Comic Cuts
Comic Cuts | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Amalgamated Press |
Schedule | Weekly |
Format | Comics anthology |
Genre | Children's, humour |
Publication date | May 17, 1890 | – September 1953
No. of issues | 3,006 |
Comic Cuts was a British comic magazine. It was published from 1890 to 1953, lasting for 3006 issues. It was created by the reporter Alfred Harmsworth through his company Amalgamated Press (AP). In its early days, it inspired other publishers to produce rival comic magazines. Comic Cuts held the record for the most issues of a British weekly comic for 46 years, until The Dandy overtook it in 1999.
Publication history[]
During its lifetime, the comic merged with many others, including Golden Penny (1928), Jolly Comic (1939), and Larks (1940). Comic Cuts finally disappeared in September 1953 when it was merged with Knockout.[1]
Content[]
Its first issue was an assortment of reprints from American publications.[1]
In other media[]
The comic is mentioned in G. K. Chesterton's 1905 book Heretics[2] and in the 1910 book Alarms and Discursions,[3] and in a line of Cyril Tawney's song "Chicken on a Raft" — "He's looking at me Comic Cuts again".
It was also mentioned in Clive Dunn's 1971 hit record "Grandad" — "Comic Cuts, all different things."
The character Annie Twohig refers to it in Lennox Robinson's play Drama at Inish — "Annie: I'll stay at home and read a magazine." "Constance: Which magazine?" "Annie: Comic Cuts."
References[]
Sources[]
- Comic Cuts at the Grand Comics Database
- Comics publications
- Comics magazines published in the United Kingdom
- Comics before 1900
- Fleetway and IPC Comics titles
- Magazines established in 1890
- Magazines disestablished in 1953
- Defunct British comics
- British humour comics
- 1890s comics
- 1953 comics endings
- Magazines published in London
- British comics stubs