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Lance | |
---|---|
Author(s) | Warren Tufts |
Current status/schedule | Concluded daily and Sunday strip |
Launch date | June 5, 1955 |
End date | May 29, 1960 |
Syndicate(s) | Self-syndicated |
Lance was an American comic strip notable as the last of the full-page strips. Created and self-syndicated by artist Warren Tufts, it ran from June 5, 1955, to May 29, 1960.[1]
Lance premiered on Sunday, June 5, 1955, launching in approximately 100 newspapers. The strip was self-syndicated by artist Warren Tufts, creator of the 1949-1955 strip Casey Ruggles.[1] Originally formatted like Prince Valiant, with text in captions but minus word balloons, it eventually switched to using word balloons. The last full page was #85.[citation needed] After that, the strip appeared in half page and tab formats.[2]
A daily strip began January 14, 1957 and lasted at least until February 15, 1958.[1] Tufts's Casey Ruggles was referenced when Ruggles made a brief appearance in the daily strip.[citation needed]
The final Lance strip was #261, published May 29, 1960.[3]
Lance starred U.S. cavalry officer Lance St. Lorne, stationed at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas in the mid-19th century. In tales of settling the Old West frontier, the character crossed paths with such figures as Kit Carson and others. Comics historian Don Markstein said the strip was "characterized by high-quality stories and art, but also by historical accuracy. Unlike, say, Lucky Luke, when Lance met someone who had really lived, that person was as old as he'd actually have been at the time, and in circumstances congruent with the known course of the person's life."[4]
Comics critic Bill Blackbeard rated Lance "the best of the page-high adventure strips undertaken after the 1930s".[5]
The American Comics Archive reprinted Lance in its Big Fun comics magazine. Big Fun #5, devoted solely to Lance, reprinted Sundays and dailies from June 5, 1955, through August 20, 1957. Comics Revue had Lance as a cover feature on several issues.
The series was completely reprinted with restoration by Manuel Caldas in Portugal (four volumes), Spain (four volumes), Germany (five volumes[6]), and Norway (a four volume edition[7][8] and a one volume edition[9][10]) in their respective languages.[citation needed] A four-volume Serbian edition was published by Makondo in 2015.[citation needed]
A complete English language reprint of the strip was published in 2018–2019 by Classic Comics Press.