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 Texas : Features : Columns : "Letters from Central Texas"

Roy Crane and Captain Easy

by Clay Coppedge
Clay Coppedge columns & bio
That Roy Crane would end up in the funny papers did not seem pre-ordained when he was a boy growing up in Sweetwater. He might have been pegged as a whiz kid with an artistic soul who would contributes to the art world in some way, but comic strips hardly existed when Crane was born in 1901. He would be one of the people who would help create a crucial part of that art form, if you’re willing to call it that.

His full name was Royston C. Crane, Jr. His father was the son of William C. Crane, who presided over Baylor University when that school was located in Independence. Roy Jr’s dad was a prominent lawyer, judge, newspaperman, civic leader and historian in the Rotan and Sweetwater areas.

As a boy, Crane took Charles N. Landon’s correspondence course in and later tried his hand at college, first at Hardin-Simmons University and then at the University of Texas. He also attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Chicago where he met fellow Texan Leslie Turner.

Something about the academic life must have rubbed Crane the wrong way because he didn’t stay at any of the schools longer than a year. He rode the rails as a hobo for a while and worked briefly for the Austin American newspaper as a reporter. After another futile stab at college, he shipped off to Europe on a freighter. When the ship docked back in New York he went looking for work and found it as a cartoonist for the New York World.

Crane tried syndicating his own strip to United Features but was turned down when only two papers offered to carry it. He submitted the strip to the Newspaper Enterprise Association in Cleveland where the art director was none other than his old mail-order instructor, Charles Landon. Crane recalled years later that Landon seemed to like his work well enough at first but it grew on him after Crane told him he was an ex student. Later, Crane noticed that Landon liked to tout his former students’ successes when advertising his correspondence course.
The strip became “Wash Tubbs,” which enjoyed fair to middlin’ success until Crane introduced a swashbuckling soldier of fortune named Captain Easy to the cast of characters. Captain Easy was sort of an Indiana Jones-type character but without the college degree. Easy eventually took over the strip and the strip became known as “Captain Easy – Soldier of Fortune.”

Crane cranked out the strips practically without a break for 14 years. In 1937, he called on his old Texas buddy, Leslie Turner, to join him as an assistant. The two Texans worked as a team for the next six years, until Crane left to draw “Buz Sawyer” for the Hearst Syndicate. Turner continued the Captain Easy strip for NEA. By the time he took on the Buz Sawyer strip, Crane was recognized as one of the comic strip genre’s finest artists and innovators, bringing new degrees of shading and technical flourishes to the strip and inspiring subsequent generations of adventure cartoonists, mostly notably “Steve Canyon” creator Milton Caniff.

In “The Art of the Funnies,” R.C. Harvey writes of Crane: “Roy Crane is undoubtedly the most unsung of the cartoonists who shaped the medium. His historic achievement was to set the pace for adventure strips in the thirties by showing the way in the twenties. Many of those who drew the earliest adventure strips were inspired and influenced by his work.”


© Clay Coppedge
"Letters from Central Texas"
July 30, 2009 Column

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