Captain Hurricane: Dirty Work (Original)

Captain Hurricane: Dirty Work art by Jack Pamby

Captain Hurricane: Dirty Work (Original)


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Artist: Jack Pamby
Medium: Pen & Ink on Acid-free Paper
Size: 17" x 20" (420mm x 520mm)
Date: 1972
Code: PambyCH

This is the unique original Pen & Ink drawing by Jack Pamby.

This is an original artwork by Jack Pamby for Captain Hurricane published in the Valiant & TV21 comic on 8th July 1972.

Captain Hurricane rages all over this action packed page.

Captain Hurricane was a fictional comic book character in Fleetway Publications' Valiant during the 1960s and 1970s, first appearing in issue #1 (Oct 1962). Captain Hurricane's adventures were scripted by the likes of Scott Goodall and Desmond Pride; Jon Rose also wrote some stories in the 1970s. R. Charles Roylance drew the strip for many years, occasionally Pamby and Fred Holmes would deputize.
  • Artist Biography

    John Albert "Jack" Pamby (31 May 1908 - 3Q 1977; Hitchin, Hertfordshire, UK)
    Jack Pamby was a British comic artist. He contributed his work to comic magazine Tip Top, which started in 1934. He also created the colorful comic 'The Adventures of Bob and Betty Britten' for magazine Crackers in 1939.

    John Albert "Jack" Pamby was born in Hitchin, Herfordshire, on 31 May 1908, the son of Ernest John Pamby, a police constable, and his wife Edith Evelyn, née Starr. By 1911 the family was living in West Ham, London. Jack joined the staff of the Amalgamated Press in the 1920s, and from the 1930s drew adventure strips for the firm's weeklies. Strips he worked on included "Cyril and Cecil" (1930), "Uncle Ebony" (1930), "The Lost City" (1932), "The Magic Box" (1933), "The Lucky Stone" (1934) and "The Emerald Arrow" (1934) for My Favourite.

    He ghosted for other artists on Film Fun and was involved in colouring. He became art editor on Stan J. Gooch's comics, and while in this position he drew "Singapore Jim and Billy" (1937-39) and "The Adventures of Jerry, Jenny and Joe" (1937-38) for Tip Top, and "The Adventures of Bob and Betty Britten" (1937) for Crackers.

    He married Margaret Brace in Hertford in 1942. After the Second World War the AP's output was reduced by paper shortages, so he did some outside work with a small publisher, Philmar, which included "Willing Wilf" (1948) for Cheery Time Comic, "Steve and his Stockwhip" (1949) for The Glee Comic, and "Cautious Claude" (1948) for The Mirth Comic. He retired early from his staff position some time in the 1960s, but appears to have continued working on a freelance basis into the 70s. His last strips were for Buster, including "Charlie Peace" (1965-74) and "The Mighty Misfits" (1965-67), and Valiant, for which he drew "The Potters of Poole Street" (1975).

    He apparently owned a small farm in Kent, but died in the third quarter of 1977 in East Ham, London.
    Source: UK Comics Wiki


£0.00
£180.00
In Stock