Jul 122010

 

DINAH-MITE!

Often neglected by collectors, Dinah-Mite was Mego’s answer to Barbie as AJ was to GI Joe. Her advertising featured her as an incredibly poseable doll who “sits and stands”; an overt shot at Barbie, who famously cannot “stand on her own”.

Dinah seems to have fared better than AJ, as she was advertised in their catalogs up through 1975. Since most of her stock did not languish in warehouses, her accessories and outfits are much harder to find.


Black Dinah-mite


Although Dinah started out as a white doll, she came in a Black version as well. Mego’s bendable doll  rode the wave of 70’s blaxploitation heroines like Friday Foster, Cleopatra Jones, Foxy Brown, Christie Love and my fave, Velvet Smooth.


May 282010

 

Purple Tee

I came across this sister’s site while scoping the web for some Funky Stuff! And I was blown away by her creativity with keeping the images of 1970’s Funk alive. The images quickly reminded me of the Blaxploitation film era. The art is funky, crazy kool and I had an immediate connection with her designs. A couple of emails back and forth Desiree was happy to be apart of The Museum of UnCut Funk Family and we can’t get enough of that funky stuff!

Please read about Desiree and her company AFRODELIK DESIGNS.


WELCOME TO AFRODELIK DESIGNS brand

…collections of hand drawn art created through the spirit of SOUL

It began with a pen and paper, and the desire to show the world my creativity. For over 20 years, I have had a passion for drawing, which comes from the heart. My natural artistic talent of drawing makes me feel at peace.

Daddy Mack BLACK


My name is Desiree Marshall, and in 2006, I decided to fulfill a life-long dream, and launched my apparel company AFRODELIK DESIGNS brand.

The various pieces feature hand-drawn original designs celebrating culture. There are currently three distinct collections available:

  • AFROCITY: a memorable throwback to blaxploitation movies of the 1970s
  • AFRIKA: inspirational line drawings dedicated to the various African cultures
  • IKONS: an ode to trendsetters and community leaders in music, politics and literature, to name a few

Nuba

AFRODELIK DESIGNS is a young and exciting company that produces collections of original HAND DRAWN art, on T-shirts, Bags, Greeting cards, and much.

We are currently working on new designs and new products for Summer 2010.

Our products are enjoyed by men and women between the ages of 24-48, and children aged 1-12 years old, of ALL shapes and colours. There is something for EVERYONE!

TAN


Afrodelik collections have been described as unique, bold, urban and inspirational, and international celebrities such as Erykah Badu, actors Vivica A.Fox and Derek Luke, singer Jully Black, and playwright and actress Trey Anthony, all own Afrodelik tees.

New to the line is a dedication to the inspiration and iconic, Young Michael Jackson. Afrodelik Designs’ brand is available in stores in North America, also available on the Afrodelik website at www.afrodelik.com

Apr 172010

 

Sting Like A Bee

Sting Like a Bee signed by Muhammad Ali circa 1979. Courtesy of The Museum of UnCut Funk Collection

 

The Art

I co-owned an art gallery for 4 years and I have the privilege to meet some fascinating collectors, dealers and celebrity artists. They have all had their opinions as to what art meant to them. In my mind if I liked what I saw and could identify with the images I made my purchase.

As my appreciation for art intensified I was contacted by an Australian art dealer who had an offering on a Muhammad Ali lithograph. He e-mailed me pictures and I was captivated by the imagery. I’m a huge fan and collector of animation and comic book art so this litho had to be in my collection.

Now art is subjective and many a art critics have panned celebrity art. Baird Jones, a critic for Artnet.com says “celebrity art combines the worst of several worlds. Since most stars who make art have little art training, their work tends to be a historical, a Hollywood version of naïve or outsider art. Furthermore, since celebrity art is shunned by top galleries, it’s usually displayed side-by-side with kitsch and low-grade prints”. He may be right in his opinion but Muhammad Ali is a cultural icon and any memorabilia from his years as a boxer, activist and humanitarian has increased in value and is extremely sought after.

You decide what art means to you but 20 to 30 years from now you’d wish you had a part of Ali’s sports history in your collection. The Ali lithos are all 18 by 24 inches, and were published in 1979 in editions of 500. Three have religious imagery and cost $8,500 each: Under the Sun, which shows a jet plane; Guiding Light, showing an image of a lighthouse; and the eponymous Mosque II. The fourth is a cartoonish scene of the boxing ring, titled Sting Like a Bee, that retails for $12,500 and by today’s standards for buying art is considered a bargain.

Although the art is hard to find and is sought after by fans and collectors alike, these are truly one of a kind pieces and should be apart of any collection.


Under The Sun

Under The Sun signed by Muhammad Ali. Courtesy of Ro Gallery


Mosque ll

Mosque ll signed by Muhammad Ali. Courtesy of Ro Gallery


Guiding Light

Guiding Light signed by Muhammad Ali. Courtesy of Ro Gallery

 

The Man Behind the art:

Young Ali


Who would’ve thought that a stolen bike was the key to the beginning of the Muhammad Ali story? But it was. In 1954 in Louisville, Kentucky, 12-year-old Cassius Marcellus Clay’s bike was stolen while he and a friend were at the Columbia Auditorium. 
Young Cassius found a cop in a gym, Joe Martin, and boiling with youthful rage, told Martin he was going to “whup” whoever stole his bike. Martin admonished, “You better learn to box first.” Within weeks, 89-pound Cassius had his first bout—his first win.

For the next 27 years, Cassius would be in that ring. Even in his youth, he had dreams of being heavyweight champion of the world. But his life would take turns that no seer could’ve predicted.


Ali Fist

Young Cassius dedicated himself to boxing with fervor unmatched by other young boxers. Indeed, it was his only activity. As a teenager, he never worked. He boxed and trained. He had 108 amateur bouts. According to Joe Martin, Clay set himself apart from the other boys by two things: He was “sassy,” and he outworked all the other boys. The work paid off: 6 Kentucky Golden Gloves championships; two National Golden Gloves championships; two National AAU titles before he was 18 years old. And the son of Odessa, whom he lovingly referred to as “Bird,” and Cassius senior, “Cash,” to everyone, won the Olympic Gold Medal in 1960 in Rome months after his 18th birthday.

Although Cassius returned home to a parade, Louisville was still, in 1960 part of the segregated South. Even with a medal around his neck, Cassius was refused service at a local restaurant.


Muhammad Ali


At the time, Cassius has managed by the Louisville Sponsoring Group, a consortium of wealthy local white businessmen. The LSG, as it became known, put young Cassius with veteran trainer, Angelo Dundee, after failed attempts to with the Mongoose, Archie Moore, and a turn down by Ali’s boxing idol, Sugar Ray Robinson.

With Dundee in his corner, from his Miami base, Cassius blazed a trail through the heavyweight division with his unorthodox style that defied boxing logic. He was a “headhunter.” He never threw body shots (he adopted this style in his youth because he had reach and because he didn’t want to get close enough to get hit). And he “danced.” Because of Clay’s powerful legs—maybe the strongest in the history of boxing—he literally floated in the ring. He invented the “Ali Shuffle;” a foot maneuver where he would elevate himself, shuffle his feet in a dazzling blur, and sometimes deliver a blow while dancing.

The third element that Clay brought to boxing was his mouth. He never shut up. He became known as, “The Louisville Lip.” It was more than banter; it was a constant harangue. In a time when boxers never talked to the media—their managers always spoke for them—Clay did all his own talking. He even went so far as to predict the round. “To prove I’m great he will fall in eight!”

While training for his title bout against the fearsome heavyweight champion, Sonny Liston, Clay met Cap’n Sam, a Nation of Islam minister of the local Miami mosque. Cap’n Sam introduced Cassius to NOI spokesman, Malcolm X. Malcolm and young Cassius bonded on a deep level. Malcolm brought Cassius into the Nation of Islam.

Despite the 7-1 odds, Clay upset Sonny Liston in Miami and became heavyweight champion of the world in 1964. The next day, Clay announced to the world that he was a member of the Nation of Islam and that his name was Cassius X. The X reflecting the unknown name that was taken from him by the slave owners centuries before.


Ali and The Jacksons

The national response was immediate, negative and intense. Cassius X, soon to be given the name Muhammad Ali, by NOI founder, “The Messenger,” the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, chose to disassociate himself from his friend and mentor Malcolm X after the Messenger suspended Malcolm. Herbert Muhammad, eldest son of Elijah, was installed as Ali’s new manager as Ali continued to defend his crown against all comers.

In 1967, as the Vietnam War was escalating, Ali was called up for induction into the Armed Services. Ali refused induction on the grounds of religious beliefs. He was, in fact, a practicing Muslim minister. This refusal led to the now-famous Ali quote, “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Vietcong…”

The national furor over that comment combined with Ali’s refusal to be inducted into the Armed Services, caused virtually every state and local entity in America to cancel Ali’s boxing licenses. Ali final fight of 1967 was against Ernie Terrell, who incensed Ali at the weigh-in by calling him “Clay.” Ali pounded him in the ring with taunts of, “What’s my name?!!”


Ali Training

Ali did not fight again for 2 ½ years. He was stripped of his championship title, his passport taken; all his boxing licenses were cancelled. He lost an initial court battle and was facing a 5-year prison term. Ali made money during his exile by speaking to colleges. He was the first national figure to speak out against the war in Vietnam.

In 1970, after a 2 ½ year layoff, and with the mood of the country changing, Ali staged his comeback, first against Jerry Quarry in Atlanta then for what was billed as, “The Fight,” his first match against undefeated champ, Joe Frazier at Madison Square Garden on March 8, 1971.

Ali fought valiantly, but lost. The 2 ½ year exile had cost Ali his legs. He could no longer dance. He lost that night in the Garden, but months later he won his biggest fight, the Supreme Court, reversed his conviction and upheld his conscientious objector claim. Ali was free of the specter of jail, and free to travel to box anywhere in the world.

Several matches followed, including an unexpected loss to ex-Marine, Ken Norton; a win in their next bout; an uninspired win against Joe Frazier. But these matches were but window dressing for the biggest match of Ali’s career: The Rumble In the Jungle.

George Foreman was a fearsome champ. He had thunder and destruction in both hands. He had easily knocked out Ken Norton and had lifted Frazier off the mat with one blow.

Promoter Don King got the government of the African nation of Zaire to guarantee the unheard of sum of 10 million dollars for the fighters. In Kinshasa, Ali derived strength from the African people. They adored him. They yelled, Ali Bomaye! (Ali kill him).


Ali and The City

Going into the fight, Ali was 3-1 underdog. His fight doctor, Ferdie Pacheco, had a jet ready to spirit Ali away to a neurological hospital in Spain after the fight. But Ali had other ideas.

Because of the heat, Ali realized he couldn’t dance from Foreman for the whole fight. He invented, “The Rope-A-Dope,” a strategy that allowed Foreman to pound on him until Foreman tired. His corner men yelled at him to get off the ropes, but Ali persisted with his strategy for seven rounds and then in the eighth round, when Foreman was spent, Ali came off the ropes and scored a shocking knockout! Ali was the king again.

After the legendary “Thrilla In Manila,” the rubber match against Frazier, who some have deemed, the greatest boxing match ever, Ali fought and lost to young Olympic Champion Leon Spinks. He subsequently regained his title against Spinks, thus becoming, at that time, the only man in heavyweight history to win the crown three times. Ali ended his career 56 wins (37 by knockout) and 5 defeats.

Ali has three ex-wives and nine children: Maryum, Rasheeda, Jamillah, Hana, Laila, Khaliah, Miya, Muhammad Junior, and Asaad. Ali is married to the former Lonnie Williams of Louisville. Ali has known Lonnie since her family moved across the street from the Clay family when she was 6 years old.

Ali has inspired millions worldwide. He gave people hope and proved that anyone could overcome insurmountable odds. He gave people courage. He made fighters of us all. This is Ali and never comes another.


The Greatnest

Please visit The Muhammad Ali Center – www.alicenter.org


Contributor: Gregory Allen Howard, he is the award-winning screenwriter of Remember the Titans. He also wrote the original story for the movie, ALI.

Feb 152010



Uptown Saturday Night


If you want to ease the minds of film fans about a remake you’re working on, just compare it to Ocean’s 11. That’s what Will Smith did back in 2002 when his production company bought the rights to Sidney Poitier’s Uptown Saturday Night with plans to do an all-star Black update on the 1974 classic that originally paired up Poitier and Bill Cosby. At the time, Smith mentioned casting Eddie Murphy and Martin Lawrence. Eight years later, the remake is in motion again, this time with Smith set to costar with Denzel Washington.

Will Smith


Denzel Washington

In the original, Cosby and Poitier play old buddies who are robbed during a nightclub hold-up and must solve the case in order to get back a winning lottery ticket that’s in Cosby’s wallet. The film also starred Richard Pryor, Harry Belefonte, Flip Wilson and Calvin Lockhart. If Smith’s initial pitch can be continued, let’s hope that these characters are indeed filled with modern African-American stars like the aforementioned Murphy and Lawrence. And while we’re on the topic of casting, It’d be interesting and refreshingly against type to put Smith in the Poitier role and Washington in Cosby’s.

 

Lobby Cards


Warner Bros. and Smith’s Overbrook Entertainment are currently looking for writers to pen a new draft of the film, working from a previous script by Robb and Mark Cullen. And for the moment, director David Dobkin is attached to the remake.

Overbrook also holds the rights to the subsequent Cosby/Poitier pairings Let’s Do It Again and A Piece of the Action. Neither was technically a sequel to Uptown Saturday Night, though the three films are considered a trilogy. My assumption is if the Uptown remake is a hit, they’ll redo the follow-ups as straight sequels involving the same characters.


Lets Do It Again Poster


Piece of the Action

Source: Cinematical

Feb 152010



Star Trek: The Animated Series was aired as the source of new adventures of the Enterprise crew. The series was produced by Filmation and ran for two seasons from 1973 to 1974 on NBC, airing a total of twenty-two half-hour episodes.


The series featured most of the original cast performing the voices for their characters, except for Pavel Chekov (Walter Koenig), who was omitted because the show’s budget could not afford the complete cast. He was replaced by two animated characters who made semi-regular appearances: Lieutenant Arex, whose Edosian species had three arms and three legs; and Lt. M’Ress, a female Caitian. James Doohan and Majel Barrett, besides performing their characters Montgomery Scott and Christine Chapel, performed the voices of Arex and M’Ress, respectively.


Initially, Filmation was only going to use the voices of William Shatner, Lernard NiMoy, DeForest Kelley, James Doohan and Majel Barrett. Doohan and Barrett would also perform the voices of Sulu and Uhura. Leonard Nimoy refused to sign up to lend his voice to the series unless Nichelle Nichols and George Takei were added to the cast — claiming that Uhura and Sulu were of importance as they were proof of the ethnic diversity of the 23rd century and should not be recast. Right On Dr. Spock!!!


The Museun of UnCut Funk is thrilled to have acquired a limition edition cel featuring Lt. Uhura and the entire cast of Star Trek The Animated Series to our ever expanding and extremely rare Black Animation Collection.


star trek

Jan 292010

Soul Train OPC

 

Original Production Cel use to film the opening of Soul Train. This cel is part of the collection of The Museum of UnCut Funk

 

Soul Train OPD

Original Production Drawing used to create the original production cel to Soul Train. This drawing is part of the collection of The Museum of UnCut Funk

 

It was the little show that could. Beginning its ride as a local dance show on Chicago’s WCIU-TV, “Soul Train” chugged its way to Los Angeles and into pop culture history. The syndicated franchise’s impact is chronicled in the 40th-anniversary tribute “Soul Train: The Hippest Trip in America.”

 

Dancers

Narrated by actor Terrence Howard with an original score by the Roots’ Ahmir “?uestlove” Thompson, the 90-minute documentary abounds with performance clips and commentary by former dancers and crew members as well as music executives (Clive Davis, Antonio “L.A.” Reid) and major performers who appeared on “Soul Train,” including Chaka Khan,Snoop Dogg, Aretha Franklin and Sly Stone. At the helm is “Soul Train” creator/producer/host Don Cornelius.

The special, produced by VH1 Rock Docs and Soul Train Holdings, doubles as entertainment and history lesson. The innovative show’s August 17, 1970, debut was bracketed on one side by the civil rights movement and on the other by the emergence of black empowerment.

“This is so much more than a story about a man with a vision for a music dance show,” says Kenard Gibbs, a co-principal in Soul Train Holdings with Peter Griffith and Anthony Maddox. “Had it not been for the social and political forces stirring the pot, the show probably wouldn’t have been as successful. It empowered African-Americans, showing our culture and creativity in a light not seen on TV. This was reality TV at its best.”


Don Cornelius


After its 1971 move to Los Angeles, “Soul Train” spun off award shows as well as a No. 1 R&B/pop hit in 1974, MFSB’s “TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia”). The Gamble & Huff-produced single originally was billed as “The Theme From ‘Soul Train.’”

Cornelius jokes in the documentary that the hit’s title change was his “one mistake.” During a recent phone interview, though, he said his fondest memory is the show’s early validation by major R&B talent.

Gladys Knight & the Pips helped us start out, but we didn’t know where it would go from there. We were just determined to make this happen, feeling it was the right kind of show for this country at the time,” he recalls. “Then one day James Brown walked onto the sound stage. A few months later came the Jackson 5, and then Stevie Wonder. So we’re thinking, ‘OK, this might work.’”

The show later hosted performances by such pop stars as Elton John and David Bowie.


Contributor: Gail Mitchell

Jan 252010

 

 

 

Filmmaker John Sealey began his career making short films for artists and galleries. He studied film practice at the International film school in Newport, South Wales and went on to do an M.A. in European Cinema and PhD in Film Practice at the University of Exeter, where he currently teaches film. John’s practice is grounded in cultural identity and his films interrogate areas of research within Diaspora histories – their function to challenge and create new ways of reception within the formulaic structure of classical narrative cinema.

‘They Call Me…Don’t Call Me…’ was commissioned by David A. Bailey for The  Black Moving Cube Project.

Two enigmatic ‘Diaspora’ characters arrive in Manhattan in search of the residue of Blaxploitation iconography in this experimental docu-drama.

Inspired by the ideas in John Berger’s book ‘Ways of Seeing’, ‘They Call Me, Don’t Call Me’ is also an in-depth study of how we read and understand images.

In the film, the interviewees are shown an image which has something to do with Blaxploitation cinema. The point in which they see the image is their first viewing (they have not been shown anything off-camera) and their initial reactions are captured on camera.

John contacted The Museum Of UnCut Funk and graciously offered to let us share his film with you. So please check it out…Thank you John for being so funky and so righteous…RIGHT ON!!!

Here is some text that was written for an upcoming exhibition that John’s film will be featured in:

Dr John Sealey – University of Exeter
They Call Me…Don’t Call Me… (2006)   DV-Cam, 25min. commissioned by David A. Bailey for ‘The Black Moving Cube Project’ 2006

‘I used to have an afro like that’

Although a great deal has been said, written and visually documented on the subject of the Blaxploitation film, for some, the mere mention of this period in Afro-American cinema history, in today’s context, seems to conjure up a narrative image of a definitive cinematic black cool, as if nothing like it had ever existed before and that everything after it seemed doomed; trapped in a straight jacket of pastiche. The hip iconography of Afros, black leather, super-cool pimps and funky soundtracks is one that the cultural mainstream has taken to its ideological heart. But what of the value of these films beyond their first level of signification and how has meaning disseminated itself over the last thirty-five years since Shaft first pounded the streets of Manhattan?

As a teenager growing up in London in the late seventies, having an Afro wasn’t just about style. For kids like myself whose parents formed part of a major migration from the West Indies in the 50s and 60s, questions of belonging became an important issue, particularly in the face of exclusion based on race and ethnicity. Having an Afro symbolised a means of identification: an identification that acknowledges one’s own cultural background. Thus, to have an Afro was to state a kind of belonging.

But these visual references can also play a different role, one that is part of a system that creates layers to be used as a defence mechanism, or as a source of cultural knowledge with which one can draw from. Stuart Hall takes up this point:

There are at least two different ways of thinking about ‘cultural identity’. The first position defines ‘cultural identity’ in terms of one shared culture, a sort of collective ‘one true self’, hiding inside the many other, more superficial or artificially imposed ‘selves’ which people with a shared history and ancestry hold in common. Within the terms of this definition, our cultural identities reflect the common historical experiences and shared cultural codes which provide us, as ‘one people’, with stable, unchanging and continuous frames of reference and meaning, beneath the shifting divisions and vicissitudes of our actual history. (Hall 2003: 223)

It was this experiential approach that was my initial starting point in developing the drama/documentary, They Call Me…Don’t Call Me…

I wanted to make a film that investigated the residue of Blaxsploitation iconography and in turn comment on structures of meaning; how we perceive or read images. Taking the idea from John Berger (1972) that seeing comes before words, I opted for a filmic structure whereby the context of a particular image was absent, so that the interviewee would be positioned in such a way, that their recall emanated entirely from the memoir of their own visual and aesthetic criteria.

This image recollection concept is also imbedded within the film form, through the 
re-construction of certain shots. The opening zoom as the characters hit the streets comes directly from the opening sequence of Shaft (Gordon Parks 1971)
and the male character as he peers out of the hotel window is a nod towards the famous rifle image of Malcolm X as he attempts to protect his family.

At the same time, the film attempts to address issues of gender within Blaxploitation, using diegetic space to re-evaluate the relationship between the male and female characters: they are in silent communion with each other, sharing the same objectives and actions.

In creating the personas of the two characters, I drew on the unique insights of French filmmaker Robert Bresson in his approach to directing, using the actor as a ‘model’ within a space in which movement or kinetics become integral to the film:

Models who have become automatic (everything weighed, measured, timed, repeated ten, twenty times) and are then dropped in the medium of the events of your film – their relations with the objects and persons around them will be right, because they will not be thought. (Bresson 1986: 32)

I embellish Bresson’s idea of using the actor as a model and automated action-character, to create a prototype ‘model’ that I can successfully apply to the documentary format. In They Call Me…Don’t Call Me…the characters provide a tension which polarizes the generic form; the documentary.

Although in the early stages of the project, I wanted to explore the dichotomy between the politics of transformation (the communal) with the individualist narratives of Shaft, Superfly (Gordon Parks Jr. 1972) and to some extent Sweet Sweetback’s Baad Asssss Song  (Melvin Van Peebles 1971), I felt that I needed to take on a role of active observer in my own film. Yes, I had certain filmic elements under my control; I could choose the shots, approach people to be interviewed and also cut the film with a subjective slant, but as to what the outcome would be, and what the people would say, that seemed out of my control.

‘Ooh, wow. I think that is about people feelin the power…’

Two silent ‘Diasporic’ characters called They Call Me… and Don’t Call Me… arrive in the city of New York in order to search for the spirit of ‘Blaxploitaion Cinema’. To do this they ‘arm’ themselves with images from several of the most recognisable characters from the genre, including Shaft and Foxy Brown (Jack Hill 1974).

Their names offer the first ‘clue’ in their quest:

‘They Call Me…Mr Tibbs’ (In the Heat of the Night – Norman Jewison 1967)

‘Don’t Call Me…Nigger, Whitey’ (Sly and the Family Stone 1969)

They approach subjects (members of the public) in the street, and without speaking, show them pictures – which we, the spectator, do not see. These pictures form or instigate the interview that follows. The subjects then discuss the image and when they are finished the Diasporic character walks away silently, looking for the next subject who is willing to deconstruct the images that the two characters carry around in their pockets. Intermittently throughout the film, we hear an echo voice-over of a woman describing the situation in America today for Afro-Americans. This structure continues throughout until the final interview where a group of women discuss the attributes of Pam Grier in such films as Foxy Brown.

The film ends with the two Diasporic characters inside a car; either retuning from whence they came, or continuing their quest.

An important point to say here is that; all the subjects in the film were initially approached by either myself (the filmmaker) or the cast and crew and then asked to contribute their thoughts on the documentary we were making about Blaxploitation cinema. None of the subjects were shown any images beforehand off-camera as it was felt that by using this method, the subjects would react more instinctively. Once the subject had agreed to be interviewed, we would then go on to explain (sometimes at great length) the procedure or method of the set-up idea; whereby the subject would pretend to be unaware until approached by one of the characters with an image-card.

The idea behind this set-up was the influence of the lucid style and reflexive camera of Haskell Wexler’s Medium Cool (1969).

In this film, Wexler (who, incidentally was Director of Photography on Norman Jewison’s In the Heat of the Night) blurs generic or traditional distinctions between drama and documentary, appropriating a style akin to cinema vérité by placing his ‘actors’ in ‘real’ situations and recording the resulting drama.

Shot frenetically over two jetlagged days in Manhattan in August 2005, the film draws its energy from its mode of production in the same way as the production of Sweet Sweetback…

In Van Peebles’ film, the aesthetic is born from the coupling of cinematic revolutionary ideas alongside budgetary restrictions. The vivid and elliptical montage sequences produced when we see the protagonist on the run is a good example of a filmmaker harnessing the moment – the inter-thought or feelings that surround the moment of filming.

Like Sweetback, the characters in They Call Me…Don’t Call Me…  are on a journey as they ‘trace’ the footsteps of Shaft through the Manhattan community, looking for answers to questions which can only come from the subjects that they confront.

The familiar quest narrative is one that is used time and again in Blaxploitation and lends itself perfectly to They Call Me…Don’t call Me… as the two characters walk the streets of Manhattan, ready to produce their images for public investigation.

The question is; are they chasing a memory, or exploring a dream?
——————–

 


Jan 092010

 

 

 

Tiger Woods



A Baad Asssss Blasian Is Coming Back To Collect His Dues….




For all the brothers and sisters who dig Blaxploitation films, have seen the original Sweet Sweetback’s film, and can see the similarities between Sweetback, the sex performer and Tiger Woods, the sex addict, as the Curator of The Museum of UnCut Funk I just could not resist…



sweet_sweetbacks_baadasssss_song



Synopsis: Produced, directed, written and scored by Sista ToFunky, this landmark Blasian film is as controversial as it is popular for its X-rated story of one bad ass Blasian brother’s triumph over The Man. After beating a couple of white golfers, he witnessed their brutalization of a little white ball because they were pissed they got their asses kicked by a Blasian. Fearing he would be framed for this brutalization, Tiger the sex addict goes on the run. As he flees from his fabulous life of fame and fortune, Tiger demonstrates his sexual prowess and insatiable appetite for ruff and wild sex by taping the asses of the willing and able. After a violent Thanksgiving holiday car crash, Tiger evades his Swedish wife, his celebrity Black friends who screw white women, the press and the paparazzi. The Tiger hunt is intensified when he runs off into the sunset to find his swagger (or a condom or another blond), while his agent, Mark Steinberg warns that his story ain’t over.



Tiger Woods


There’s a bad ass Blasian coming for your ass, your daughter’s ass, your wife’s ass and as a matter of fact any other ass that crosses his path.

 

Coming soon to a theater near you.

 




Dec 202009

 

 

Champale

 

 

What??? Looks like champagne, pours like champagne, tastes like champagne! But it cost PENNIES more than beer! Yeah right! This ad was straight from Madison Ave…or maybe Harlem…Ad executives went further to suggest that Champale would taste better served in a stemmed glass. LOL!!! Well, actually it did if you were around during the 1970’s.


 

Champale


In the 1970’s, Pink and Sparkling Champale was an integral part of pop culture and a major hit in the Black community. It was my drink of choice at an age when I shouldn’t have been drinkin’. Decades later, even JayZ, Ghostface and the Beastie Boys added a line or two about Pink Champale in their lyrics.


“Grandma dressed me, plus she fed me banana puddin’, what’s in the hood then Puffin on L’s, drinkin’ pink champelle.” Jay Z – Mama Loves Me – The Blueprint

“Begosh all that Oshkosh jumpers / Pink Champale, brown paper bags, wall to wall bumpers.” Ghostface Killah – Wu-Tang’s Careful Click Click

“I got class like pink Champale.” The Beastie Boys -Ch-Check It Out – To The 5 Boroughs.


What was so cool and hip about Sparkling Champale and Pink Champale was the ads. The ads that ran in Ebony magazine were sexy and featured sexy looking Black folks drinking this malt liquor. You thought it was Champagne and you had to have some because it was cheap.

The Museum of UnCut Funk found a number of the original ads that ran in Ebony magazine.


 

Pink Champalw

 

 

 

Pink Champale

 

Pink Champale

 

 

 

Champale

 

 

 

Champale

 

 

 

Champale

 

 

 

Champale

 

 

 

Champale

 

 

 

 

 

Oct 052009



Torchy  Brown Panel


Jackie OrmesTorchy Brown first appeared in the Pittsburgh Courier in the 1937-38 comic strip Dixie to Harlem, drawn by the first Black Female Cartoonist, Jackie Ormes. Torchy Brown was later syndicated around the country until it’s end in 1940. The strip was resurrected in the 1950’s as Torchy and the Heartbeats. Since then, Torchy Brown, the feisty and independent singer and dancer has appeared in her own TPB and several hardcover tributes to her creator, Jackie Ormes.

 

The emergence of Torchy Brown marked the first appearance of an independent Black woman in a nationally syndicated comic strip. Torchy BrownTorchy’s self-reliance drove her to leave her Mississippi home at an early age and pursue her dreams of performing on stage, ultimately becoming a staple act at Harlem’s Cotton Club. Torchy Brown’s creator, Jackie Ormes is also the creator of ‘Patty-Jo ‘n’ Ginger’.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Torchy BrownTorchy Brown was made into a popular paper doll in 1947. In keeping with Torchy Brown’s forward-thinking themes, the character often tackled hot-button issues like racism, pollution and social injustice in a comedic and approachable way. Because Torchy’s syndication was largely limited to papers with circulation extended only to Black constituents, the character has only recently gained long overdue widespread attention.Torchy Brown Nurse

 

 

 

About the Cartoonist:

 


Zelda StripZelda Jackson “Jackie” Ormes, by most accounts, became the first nationally syndicated Black woman cartoonist in 1937. The “Touchy Brown” series first appeared in the Black-owned Pittsburgh Courier in 1937, and eventually appeared in fourteen syndicated newspapers. Ormes’s strips depicted Blacks in a very different fashion which was not the norm of her day.

 

Typically Blacks were shown as servants or exaggerated caricatures of the “Buckwheat” or “Steppin Fetchit” variety. In contrast, Ormes’s female characters were independent and strong.  Jackie Ormes said “I have never liked dreamy little women who can’t hold their own”.


Torchy Brown Close Up

Jackie Ormes The Book

Book CoverJackie Ormes: The First Black Woman Cartoonist chronicles the life of a multiply talented woman who became a successful cartoonist. Ormes’s cartoon characters–Torchy Brown, Candy, Patty-Jo, and Ginger–delighted readers of Black newspapers such as the Chicago Defender and Pittsburgh Courier between 1937-56. This biography provides an invaluable glimpse into the history and culture of that era. As a member of Chicago’s Black elite, Ormes’s social circle included leading political figures and entertainers of the day. People who knew her say that she modeled some cartoon characters after herself as beautifully dressed and coiffed females, appearing and speaking out in ways that defied stereotyped images of Blacks in the mainstream press. Ormes’s politics, which fell decidedly to the left and were apparent to even a casual reader of her cartoons and comics, eventually led to her investigation by the FBI during the McCarthy era. In the late 1940s, Ormes transformed cartoon character Patty-Jo into a doll that is now a collector’s item.


Source: Comic Vine and JackieOrmes.com

 

 


Sep 062009




The Museum of UnCut Funk pays homage to Valerie Smith the lone Black character from the 1970’s hit Josie and the Pussy Cats cartoon. Ms Smith character was voiced by Barbara Pariot and Patrice Holloway for the singing voice.

 

 

Title Card

“Josie and the Pussycats!

Long tails — and ears for hats!

Guitars in sharps and flats!

Neat, sweet, a groovy song! You’re invited, come along!”

 

 

Josie Pussy Cats Logo

Josie and the Pussycats was produced for Saturday moring television by Hanna-Barbera Productions, airing on CBS. The series started its life in 1970 as an all-female counterpart to the Archies, and in 1972 was re-conceptualized as Josie and the Pussycats in Outer Space. The Pussycats finished their television run in 1976.


Josie and the Pussycats featured an all-girl pop music  band that toured the world with their entourage, getting mixed up in strange adventures, spy capers, and mysteries. On the small-screen, the group consisted of Josie (the leader and lead singer), Valerie (the intelligent black member) and Melody (the air-headed blond drummer). Other characters included their agent Alexander, his sister Alexandra, her cat Sebastian, and hunky roadie Alan M.

 


Josie Pussy Cats StillThe show, more similar to Hanna-Barbera’s Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! rather than the original Josie comic book, is famous for its music, the girls’ leopard print leotards (replete with “long tails and ears for hats,” as the theme song states), and for featuring the first regularly appearing female character in a Saturday morning cartoon show. Each episode invariably featured a Pussycat song played over a chase scenes which featured the group acting like animated Monkees, running after and from a selection of haplessly villainous characters.

The Museum of UnCut Funk has acquired the original production cels of Valerie Smith and Sebastian from the animated series.

Val

 

 

Sebastian


Source: The Trades and Wikipedia

 

 

 

 


Aug 212009




Hungry Jerk


Wacky Packages BookWacky Packages are a series of trading cards featuring parodies of North American consumer products. The cards were produced by the Topps Company beginning in 1967, usually in a sticker format. The original series sold for two years, and the concept proved popular enough that it has been revived every few years since. Per trader legend, at one time they outsold Topps baseball cards.

crust2Relying on the talents of such comics artists as Kim Deitch, George Evans, Drew Friedman, Bill Griffith, Jay Lynch, Norman Saunders, Art Spiegelman, Bob Stewart and Tom Sutton, the cards spoofed well-known brands and packaging, such as “Crust” (instead of Crest) toothpaste, “Blisterine” (instead of Listerine), and “Neveready” batteries (for Eveready Industries batteries). The initial series was followed by a somewhat different Wacky Ads line in 1969, featuring gags and roughs by Lynch and Deitch with finished paintings by Sutton. These cards were designed more like miniature billboards with a die-cut around the parodied product, so it could pop out of the horizontal billboard scene.

Never ReadyWacky Packages returned in 1973 for a highly successful run. They continued until 1977 through a total of 16 series. Some cards were sold in reprinted editions beginning in 1979 to 1980.

Newly designed series were produced in 1985 and 1991, but these strayed from the original concept and were not as successful. A new series of stickers was released in 2004, and continued into a sixth set in 2007. These series have been very successful with the return of cartoonist Jay Lynch, plus newcomers Dave Gross, Strephon Taylor and Neil Camera. This series also marks a return to the use of underground comix artists including M. Wartella. In 2007, Topps released its series 5 and 6 in the Wacky Package Series.

In February 2008, Topps released a series of Wacky Packages called Flashbacks. This series contained artwork from previously released cards as well as unreleased artwork to make a set of 72 base cards. Moving towards the trend with other types of trading cards, this set also featured a number of rare chase cards.

SkimpyOne unreleased design, by John Pound for the 1985 series, spawned the Garbage Pail Kids trading card series.

In 2009, Topps will release a new series called “Wacky Packages Old School”. Designed and painted by David Gross, the set will feature 33 all new parodies of vintage 1970s products. Many extras will be included in every box, such as a Jay Lynch sketch card, giant 5×7 stickers, a mini promo sticker and more. The stickers, puzzle checklists, packs and display box are all designed to have the original 1970s look and feel.

Sources: Wacky-Packages.com, Wackypackages.org .The Wacky Packages Official Site and Wikipedia.

 

 

 

 

 


Quacker Oats

 

 


Mrs Klean

 

 


Hostage

 

Chock Full Of Nuts And Bolts

 

Aug 212009

 
For a short time in the early 1970’s, Crazy magazine, a competitor of Mad and Cracked magazines was published by Marvel Comics. In 1973, Crazy released a parody of Shaft, called Shafted. During this period Crazy magazine payed tribute to many Black celebrities in the area of film, music and television. After the 1970’s, Crazy Magazine sadly went away from the funky and focussed more on urban crap. True comic and blaxploitation fans will have at least one issue of Crazy Magazine in their collection.

The Museum of UnCut Funk Collection includes Crazy Magazine issues #4 and #48.



Crazy Magazine #2 – 1973

James Bond parody of Live and Let Die.


Crazy Magazine #2


Crazy Magazine #4 – 1973

Richard Roundtree parody of Shaft.


Crazy Magazine #4


Crazy Magazine # 26 – 1977

A cast of TV characters that features Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs of Welcome Back Koter and Redd Foxx of Sanford and Son.


Crazy Magazine #26

 

Crazy Magazine # 29 – 1977

A cast of Welcome Back Kotter with Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs aka Freddie Boom Boom Washington. A true cult classic.

 

Crazy Magazine #29



Crazy Magazine #48 – 1978

Ease on down the road with Michael Jackon, Diana Ross, Nipsey Russell and Ted Ross. For the Michael Jackson fan looking for something a little different and special to add to their collection this might be it.


Crazy Magazine #48



Aug 022009


Franklin


Good grief! Franklin’s 41!!!


It happened on a beach on July 31, 1968.

Charlie Brown Comic 1

The white boy’s little sister threw his beach ball into the water. The Black boy who was swimming retrieved the ball and took it back to him. The white boy thanked the Black boy, and that was how Charlie Brown met Franklin in “Peanuts.”


Charlie Brown Franklin Comic 1

With that appearance, Franklin became the first Black person in Charles Schulz’s magnificent comic strip.

Charlie Brown Franklin Comic 2

HAPPY 41ST FRANKLIN!

Franklin 1Had Charlie truly been a blockhead, when Franklin brought him his ball, he could have said something stupid like, “Good grief! I didn’t know you people could swim.” Instead, future strips show Franklin and Charlie playing ball.

Franklin was never as big a star as Linus, Lucy, Snoopy, Schroeder or Pigpen. He didn’t have a last name and wouldn’t even win a contest for best Afro among the “Peanuts” characters.

But as the first Black in the most successful comic strip of all time, Franklin is the greatest Black cartoon figure in American history. Even though it was the end of the racially charged 1960s when Schulz introduced Franklin, the cartoonist wasn’t attempting any kind of political statement, and Franklin being darker than his friends was never something commented on in the strip. Franklin’s debut and the appearance a few months later of The Jackson 5, fronted by the otherworldly talented Michael Jackson, was a wonderful representation of Black adolescents. Franklin proved to be wise and dignified and has never done anything he should have to apologize for except for the strange dance he did with the other kids in, “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”


Franklin Dyptych - Cel Close Up

Like Charlie, he’s close to his grandfather and, like Linus, he quotes the Old Testament. His father was in Vietnam and, most of all, Franklin has a good heart. Nowhere was that more evident than in a 1969 strip in which Peppermint Patty cries because of shoes she’s required to wear to school. Franklin says, “All I know is any rule that makes a little girl cry has to be a bad rule.”

So here’s to a comic strip trailblazer, a thoughtful and decent lad who loves his grandfather, is loyal to his friends and never made any little girls cry.

You’re a good man, Franklin.

Source: By CARY CLACK


The Original Production Cel of Franklin drumming is a part of The Museum Of UnCut Funk Collection.




Aug 022009


I Am Curious Large


lois lane 106 LargeI am Curious (Black)” is the first Superman’s Girlfriend story.

Lois Lane is sent to get a story in Metropolis’s “Little Africa” but is unable to get anyone to talk to her. Little children run away from her and adults shut doors in her face. One old lady will talk to her, but only because she is blind and doesn’t realize Lois is white. She draws the particular ire of a fiery orator who uses her as an example of the enemy “whitey.”

Frustrated, Lois convinces Superman to take her to his Fortress of Solitude and use the Kryptonian Transformoflux on her to turn her Black for twenty four hours.

Back in Metropolis, her usual cabby won’t stop for her because she’s Black. She has to take the subway but is convinced that everybody is staring at her because of her skin color.

This time in Little Africa, people are happy to talk with her and help her. She meets Dave Stevens, the same firebrand she encountered before, but this time because she is Black he talks to her and even hits on her. He sees some kids run into an alley to buy drugs and runs after them. He interrupts the drug deal but is shot by a pair of gangsters straight out of Guys and Dolls.

 


 

 

 

 

 

lois106_1 Large

 

lois106_2 Large


Superman, who was conveniently nearby keeping an eye on Lois, swoops in and takes them both to the nearest hospital. The doctor there informs Superman that the patient is fading and needs a blood transfusion.


It’s understandable that small hospitals would not be able to carry every blood type because it is very expensive to buy and store blood. However, blood type O-negative is the “universal donor” and in a hospital limited to only a few types of blood, O-negative would be the one blood type they would definitely stock.

What’s with Superman? He’s donated blood before countless times, usually to Lois or Lana. It’s been established in the past that his blood is compatible with every blood type, and he’s been able to “rip open” his skin even though needles don’t work. Is this simply a continuity error for the sake of plot or is Superman a closet racist? (We can assume it’s the former since Lois doesn’t bat an eye at Superman’s statements.)

 


lois106_3 Large

 

Previously, we learned from Superman #125 that Lois has a “very rare blood type”, yet this comic tells us that she has blood type O-negative. Seven percent of the U.S population is type O-negative, the most of any negative blood type, so while it may not be common it’s certainly not “very rare.” Common blood types vary quite a bit across the world, so what is common in the US is not necessarily common in other areas. Given the globalization of today’s world, this is slowly changing as populations mix.

At the end of the story, Stevens realizes that Lois was white and yet donated blood to save his life. He smiles at her and they shake hands.

So here we have another “blood transfusion redeems racist” storyline. This story is a bit schizophrenic though. The individual racist — in this case a Black man — is redeemed. However the societal prejudice against blacks — the supposed point of the entire story — is glossed over and barely mentioned.

Lois does confront Superman about whether he would ever marry a Black woman, but he never has the chance to answer fully. Dave Stevens is a complex character as he is both a racist and the best hope for his neighborhood. Still, I felt that the ending went for the easy way out and missed the big picture.

Source: Polite Dissent

The I Am Curious Comic is a part of The Museum of UnCut Funk Collection.


 


Jul 242009




I get my thing in action (Verb!)

To be, to sing, to feel, to live (Verb!)

That’s what’s happenin’

I put my heart in action (Verb!)
To run, to go, to get, to give (
Verb!)
(
You’re what’s happenin’)

That’s where I find satisfaction, yeah! (Yeah!)
To search, to find, to have, to hold
(
Verb! To be bold)
When I use my imagination (
Verb!)
I think, I plot, I plan, I dream
Turning in towards creation (
Verb!)
I make, I write, I dance, I sing
When I’m feeling really active (
Verb!)
I run, I ride, I swim, I fly!
Other times when life is easy
(
Oh!) I rest, I sleep, I sit, I lie.

(Verb! That’s what’s happenin’)
I can take a noun and bend it,
Give me a noun -
(
Bat, ball, rake, and plow)
Make it a verb and really send it!
(
Show me how)
Oh, I don’t know my own power. (
Verb!)

I get my thing in action (Verb!)
In being, (
Verb!) In doing, (Verb!)
In saying

A verb expresses action, being, or state of being.

A verb makes a statement.

Yeah, a verb tells it like it is!

(Verb! That’s what’s happenin’.)
I can tell you when it’s happenin’,
(
Past, present, future tense)
Ooh! Tell you more about what’s happenin’,
(
Say it so it makes some sense)
I can tell you who is happenin’!
(
Verb, you’re so intense)
Every sentence has a subject.
(
Noun, person, place, or thing)
Find that subject: Where’s the action?
(
Verb can make a subject sing)
Take the subject: What is it? (
What!)
What’s done to it? (
What!)
What does it say?

(Verb, you’re what’s happenin’)

I can question like: What is it?
(
Verb, you’re so demanding.)
I can order like: Go get it!
(
Verb, you’re so commanding.)
When I hit I need an object
(
Verb, hit! Hit the ball!)
When I see, I see the object
(
Do you see that furthest wall?)

If you can see it there, put the ball over the fence, man!
Go ahead. Yeah, alright.
What?! He hit it. It’s going, it’s going, it’s gone!

(
What!)

I get my thing in action.
(
Verb, that’s what’s happenin’)
To work, (
Verb!)
To play, (
Verb!)
To live, (
Verb!)
To love… (
Verb!…)

Verb OPC - Close Up 2

Schoolhouse Rock!: The History

Verb OPD 5Schoolhouse Rock! is a series of animated musical educational short films that aired during the Saturday morning children’s programming on the U.S. television network ABC. The topics covered included grammar, science, economics, history, mathematics and civics. The series produced original episodes between 1973 and 1986, with a return in 1993 and new episodes airing at least once a year between then and 1996, when production of the series for ABC was halted. Episodes continued to air for an additional five years after that, finally coming to an end after a 26-year run cancellation in 1999 by ABC.

Verb OPC 1Schoolhouse Rock! began as a commercial advertising venture by David McCall. The idea came to McCall when he noticed one of his sons, who was having trouble in school remembering the multiplication tables, knew the lyrics to many current rock songs. The first song recorded was “Three is a Magic Number,” written by Bob Dorough. It tested well, so a children’s record was compiled and released. Tom Yohe listened to the first song, and began to doodle pictures to go with the lyrics. He told McCall that the songs would make good animation.


Verb OPC - Close Up 3When a print workbook version fell through, McCall’s company decided to produce their own animated versions of the songs, which they then sold to ABC (which already was McCall’s company’s biggest advertising account) based on a demo animation of the original “Three Is A Magic Number” for its Saturday morning lineup. They pitched their idea to Michael Eisner, then vice-president of ABC’s children’s programming division. Eisner brought longtime Warner Brothers cartoonist/director Chuck Jones to the meeting to also listen to the presentation.

The network’s children’s programming division had producers of its regular 30- and 60-minute programs cut three minutes out of each of their shows, and sold General Foods on the idea of sponsoring the segments. The series stayed on the air for 12 years. Later sponsors of the Schoolhouse Rock! segments included Nabisco, General Foods, Kenner Toys, Kelloggs’s and McDonalds.

The last of the original series were four segments about the then-novel personal computer technology. The shorts featured two characters by the name of Scooter Computer and Mister Chips, and so these were the only episodes in the series to feature any recurring characters.

A 1987 production of the series for VHS tape featured Cloris Leachman opening the collection and some songs with child dancers and singers but “Three Ring Government,” “The Good Eleven” and “Little Twelve Toes” were not included on the videos.

In the 1990s, the team reunited to produce Money Rock and two more Grammar Rock segments (”Busy Prepositions” and “The Tale of Mr. Morton”).

In 2002, the team once again reunited to produce a new song, “I’m Gonna Send Your Vote To College” for the release of the 30th Anniversary DVD. For the new song, Tom Yohe Jr. took over as lead designer for his father Yohe Sr., who had died in 2000. Another contemporary song, called “Presidential Minute”, which explained the process of electing the President of the United States. in greater detail, was included on the 2008 DVD “Schoolhouse Rock! Election Collection”, which centered on songs relating to American history and government.

In 2009, the team produced eleven new environmentally-themed songs for the DVD “Schoolhouse Rock!: Earth “.

In keeping with our mission to “Preserve the Funk” and bring global awareness to collecting Black animation, The Museum of UnCut Funk has acquired the original productions cels and drawings featured in this blog entry from the Schoolhouse Rock! animated series.




Jun 012009



Superman’s Greatest Opponent: Muhammad Ali

SVA4

Superman has had a tumultuous superhero career since his debut in 1938. He has been forced to walk the Earth as the boring Clark Kent and suffered the stress of battling villains like Lex Luthor and Braniac. In 1992, he was even killed by another foe, Doomsday, before returning a year later.


aliteaserPrior to his death, the only other person to best the Man of Steel was the Greatest himself in D.C. Comics’ Superman vs. Muhammad Ali, released in 1978.

There are many rumors surrounding the creation of this comic, which pits Superman and Ali in a boxing match to save the world. One is that it was inspired by Johnny Wakelin’s Billboard Top 40 hit, Muhammad Ali, the Black Superman. Another is that D.C. Comics wanted to capitalize on the success of science fiction blockbusters like Star Wars and Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

However, D.C. comics has never acknowledged that Wakelin’s song was the inspiration, and Neil Adams, one of the comic’s creator, said planning stagesSVA32began in 1976, a year before both movies were released. In an interview with Comic Book Artist in 1999, Adams said, “Certainly, when I heard it, I thought it was a great idea. I mean, just the concept… yet, at the same time, the logical question is, ‘How do you have a human being fight an alien – Superman – and how do you justify such a battle?’”

Writer Denny O’Neil was the first person tasked with finding an answer. He wrote the original script for the 72-page comic book. Artist Joe Kubert was responsible for the drawings, but both D.C. Comics and Ali’s handlers were not pleased with the Greatest’s artistic depiction. Adams was then brought in.

“They were happy with my likenesses,” said Adams, “and basically, that was the turning point, and the reason I got the project.”

Before he could go to work, Adams and the other creators had to be approved, not by D.C. Comics or Ali, but by Nation of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad. After Ali’s convergence to Islam, much of the literature about him, including his 1975 autobiography, had to be sanctioned by Muhammad.

SVA 8“And there was really only one way we could be approved of by him,” said Adams, “and that was for us to get on a plane, go to Chicago, be driven by limousine to the home of Elijah Muhammad.”

Adams said that O’Neil and he sat in Muhammad’s elegant, Turkish-like parlor waiting.

“And Elijah Muhammad came out, said hello, got into a phone call, was called away, and left. And we were excused!”

One of Kubert’s drawings that Adams built upon was the cover, which features Ali and Superman battling in front of an immense crowd. Adams took it a step further and filled it with superheroes and 1970s celebrities. The onlookers include Batman, Don King, Jimmy Carter, Lucille Ball, and Adams himself. There would have been more but many declined to appear on the cover.

ticket-1“John Wayne decided he didn’t want to be in it, but I’d already drawn him,” said Adams. “So I decided, ‘I don’t want to take him out, but on the other hand, I don’t want everybody to know it’s John Wayne.’ So we put a mustache on him.”

Because of all the changes, the detail, and the required approval by both Ali’s camp and D.C. Comics, Superman vs. Muhammad Ali took longer than a normal comic for a release.

SVA17 small“My agreement with DC Comics was that I couldn’t commit to a deadline,” said Adams, “and it was agreed it would be done when it was done. That was the agreement – the full measure of the agreement – and it took a year to get the thing done! If there was a deadline, certainly the book would’ve been pulled long before the year went by.”

The comic begins with the alien Scrubb from the planet Bodace threatening to destroy Earth unless it sends its greatest fighter to face Bodace’s champion, Hun’Ya. Since Ali and Superman are the planet’s finest warriors, they both agree to a boxing match to determine who gets the honor. In fairness, Superman will fight near a red sun, diminishing his powers, and Ali will teach Superman to box.

When the two face-off, Superman gets through the first round with ease. In round two, things go downhill as Ali’s superior boxing skills overtake the Man of Steel. The fight ends with a bloodied Superman on the canvas, and he returns to Earth in an oxygen tent.

SVA13An armada of spaceships heads towards Earth as Ali prepares for Hun’Ya. It is clear that the Scrubb have broken their word. During the fight’s introductions, Ali’s corner poet Drew “Bundini” Brown slips away from the crowd and makes his way to the bridge of the lead ship. Once there, he removes his mask, revealing that he is actually Superman and prevents the Scrubb from destroying Earth.

Meanwhile, Ali gets off to a poor start with Hun’Ya, but true to form, is able to overcome his opponent in the later rounds. At end of the comic, the two congratulate other, with Ali, saying, “Superman, we are the greatest!”

 

page27


SVA22

 

SVA24

 

SVA39

 

The plot is a bit silly, as is the case with superhero and athlete comic book crossovers. The release was mistimed as well. At the time of its inception, Ali was the heavyweight champion coming of a landmark victory against Joe Frazier. By the time of the release, he had lost his title to Leon Spinks and was preparing for a rematch.

SVA34

 


Nevertheless, the popularity of both fighters led to high sales worldwide. The comic has since become a collectible. Originally selling for $2.50 in 1978, the comic is now valued at $80 by Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide.

And while it seems outlandish by today’s standards, Superman vs. Muhammad Ali was not a misfire. The Man of Steel would probably rather box Ali 100 times before attaching his name to a project like the Broadway musical, It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, It’s Superman, again. The comic also gained Adams a great deal of recognition, as he was asked to contribute art for ESPN Magazine’s millennium edition.

“There are some people out there who’ve seen it (Superman vs. Muhammad Ali), and have a certain amount of respect for it,” said Adams. “One wonders why DC Comics hasn’t reprinted that book, or in some way, promoted it.”

The Superman vs. Muhammad Ali Comic is a part of The Museum Of UnCut Funk Collection.

Source: Aaron Tallent


Apr 232009


Harlem Globetrotters Board Game

 

 

1971 The Harlem Globetrotters Board Game by Milton Bradley


Harlem Globetrotters Board Game 2The Harlem Globetrotters board game is based on the world famous ballers who gradually worked comic routines into their act until they became known more for entertainment than sports.

The game board features the animated faces of the team members who starred in the Go-Go Globetrotters Saturday morning cartoon that ran from 1970 – 1972; “Meadowlark” Lemon, “Curly” Neal, “Geese” Ausbie, Bobby Joe Mason, “Gip” Gipson and Pablo Robertson.

The object of The Harlem Globetrotters board game is to score points by collecting basketball cards. The person who scores the most baskets wins.

Harlem Globetrotters Nintendo DS GameIn 2006, The Harlem Globetrotters were made into a video game for the Nintendo DS – The Harlem Globetrotters World Tour.

1973 Fat Albert Board Game by Milton Bradley


Fat Albert Board Game 2The Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids board game is based on The Fat Albert Saturday morning cartoon that ran from 1972 – 1984.

The game includes cut out pieces of Bill, Fat Albert, Mushmouth and Russell. All eight characters are pictured on the playing cards.

The object of The Fat Albert board game is to get the gang together by collecting each of their cards.


Fat Albert Game

1974 Jackson 5ive Board Game by Shinda Toys


Jackson Five Board Game 1The Jackson 5ive Action Game is a card game based on The Jackson 5ive Saturday morning cartoon that ran from 1971 – 1973.

The game cards feature the animated faces of the five brothers, Michael, Marlon, Jermaine, Tito and Jackie, plus one card that shows the entire group.

 

 

 

 

 

Jackson Five Board Game 2

1984 The A Team Board Game by Parker Brothers

A Team Board Game 1

This A Team board game is based on the popular prime time TV action series that ran from 1983 – 1986 and featured Mr. T., or Bosco “B.A.” Barakus as he was known on the show. (B.A. is short for Bad Attitude).

The premise of this game is that a top secret formula for a famous soft drink has been stolen by a crafty madman and his evil band. They are holding it for ransom at the island fortress from which they operate.

The internationally-renowned company that owns the formula has hired The A-Team to go into the fortress and retrieve it before the public – and Wall Street – find out about it!

The madman knows that The A-Team is on to him so he has set up a deadly game which they must play once inside the fortress.

Dressed in outfits to look like fortress guards, The A-Team members must work alone to find the formula. But Hannibal is crafty, too. He has sent B.A. in ahead of the others to infiltrate. B.A. knows “where it’s at” and he is there to help you in your mission.

So what this means is that the game that prominently features B.A. on the outside and inside of the box has no B.A. game piece. So you can’t “be the Black character”, which you know you would want to do if you owned this game. Instead, B.A.’s face is incorporated into the game cards and on the game board! Just another evil conspiracy of the man!!!

The player that gets the secret formula out of the fortress wins.


A-Team Game Board 1

BA Game Piece 1

BA Game Piece 2

BA Game Board Space


Apr 142009

 

 


Fat Albert Lunch Box 1

 


Remember when getting ready for the new school year included picking out a shiny new metal lunch box? Starting in 1951, the lunch box became a must have school accessory, a cool way to let everyone know what your favorite new TV show was. The reign of metal lunch box ended in 1986 when the industry went plastic, influenced by soft packaging technology and a ruling by the Florida legislature that they were “lethal weapons.”

 

Julia Lunch Box

Late to the game, lunch boxes with Black characters did not appear until the Julia lunch box. Julia, starring Diahann Carol in the title role, premiered on television in 1968. The series offered a different view of family life with a Black single working mother and her son. King Seeley (The Thermos Company) produced the Julia metal lunchbox with matching steel thermos in 1969.

 

Harlem Globetrotters Lunch Box

 

The Harlem Globetrotters dominated the 1970’s. They had a cartoon series, a pinball game and even made it onto Gilligan’s Island. They also played basketball. In 1971, one year after the premiere of the first Globetrotters Saturday morning show, King Seeley released a metal lunchbox with matching steel thermos.

 

Fat Albert Lunch Box 2

The Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids cartoon premiered on Saturday mornings in 1972 and ran for more than ten years. In 1973, King Seeley produced the Fat Albert metal lunchbox with matching plastic thermos. It was the first lunchbox ever to have exclusively Black characters pictured in the artwork.

 

 

The A Team Lunch Box

It took two years after the first airing of The A-Team and Mr. T, before King Seeley released this metal lunchbox with plastic matching thermos in 1985.

All of these lunch boxes are highly collectible.

 

 

 

 


Feb 052009

 

 

Jackson 5ive


One thing that was really cool about the 70’s was the fact that there were Black cartoons on TV. I love cartoons and every Saturday morning you would find me right in front of the tube watching Fat Albert and The Cosby Kids, The Go Go Globetrotters and my favorite, The Jackson 5ive.

Years later I would meet someone who hipped me to collecting the original animation cels that were actually used under the camera to create these cartoons. As cartoons today are computer generated, hand drawn and painted animation cels are rare and represent a lost art form. I now have a very funky collection of original and limited edition Black animation art from all of my favorite cartoons.

The Jackson 5ive Cartoon Facts

The Jackson 5ive was a Saturday morning cartoon  based upon the careers of the popular Motown recording group, which premiered on ABC on September 11, 1971 and ran through September 13, 1973. The series was produced by Rankin / Bass and was animated mainly in London at the studios of Halas and Batchelor. Some of the animation was done at Estudios Moro, Barcelona Spain. The director was Spanish American Robert Balser.

The show featured all five Jackson brothers: Michael, Marlon, Tito, Jermaine and Jackie. Other than appearing in the introduction, the actual Jackson brothers themselves were unable to contribute to the show in any way due to scheduling conflicts. Only their music was used. During the music montages, a clipping of the Jackson 5 appearing in concert would air occasionally to blend in with the cartoon. Though Berry Gordy did not provide the original voice, his character was frequently involved as the “adult figure” to the group. R&B / Pop singer Diana Ross contributed to voice her fictionalized self.

Each episode revolved around wacky misadventures the group encountered while traveling around the country. Michael was usually the focal point of the stories. In the cartoon he had a pet snake named Rosie and two mice named Ray and Charles.

Each episode featured two musical numbers. A specially recorded medley of the groups three #1 hits – “I Want You Back”, “The Love You Save”, and “ABC” – served as the show’s theme song.

There were 21 episodes that aired in 1971. In the second year, the show consisted primarily of reruns.

All Episodes:

Season 1


“It All Started With…”
“Pinestock U.S.A.”
“Drafted”
“Mistaken Identity”
“Bongo Baby Bongo”
“Winner’s Circle”
“Cinderjackson”
“The Tiny Five”
“The Groovatron”
“Ray and Charles: Superstars”
“The Wizard of Soul”
“Jackson Island”
“Farmer Jackson”
“The Michael Look”
“Jackson Street, U.S.A.”
“Rasho Jackson”
“The Rare Pearl”
“Who’s Hoozis”
“Moe White”
“Groove the Chief”
“Michael in Wonderland”
“Jackson and the Beanstalk”
“The Opening Act”


Season 2 (billed as The New Jackson 5ive Show)

“Who’s Hoozis?”

“Michael White”

“Groove To The Chief”

“Michael In Wonderland”

“Jackson and The Beanstalk”

“The Opening Act”


Like most animated comedies of the time,
The Jackson 5ive contained a laugh track. However, the chuckles were not edited onto the soundtrack smoothly. More than likely, Rankin / Bass did the editing themselves as a cost-saving measure (a la Hanna-Barbera), recycling about 10 to 12 different guffaws. It was less expensive to add the laughs themselves instead of hiring Charley Douglass’s company, who added the giggles to all the major network shows. Interestingly, Rankin / Bass “limited” chuckles were actually culled from the same tapes Douglass used.

The Animation Art

Original 12 Field Cels and Backgrounds


J5 Dance Sequence Unframed 2

Jackson Five Unframed 2


Some collectors of animation cels prefer original production cels. These one-of-a-kind pieces are the building blocks of traditional animation and can be extremely rare and valuable, depending on a variety of factors including age, origin, artist and condition. Production cels sometimes come with original production art (a pencil drawing by the artist). Original production art can be sold with the production cel or by itself.

Original Production Cel and Drawing

Michael Jackson Unframed 3



The Jackson 5ive cels are extremely rare and can be expensive. There are no limited productions cels or serigraphs for this cartoon.

These cels are a part of The Museum of UnCut Funk Collection.


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