Frank Bellamy

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A 1972 Radio Times cover featuring Doctor Who - illustration by Frank Bellamy.
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A 1972 Radio Times cover featuring Doctor Who - illustration by Frank Bellamy.

Frank Bellamy (born 21 May 1917, died 5 July 1976) was a British comics artist, best known for his work on the Eagle comic, for which he illustrated Heros the Spartan and Fraser of Africa. He reworked its flagship Dan Dare strip. He also drew the Thunderbirds in a dramatic two-page format for the weekly comic TV Century 21. He drew the newpaper strip Garth for the London Daily Mirror. His work was innovative in its graphic effects and sophisticated use of colour, and in the dynamic manner in which it broke out of the then-traditional grid system.

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[edit] Biography

Born in Kettering, Nothamptonshire, Bellamy met his wife Nancy whilst he was stationed near Bishop Auckland during World War II. They moved to London, where Bellamy lived and worked for the rest of his life. They had one son, David.[1]

[edit] Career

Whilst in the army, Bellamy had a weekly illustration published by the Kettering Evening Telegraph. Later, he worked in advertising (for Gibbs Dentifrice). In 1953, he began his first comic strip, called Monty Carstairs in "Mickey Mouse Weekly". Shortly after he moved to Swift where his work included Swiss Family Robinson, King Arthur and Robin Hood.

In 1957, he moved to Eagle and began working in colour, on their back page biography strips - The Happy Warrior (the life of Winston Churchill), The Shepherd King (the life of the biblical King David), and The Travels of Marco Polo for which Bellamy only did eight episodes before moving to Dan Dare.

Bellamy took over Dan Dare part way through the "Terra Nova" storyline, replacing creator Frank Hampson. In contrast to the studio system of drawing used previously on the strip where the drawing, inking, lettering and coloring were all separately completed, Bellamy did the entire job completely by himself, as was his preferred style (although some fill-in pages were drawn by others). He was asked to design the strip his own way, so he completely redesigned everything from the costumes and spacecraft to the page layouts. These redesigns were somewhat controversial, and after Bellamy left the strip a year later, the next artist chose to reintroduce the original designs.

Bellamy then went on to draw two of his most celebrated strips, Fraser of Africa and Heros the Spartan. He also drew Montgomery of Alamein (the life of Field Marshall Bernard Law Montgomery) and did some work for Look and Learn.

Fraser of Africa, one of Frank Bellamy's artistic high-water points, was not his idea, but as he was obsessed with Africa he was the perfect choice to draw it. Bellamy used a monochromatic sepia color palette to reflect the sun and desert locale, with occasional bursts of bright color. It was a challenging and unusual approach and Fraser became the Eagle's most popular strip. Bellamy insisted on proper research and even had a reader living in East Africa supplying reference material.

Heros the Spartan, a swashbuckling adventure set in Roman times was another artistic triumph. Drawn as a two page spread and usually organized around a complicated splash in the centre of the two pages, Heros was a bravura display of skill. The battle scenes displayed a vividness and complex layout rarely seen in comics and it won Bellamy an award (for 'Best Foreign artist') from the American Academy of Comic Book Arts in 1972.

Part of the cover of TV 21 showing Frank Bellamy's work on Captain Scarlet.
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Part of the cover of TV 21 showing Frank Bellamy's work on Captain Scarlet.

In January 1966, Bellamy left the fading Eagle to work for the new comics magazine TV Century 21, where he drew their centrespread Thunderbirds strip. Rather than faithfully draw puppets, he took the artistic license of rendering the characters as real people for a more exciting strip, as was already being done by Ron Embleton and Mike Noble in their strips. Apart from one short break, Bellamy drew Thunderbirds throughout its run in TV Century 21 and TV21, leaving after the third strip in the merged "TV21 & Joe 90" which had gone from colour to black and white. He also drew the colour first pages for five Captain Scarlet stories.

In 1968 Bellamy famously worked on an episode of the British TV show The Avengers called The Winged Avenger. The story featured a strip cartoonist and Bellamy was asked to create all the illustrations used in the episode. He also designed the artist's studio set and the costume of the Winged Avenger villain.

In 1969, he began drawing the newspaper comic strip Garth which appeared in the Daily Mirror. This was the period in which intense competition with the new tabloid The Sun caused large helpings of nudity to be seen in British tabloids, and the strip reflected this. Bellamy's style was much more vivid than that of the original artist Steve Darling, and he was probably brought in as part of the effort to spice up the strip. The original writing team of John Allard and Jim Edgar shared byline credit with Bellamy. Bellamy applied all the graphic tricks in his arsenal from stippling and crosshatching to chiaroscuro inking to create a modern and eyecatching look for Garth unlike anything else appearing in newspapers at the time.

Drawing in black and white rather than colour gave Bellamy time to maintain a number of other regular commissions. During this period he drew the first comic strips The Sunday Times had ever run in its magazine as non-fiction journalism. He also regularly did illustrations for the BBC's Radio Times television listings magazine, in particular for the Doctor Who television programme.

Frank Bellamy died suddenly in 1976, a tragic loss to the British comics industry and indeed to the world, at the height of his powers. He had plans for many projects including a western strip he was to write himself, inspired by the "spaghetti westerns" of Sergio Leone, but none of that work survives.

[edit] Comic strips drawn by Frank Bellamy

The Eagle:

  • The Happy Warrior (Biography of Winston Churchill) (1957/58)
  • Montgomery of Alamein (1958)
  • The Shepherd King - the story of David (1958/59)
  • The Travels of Marco Polo (1959)
  • Dan Dare (1959/60)
  • Fraser of Africa (1960/61)
  • Heros the Spartan (1962/63)

TV21:

  • Thunderbirds (1966/69)
  • Captain Scarlet

Garth:

  • Sundance (second half drawn by Bellamy)(1969)
  • Cloud of Baltus (1970)
  • The Orb of Trimandias (1970)
  • The Wolf Man of Ausensee (1971)
  • People of the Abyss (1972)
  • The Women of Galba (1972)
  • Ghost Town (1973)
  • The Mask of Atacama (1973)
  • The Wreckers (1973/74)
  • The Beast Of Ultor (1974)
  • Freak Out To Fear (1974)
  • Bride of Jengis Khan (1974/75)
  • The Angels Of Hell's Gap (1975)
  • The Doomsmen (1975)
  • The Bubble Man (1975)
  • The Beautiful People (1975/76)
  • The Spanish Lady (1976)
  • The Man-Hunt (1976)

[edit] Books

  • Dan Dare Deluxe Collector's Edition Volume 10 - PROJECT NIMBUS (Hawk Books, 1994)
  • Eagle Classics: Fraser of Africa. (Hawk Books, 1990) ISBN 0948248327
  • Timeview - The complete Doctor Who Illustrations of Frank Bellamy ( Who Dares publishing, 1985)
  • Garth. Book 2: The Women of Galba (with Jim Edgar). (Titan Books, 1985) ISBN 0907610498
  • Garth. Book 1: The Cloud of Balthus (with Jim Edgar). ( Titan Books, 1984) ISBN 090761034X
  • High Command: The Stories of Sir Winston Churchill and General Montgomery (Dragon's Dream, 1981) ISBN 9063328516
  • The Daily Mirror Book of Garth 1976 (with Jim Edgar). ( IPC Magazines, 1975)
  • The Daily Mirror Book of Garth 1975 (with Jim Edgar). ( IPC Magazines, 1974)

[edit] References

  • Woollcombe, Alan. "Nancy Bellamy interview", archived from Speakeasy#100, July 1989. Retrieved November 28, 2006
  • Wright, Norman: "Frank Bellamy and Fraser of Africa" in Eagle Classics: Fraser of Africa, 3-10 (Hawk Books, 1990) ISBN 0948248327
  • Garriock, P.R. in Masters Of Comic Book Art, 32-41 (Aurum Press, Big O Publishing, 1978) ISBN 0905664051
  • Skinn, Dez & Gibbons, Dave: "The Frank Bellamy Interview" in Fantasy Advertiser #50, 14-31 (Derek G Skinn, 1973)

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