Powerhouse Pepper

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Powerhouse Pepper #3 (July 1948). Cover art by Basil Wolverton.
Powerhouse Pepper #3 (July 1948). Cover art by Basil Wolverton.

Powerhouse Pepper is a fictional, comic-book humor character who appeared in comics published in the 1940s by Timely Comics, a predecessor of Marvel Comics. A somewhat dim-witted but decent boxer with superhuman strength who appeared in slapstick adventures, he was created and produced exclusively by cartoonist Basil Wolverton, and first appeared in the humor omnibus Joker Comics #1 (April 1942).

Contents

[edit] Publication history

Powerhouse Pepper appeared in six- to eight-page stories in Timely Comics' Joker Comics #1-27, 29-31 (April 1942 - May 1947, Fall 1947 - Spring 1948); Gay Comics #1, 18-22, 28-29 (March 1944, Fall 1944 - Winter 1945, Aug.-Nov. 1947); Tessie the Typist #2, 4, 7-13 (Winter 1944, Fall 1945, Fall 1946 - Dec. 1947); Rusty #14 (Aug. 1947); and Millie the Model #9 (Dec. 1947), as well as in his own series.

A single issue of that solo title appeared as Powerhouse Pepper Comics #1 (Jan. 1943), featuring a slightly different character design than elsewhere. The series then went dormant for five years while the character's adventures were published in the aforementioned titles. It was revived, slightly shortened to Powerhouse Pepper, for four additional issues (#2-5, Spring - Nov. 1948). Backup features there included the humor characters Goofy Giggles, L'il Louie, Squeeky, and (in issue #2) Wolverton's detective Disk-Eyes the Dick.

[edit] Fictional character biography

A bullet-headed boxer in a striped turtleneck, he is, per comics historian Don Markstein

...an amazingly tough guy, and yet his ability to win any fight never goes to his head. He's kind, generous, and uninterested in worldly goods to the point where he once dug up an entire beach looking for a clam, and completely ignored the millions in buried treasure unearthed in the process. ... A major departure from the Popeye mold was Wolverton's constant wordplay. Powerhouse Pepper sailed through life in a sea of rhymes, rhythms and alliterations, often — usually, in fact — carried to ridiculous extremes.[1]

[edit] Reprints

Modern-day Powerhouse Pepper reprints include the eight-page story "McClaw the Outlaw",[2] in the hardcover anthology A Smithsonian Book of Comic-Book Comics (Smithsonian Institution Press / Harry N. Abrams, 1981). Additional reprints have appeared in New Media Publishing's black-and-white magazine Golden Age of Comics #5 (Oct. 1983); publisher Kitchen Sink Press' adult-oriented Snarf #13 (Dec. 1989); and Pure Imagination's 1993 all-Wolverton comic-book Intense! #1-3 and The Human Powerhouse #1.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Don Markstein's Toonopedia: Powerhouse Pepper
  2. ^ The title appears on the original comic's title page, not on the story itself, which references sources generally list as "Rawjaw McClaw"

[edit] References