Herbie Popnecker

Herbie

Herbie, from Forbidden Worlds #114 (Sept. 1963).
Art by Ogden Whitney
Publication information
Publisher American Comics Group
First appearance Forbidden Worlds #73 (Dec. 1958)
Created by Richard E. Hughes and Ogden Whitney
In-story information
Alter ego Herbie Popnecker
Notable aliases The Fat Fury
Abilities Flying
Invisibility
Ability to talk to animals
Time travel

Herbie Popnecker is a fictional character, who first appeared in Forbidden Worlds #73 in December 1958, published by American Comics Group. He was created by Richard E. Hughes (using the pseudonym "Shane O'Shea")"Shane O'Shea")[1] and Ogden Whitney. Comics writer Alan Moore has called Herbie his favorite "superhero."[2]

Herbie is an antithetical hero — short, fat, and young — but ironically one of the most powerful and best-known beings in history. Deriving some of his powers from genetics and some from magical lollipops from "the Unknown," Herbie can talk to animals (who know him by name), fly (by walking on air), become invisible, and (once he got his own title), travel through time. Herbie is emotionless, terse, irresistible to women, consulted by world leaders, and more powerful than the Devil.

Contents

Publication history

Herbie made several appearances in Forbidden Worlds, in issues #73, #94, #110, #114, and #116 — the final two issues with Herbie featured on the cover. Herbie also made a cameo appearance — albeit very much out of character — in Unknown Worlds #20, published in 1961.

Herbie received his own title in April 1964. The series ran for twenty-three issues until February 1967, shortly before the demise of American Comics Group.

Fictional character biography

Herbie's parents are unaware of his great powers and fame, and his father repeatedly refers to him as a "little fat nothing". Herbie's dad, Pincus Popnecker, is a financial failure with one poorly-conceived scheme after another, but Herbie bails him out every time (and his dad takes the credit for being a business genius).

Herbie is practically always shown with a lollipop, and lollipops are the main subjects of several stories. Herbie can "bop" adversaries with his lollipops, immediately defeating them. Herbie threatens others by asking them rhetorically, in his inimitable style of speaking, "You want I should bop you with this here lollipop?"

The Fat Fury

In Herbie #8 (March 1965), Herbie feels a need to become a costumed superhero, but after failing superhero school, he creates the Fat Fury by donning full-body red underwear with a drop seat, a blue plastic mask, and a toilet plunger on his head. He is bare-footed. Herbie's father wishes that his little fat nothing of a son could be like the Fat Fury.

As the Fat Fury, Herbie does not have any powers beyond the many he had before donning the costume. Although Herbie travels back in time, the Fat Fury never does.

The Fat Fury was featured in even-numbered Herbie comics from #8 to #22.

Powers

Recurring gags

There are many recurring gags in Herbie comics:

. Herbie sometimes refers to his favorite lollipop flavors , including "hard-to-get cinnamon".

Collections and revivals

In the 1990s, there were some attempts to revive Herbie. A-Plus Comics (which had purchased the American Comics Group reprint rights) published six black-and-white issues of reprints in 1991. Dark Horse Comics published two issues of a planned twelve in 1992, the first with a new story by John Byrne. Flaming Carrot Comics #31 (1994) featured an appearance by Herbie (words and pictures by Bob Burden). America's Comic Group (a publisher affiliated with A+ Comics) published a new story written by Roger Broughton with artwork by Dan Day.

In 2008, Dark Horse Comics announced that they would reprint the original Herbie stories in a series of hardcover archive volumes. The first came out in August 2008 (ISBN 978-1-59307-987-1) and collects Herbie stories from Forbidden Worlds #73, 94, 110, 114, 116, Unknown Worlds #20, and Herbie #1 - 5. The second came out in December 2008 (ISBN 978-1-59582-216-1), and collects issues #6-14. The third and final volume came out in April 2009 (ISBN 978-1-59582-302-1), and collects issues #15-23.

References

  1. ^ Herbie at Don Markstein's Toonopedia
  2. ^ Pindling, L.J. Alan Moore interview, part eight," Street Law Productions (Spring Boroughs, Northampton, England, June 27, 2008).

External links