Wednesday, August 31, 2011

The Ever-Resourceful Aleta


Kidnapped by Ulfran the Viking sea rover, Prince Valiant's wife Aleta takes matters into her own hands – literally.


Art and text: Hal Foster (February 1947).
Source: One of the Prince Valiant comic books my father collected in 1954-55 and which were published and distributed by Associated Newspaper Ltd. of 60-70 Elizabeth Street, Sydney.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

The Governor's Advice


When Prince Valiant upsets a greedy caliph by angrily refusing to sell him either his wife or one of his daughters, the Governor of Lyon advices him to gather his family and leave the city at once.


Art: Hal Foster and John Cullen Murphy (from installment 2148, April 9, 1978). At this point in Prince Valiant's run, John Cullen Murphy, who had been quietly assisting Hal Foster since 1970, was well into his first decade of drawing the strip over Foster's writing and roughs.
Text: Hal Foster.
Source: Prince Valiant (Vol. 40): Return to Camelot, comprising pages, or installments, 2124 (October 23, 1977) through 2167 (August 20, 1978). Fantagraphics Books, 2003.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Thorwolf's Claim


With eyes burning with "insane fever," the Norseman Thorwolf claims the treasure of Solomon and threatens Prince Valiant. "Your bones . . . will join the others in silent witness to my stake," Thorwolf declares.


Art: Gary Gianni. (From installment #3617, June 4, 2006).
Text: Mark Schultz.
Source: Prince Valiant: Far from Camelot – Gary Gianni and Mark Schultz (Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2008).

Saturday, August 20, 2011

An Audience with King Arthur and Queen Guinevere


A young Prince Valiant meets the famed King Arthur and his wife Guinevere for the first time.


Art and text: Hal Foster. (From installment #21, July 3, 1937)
Source: Prince Valiant (Vol. 1): 1937-1938 – Hal Foster (Fantagraphics Books, 2009).

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Journey to Lapland


Above and below: Two panels from installment #2509 (March 10, 1985) of Prince Valiant that not only showcase the exquisite artwork of John Cullen Murphy but the eloquent writing of his son John Cullen.





Left: Detail from the third panel of installment #2509.

Journeying into Lapland, the young Mikkel points out and explains to Prince Valiant the significance of the annual herding of reindeer. "This is the most important thing that happens in our land," he says. "At summer's end we drive the herds south for better foraging. When winter breaks we drive them north again – back home. The reindeer give us meat and milk. They give us clothes for our backs and skins for our roof."

Saturday, August 13, 2011

"We Are the Daughters of the Queen of the Misty Isles and the Prince of Thule"


With these words Karen and Valeta, the twin daughters of Prince Valiant and Queen Aleta, returned August 7, 2011, to the Sunday adventure strip that bears their father's name.

Their words are spoken to Maldubh, whose dark witchcraft threatens both Val and Aleta's lives, and is ultimately aimed at placing her conniving husband, Draco, on the throne of Camelot.

Yet with the help of their sister-in-law Maeve, Karen and Valeta wage a spectral battle against Maldubh – a battle that they ultimately win.


Left: A dazed and enraged Maldubh demands to know the identity of the three mysterious interlopers who have defeated her dark witchcraft.



I'm not sure, but I think this is the first time since artist Gary Gianni and writer Mark Schultz began collaborating on Prince Valiant in November 2004 that Karen and Valeta have made an appearance. I don't think this absence has anything to do with Gianni and Schultz's dislike for these particular characters. Rather, I think it may have something to do with how they've chosen to depict Prince Valiant and Queen Aleta.



You see, over the 30+ years that Gianni's predecessor John Cullen Murphy drew Prince Valiant, he aged Val to a man in his mid-40s (left). Yet since fully taking over the strip in 2004, Gianni has taken a good twenty years off Valiant and Aleta. Indeed, as the illustration below demonstrates, at times Prince Valiant looks as young as his adult children!





Above: Prince Valiant, as drawn by Gary Gianni (June 25, 2006).


All the more reason, perhaps, to keep these adult children off center stage as much as possible. Of course, Nathan, the youngest in the family, doesn't look out of place (right). And Arn, the eldest, almost has to be present. He is, after all, married to Maeve, the niece of King Arthur, and currently serving as regent of Camelot. Furthermore, Arn and Maeve's daughter Ingrid is heir to the throne. With such connections, it's difficult to write Arn out of the story. Not so, it seems, Karen and Valeta, and their younger brother Galan.

Yet perhaps with the recent return of Karen and Valeta, we'll see more of the daughters of the Queen of the Misty Isles and the Prince of Thule!

Following are some depictions of Karen and Valeta throughout the 70+ year history of Prince Valiant.




Above: After a year away adventuring, Prince Valiant returns home to find he is the father of twin daughters.

Art and text: Hal Foster (from installment #767, October 21, 1951).


Notes Brian M. Kane in Hal Foster: Prince of Illustrators, Father of the Adventure Strip:

After Val and Aleta's twin girls were born, King Features held a contest to name them, but Foster reserved the right to select the winning entry. A young girl, Cindy Lou Hermann, sent in the winning names "Karen" and "Valeta" and visited Hal in Connecticut.



Above: Prince Valiant and Queen Aleta's growing family. From left: Arn, Karen and Valeta, and Aleta with the infant Galan.

Art: Hal Foster (from installment #1342, October 28, 1962).



Above: In the aftermath of a dramatic rescue, Prince Valiant shares a tender moment with his daughters.

Karen (at right) is sporting the attire of the Amazons. Her interest in the legendary nation of female warriors in Greek mythology was inspired by her witnessing of the defeat of the Persian warlord Khazan II by Hypathia, Queen of Petropolis.

Art: Hal Foster and John Cullen Murphy (from installment #2128, November 20, 1977).
Text: Hal Foster.



Above and below: Two panels from installment #2162 (July 16, 1978) highlighting the difference in interests and personalities of Karen and Valeta.





Above: The teenage Karen and Valeta, along with their brother Galan, make the acquaintance of Chinese scholar Yuan Chen.

Art: John Cullen Murphy (from installment #2366, June 13, 1982).



Above: Prince Valiant attempts to console a lovelorn Valeta. By entering the tourney incognito as "Lord Trueheart" and asking Valeta for the honor of wearing her pennon, it's Val who will be his daughter's "secret admirer."

Art: John Cullen Murphy (#2467, May 20, 1984).
Text: Cullen Murphy.


In later stories illustrated by Murphy, Karen meets and marries a young man named Giovanni ("Vanni"), the son of Prester John, whom Prince Valiant, Karen, Vanni, Galan, Sir Gawain, and Yuan Chen encounter in Cathay.

Valeta, meanwhile, becomes romantically involved with the young Druid high priest Cormac, who is described as a "strange mixture of warmth, wisdom, wit, and sadness." In time it is discovered that Cormac is Maeve's long-lost brother, and thus, like her, the son of King Arthur's evil half-brother Mordred. It's a revelation that causes much grief and trouble for the young man.

Although there is no mention of Karen and Vanni in Gianni and Schultz's "seasonal greeting" installment of 2010, it is noted that Valeta and Cormac are living amidst the "emerald vales" of Hibernia, while Galan "continues his scholarly pursuits" in Jerusalem.



Monday, August 8, 2011

A Spectral Battle


A stunning panel by the current illustrator of Prince Valiant, Gary Gianni.

A mysterious trio come to the rescue of a cursed Prince Valiant and Queen Aleta by doing battle against the dark witchcraft of Maldubh, wife of the would-be ruler of Camelot, Draco.

The identity of this trio? To find out, click here.


Art: Gary Gianni (July 31, 2011).
Text: Mark Schultz.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Sleight of Hand



In order to secure the release of his kidnapped son, Prince Valiant employs some sleight of hand!


Art and text: Hal Foster (January 20, 1963).
Source: Prince Valiant (Vol. 30): Arn, Son of Valiant, comprising pages, or installments, 1327 (July 15, 1962) through 1372 (May 26, 1963). Fantagraphics Books, 1997.