Steve Canyon
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Steve Canyon is an American adventure comic strip by Milton Caniff, published from January 7, 1947, after Caniff had retired from his equally famous strip Terry and the Pirates, through June 4, 1988, shortly after Caniff's death. Caniff won the Reuben Award for the strip in 1971.
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[edit] History
By 1946, Caniff had developed a worldwide reputation for his writing and art on Terry and the Pirates, the rights to which were owned by the Chicago Tribune newspaper syndicate. Seeking creative control of his own work, Caniff approached the Chicago Sun-Times with an idea for a strip he would own outright. Caniff's last episode for Terry and the Pirates appeared in December 1946, and Steve Canyon appeared little more than a week later in 125 newspapers throughout the country.
Like many comic-strip creators, who employ uncredited assistants or ghost artists, Caniff in 1952 hired comic book artist Dick Rockwell as his assistant on the strip. A nephew of famed illustrator Norman Rockwell, Dick Rockwell penciled and inked secondary characters and backgrounds, while Caniff wrote, drew the main characters, and did finishing touches. Rockwell continued on Canyon until Caniff's death on May 3, 1988.
The last Steve Canyon strip was a tribute to Caniff in two panels, one drawn by legendary cartoonist Bill Mauldin, the other containing the signatures of 78 fellow cartoonists.
[edit] Cast
Visually based on Gary Cooper, Steve Canyon was an easygoing adventurer with a soft heart. Originally a veteran running his own air-transport business, the character returned to the U.S. Air Force during the Korean war and remained in the military for the remainder of the strip's run.
Initially his buddies were former veterans, and romantic interest was provided by Copper Calhoon, a kind of capitalist version of the popular Dragon Lady character Caniff had created for Terry and the Pirates. Eventually, however, Canyon developed a permanent sidekick in crotchety millionaire adventurer "Happy" Easter, and a permanent love interest in Summer Olson, Calhoon's private secretary. The young, Terry-like Reed Kimberley also became a major character.
Caniff was famous for colorful villains and intriguing female characters, and these populated the series.[citation needed] He was also intensely patriotic and with Canyon's return to the military the story began to revolve around Cold War intrigue and the responsibilities of American citizens. However, Caniff was able to maintain the picaresque quality of his stories, which ranged throughout the world.
[edit] Other media
The strip was adapted into a filmed, half-hour television series on the NBC network in 1958-1959 (with reruns on ABC in 1960). Dean Fredericks played Canyon as a troubleshooter for the Air Force who travelled from base to base until mid-season, when he became stationed at the strip's fictitious Big Thunder Air Force Base in California. None of the supporting characters from the strip were used.
[edit] Collections
Kitchen Sink Press published Steve Canyon Magazine for 21 issues, until replacing it with trade paperback collections using the same numbering:
- Steve Canyon v.22 In Formosa's Dire Straits (1989, ISBN 0-87816-044-2, reprints Feb 8, 1955 to August 8, 1955)
- Steve Canyon v.23 The Scarlet Princess (1989, reprints August 9, 1955 to April 11, 1956)
- Steve Canyon v.24 Taps for 'Shanty' Town (1989, reprints April 12, 1956 to November 28, 1956)
- Steve Canyon v.25 Damma Exile (1991, ISBN 0-87816-061-2, reprints Nov 29, 1956 to Sept 24, 1957)
In 2006, Checker Book Publishing began releasing a year-by-year collection of Steve Canyon:
- Steven Canyon: 1947 (ISBN 0-9710249-9-5)
- Steven Canyon: 1948 (ISBN 0-9741664-1-3)
- Steven Canyon: 1949 (ISBN 0-9710249-1-X, February 9, 1949 and February 18, 1950)
- Steven Canyon: 1950 (ISBN 1-933160-51-9, reprints January 29 to October 7, 1950)
- Steven Canyon: 1951 (ISBN 1-933160-10-1, reprints October 8, 1950 to Nov 14, 1951)
- Steven Canyon: 1952 (ISBN 1-933160-55-1, reprints April 9, 1952 to May 14, 1953)
- Steven Canyon: 1953 (ISBN 1-933160-57-8, reprints May 15, 1953 to August 5, 1954)