Edgar Stow Wheelan (1888–1966), who signed his work Ed Wheelan, was an American cartoonist best known for his comic stripMinute Movies, satirizing silent films, and his comic bookFat and Slat, published by EC Comics. He was one of the earliest writer-artists to introduce daily narrative continuity and cinematic techniques to comic strips.
Wheelan continued to mock movies in his Minute Movies for the George Matthew Adams Service. He drew the two-tiered Minute Movies from the early 1920s until 1935, developing one of the characters into a spin-off strip, Roy McCoy. Near the end of the 1930s, Wheelan teamed with Bill Walsh on Big Top, a circus strip.[1]
Comic books
In the early 1940s, DC Comics brought back Minute Movies as a feature in 58 issues of Flash Comics. In 1944, Max Gaines published the Edgar Wheelan Joke Book with Wheelan's Fat and Slat characters, who returned in their own title, Fat and Slat, which ran for four quarterly issues in 1947 and 1948. The book also featured Wheelan's "Comics" McCormick ("The World's #1 Comic Book Fan").
In the late 1940s, Wheelan drew Foney Fairy Tales, fairy tale parodies that ran as a feature in Wonder Woman and Comic Cavalcade.[2]
After leaving comics, Wheelan created paintings of clowns. He died in 1966 in Fort Myers, Florida.[1]
Reprints
In 1972, Woody Gelman reprinted Minute Movies in his Nostalgia Comics.
Other reprints include:
Minute Movies 1977 Hyperion Press, ISBN0-88355-671-5 (reprints from 1927 & 1928).
Let's Go to the Movies aka Murder City 1990 Malibu Graphics ISBN0-944735-74-6 (reprints April 30, 1934 to August 4, 1934).