Corporal Clott
Dandy strip |
|
Corporal Clott |
First artist |
David Law |
Current/last artist |
Nigel Auchterlounie |
First appearance |
1960 |
Last appearance |
2012 Annual |
Regular characters |
Corporal Clott, Colonel Grumbly |
Corporal Clott was a strip in the British comic The Dandy. It started in the issued dated 12th November 1960 (issue 990) and was drawn by Dennis the Menace artist David Law.[1] The strip was drawn by David Law until issue 1496 dated 25th July 1970. The strip continued after David Law lef it with these strips being drawn by Bully Beef and Chips artist Jimmy Hughes. Jimmy Hughes version of the strip ended in the 1970s however the strip was revived in 1987 by Steve Bright and later dropped again. The character was also featured in a few Dandy Comic Libraries devoted entirely to him.[2][3] The strip reappeared in the 2012 Dandy Annual, drawn by Nigel Auchterlounie.
The tales revolved around Corporal Clott's bungling exploits, which often brought the entire Army to its knees: or at least, to the vast base that he resided in. His 'superior', the bulky, beefy Colonel Grumbly was an aggressive, dominant authority figure who often bore the brunt of Clott's innocent-but-chaotic misdemeanours. Most of the action centred in the Army camp itself, and rarely ventured into the outside world. The accident-prone Private was often seen driving an Army Jeep, with the oft-viewed ICU2 number-plate.
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