and he photographed her for a beer ad in a bikini. At the suggestion of a calendar publisher, Kelley asked Marilyn to pose nude.

At first Marilyn refused, but she gave the idea some more thought. She mulled over the fact that she had met Kelley in 1947 after having some car trouble and he had lent her some money she never had repaid. He was apparently unaware of this, but it was something that possibly weighed on her conscience. She also needed the money that the calendar would bring to get her impounded car back. Monroe was still hesitant because she was afraid of what the photos could do to her career, but she finally agreed to pose for them. Kelley reassured her that his female partner would be at the session and they would retouch the photos so nobody could recognize her.

Kelley took the nude photos, but they were still somewhat recognizable as Marilyn. The photos were used for calendars, but didn’t become popular until her film career started getting more recognition. This came to a head during March of 1952 when a newspaper reporter asked Marilyn about the photos in an interview.

It must be said that there are a couple different stories circulating about how the photo scandal started. Some think that Monroe leaked the photographs the press, while others say that Jerry Wald, the producer of her next film “Clash By Night,” was involved with leaking the photos. Regardless of how it went down, “Clash By Night” was released on June 18th that year and did well at the box office because of the press.

The photos put Monroe and her movie career in jeopardy as flaunting sexuality in Hollywood could put an end to her career. She explained that she posed for the photos because she was “broke and needed the money.” Coupled with the story of her troubled upbringing, this public relations move lead to sympathy for Monroe and her plight as a struggling actress. Around this time she also started dating Joe DiMaggio who’s perceived moral purity also helped Monroe in the public eye.

The photos and the scandal helped her career substantially. She landed the cover of Life magazine in April with a story explaining about the photos and talking about her background. This continued throughout the year as she landed several magazine covers and news stories.

Caniff’s first correspondence about Miss Mizzou dates to May 29th, 1952, so it wouldn’t have been too long after Monroe’s Life profile. Miss Mizzou in the comic strip is a character who dreamed of Hollywood fame, but came up a little short. Caniff even described Mizzou as someone who was like Marilyn Monroe but didn’t “hit the jackpot in hollywood.” My theory is that Monroe’s nude photos and her subsequent explanation to the press about her career struggles helped inform the back-story for Miss Mizzou.

It must be kept in mind that Monroe was still a somewhat small time celebrity when Caniff would have been conceiving Miss Mizzou in May. While Monroe had gotten some publicity at that point, I’m thinking that it would have been possible for the press to move on to another person had Monroe not been starring in five films that year. Her career was gaining momentum, but Caniff would have had no idea Monroe would become as big as she eventually did. Monroe’s fame didn’t solidify until 1953 with several films including “Niagra” in January, “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” in July, and “How to Marry a Millionare” in November. In December of 1953, the first issue of Playboy launched with Monroe on the cover, and she became the first playmate of the month.

One of my observations in my Miss Mizzou book is that her popularity came from the people, and not solely from Caniff’s promotional savvy. Oddly enough, Monroe felt the same thing about her popularity: “If I am a star, the people made me star. No studio, no person, but the people did.” Actor Joseph Cotton agreed: “A lot of people will tell you it’s all publicity. That’s malarkey. They’ve tried to give a hundred girls the same publicity build-up. It didn’t take with them.”

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IMAGE: Steve Canyon daily comic strip, Janurary 7, 1953 – Copyright 2014 the Milton Caniff Estate. Pipper the Piper makes a joke about Marilyn Monroe’s calendar.

One last comment about the calendar: The “Marilyn Monroe calendar fan club” joke that was referenced at the top of this post was also repeated in the above Steve Canyon strip from January 7th, 1953. The character who makes this comment is Pipper the Piper, who was seemingly based on newly elected U.S. senator and eventual U.S. President John F. Kennedy. (The character’s personality was also based on David McCallister Jr. as comics historian Bruce Canwell notes in the introduction to Steve Canyon Volume 4.) This is of course an interesting footnote considering that Monroe and Kennedy were allegedly romantically linked a few years after this appeared.

Featured Reviewer: Bruce Canwell

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Bruce Canwell is a comic scholar who is well known for his great essays on comic history. With owner/designer Dean Mullaney he helped launch the Library of American Comics in 2007. The company packages high-end comic strip reprint books, and just last year they surpassed 75 titles. Within the last few years the company has set a high water mark for comic reprints, netting numerous Eisner awards for their books along the way.

To Caniff fans, he’s primarily known for his essays at the beginning of the current Library of American Comics “Steve Canyon” reprint editions. With this in mind, I asked Bruce to write up a review blurb for my book, and he returned this great little gem:

“In her high heels and trademark trench coat, Miss Mizzou stands tall in the long list of beauties Milton Caniff created to enliven his comic strips ‘Terry and the Pirates,’ ‘Male Call,’ and ‘Steve Canyon.’ J.B. Winter has crafted a spritely, well-researched look at the effect one cartoonist and his curvy creation had on the original ‘Mizzou’—the University of Missouri—and its environs. Caniffites, MU alumni, and residents of Columbia, Missouri will surely enjoy what they find in these pages.”

This seems like a perfect summary of the book. Thanks Bruce!

Recommended reads:

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  • As I wrote above, you should check out Canwell’s essays at the beginning of the current “Steve Canyon” reprint volumes. His latest one for “Steve Canyon 1953-1954” references a lot of information that I had never came across about Caniff. I always learn something new when I read one of his essays.
  • Canwell and the Library of American Comics folks have just this year finished up the Alex Toth trilogy of books: “Alex Toth : Genius, Isolated,” “Alex Toth : Genius, Illustrated,” “Alex Toth : Genius, Animated.” These books illuminate the amazing work of this comic icon in beautiful hardcover books. One glimpse inside one of these and you can see why it would win an Eisner award.

Massey, Madame, Monroe, and Mizzou

IMAGE: Steve Canyon, July 28, 1947. While she made an appearance in the previous day's comic, this is the first time the name Madame Lynx was mentioned.

IMAGE: Steve Canyon daily comic strip, July 28, 1947 — Copyright 2014 the Milton Caniff Estate. This is the first introduction to character Madame Lynx. She was shown in the previous day’s Sunday comic, but she didn’t reveal her name until this comic strip.

One of the earliest femme fatales in “Steve Canyon was Madame Lynx. In the May 1953 issue of “Pageant,” Caniff notes that Madame Lynx was based on actress Ilona Massey because she’s pretty and she often “plays the type of role that he wanted Madame Lynx to play in the comic strip.”

However, some people erroneously report that Madame Lynx was based on Madame Egelichi, a character played by Ilona Massey in the 1949 Marx Brothers film “Love Happy.” This can’t be the case however, since Madame Lynx was introduced into the comic strip in 1947 and the film was released nearly two years later. (You can catch a glimpse of Madame Lynx in the trailer for the Miss Mizzou book I made; check out my blog post about the trailer for more info.)

Marilyn Monroe also had a small part in the film “Love Happy.” Though Marilyn had done other films, this was the first one that played up her sex appeal. If Caniff was an Ilona Massey fan and he was watching her in this film, I wonder if he also took notice of Marilyn Monroe, who would later inspire Miss Mizzou?

Kewpie Mascot Celebrates 100 Years

Photo of the 1913-1914 Columbia High School basketball team with a kewpie doll at the bottom. From the 1914 Cresset yearbook courtesy of Daniel Boone Regional Library.

Photo of the 1913-1914 Columbia High School basketball team with a kewpie doll at the bottom. From the 1914 Cresset yearbook courtesy of Daniel Boone Regional Library.

When Miss Mizzou was introduced, the character raised some eyebrows because it was reported that she didn’t wear anything under the trench coat. However, it turns out that Miss Mizzou is not the only “naked” comic character associated with Columbia, Missouri. A naked baby character called a Kewpie also became a prominent figure locally when Hickman High School adopted the character as a mascot in 1914. The Columbia Missourian has full coverage of the 100 year anniversary of the mascot in a series of stories that appeared earlier this month.

The Kewpie was the creation of southern Missouri resident Rose O’Neill for a comic that appeared in the Ladies Home Journal in 1909. The character, inspired by the Roman god of love Cupid, became popular and spun off into a successful line of Kewpie dolls that have become world famous.

How the Kewpie made it’s way into being a mascot for Columbia High School (later called Hickman High School) is more of a mystery with varying stories. One of the prominent stories has been that a reporter of a sports game remarked that the Columbia players looked like Kewpies. Another story that surfaced in 2009 came from the great uncle of Lucy Church. She tells her story here:

My great uncle was quite an athlete, who not only played basketball at Hickman but also at MU, and he was the first Kewpie to letter in four sports. Although I did not know him too well because he lived in Florida, I do recall that he came to visit us once in the 1960s. During that visit he told us about the Kewpie, which was quite significant to him. Apparently, the school secretary owned a Kewpie doll, as they were popular figurines then, and she kept it on her desk. At one of the basketball games, she placed the Kewpie in the center of the court (I guess for good luck), and the entire game was played around it without its being broken. This was somewhat remarkable since the dolls were very fragile. Because it survived the game and brought a victory, it was thereafter considered the good luck mascot. You can see a picture of it underneath my great uncle’s chair in the team photograph. Also, the Kewpie does not appear prior to 1914 in any other Cresset.

You can see a video of her telling her great uncle’s story up on Charley Blackmore’s website. Whatever the actual story is, the character stayed as the mascot for the school the last 100 years. While several mascots share names with comic characters, the Kewpie seems to be the only comic character that has inspired a mascot.

Sorry for the digression this week, but I thought this news item might be of interest. Stay tuned for more Miss Mizzou centric posts in the future.

Maneater Student Newspaper Story

maneaterA story about the Miss Mizzou book appeared in The Maneater student newspaper on October 22, 2014. The story appeared in the MOVE magazine section of the homecoming edition of the paper, and it’s an excellent overview of the book and character written by Taylor Ysteboe. In researching the Miss Mizzou book I referenced a LOT of Maneater articles about the character, so it’s good to see that paper covering the story of Miss Mizzou after all these years.