When SMASH! was relaunched in March of 1969, it bore little resemblance to its previous incarnation. A few strips survived, but - without the MARVEL reprints - the comic had lost a great deal of its uniqueness. (Well, as unique as a companion paper to WHAM! could be.) Which is not to suggest by any means that the new version of the comic was bereft of charm, but it was a different type of charm to what had gone before. Above is the cover to the first Christmas number of the new Smash!, which, contrary to what I've just written, manages to conjure up similarities to the earlier look of the title - only the different logo betrays the cheat.
Above (from the Christmas issue) is BAD PENNY by LEO BAXENDALE, which I always preferred to his similarly-themed strip, MINNIE THE MINX in THE BEANO. Minnie came first, but Bax's art had evolved into a seemingly simpler, but much more madcap and funnier style by the time he got 'round to drawing Penny. Give me Penny over Minnie any day of the week. Baxendale created some good strips for Wham! and Smash! - it's interesting that he never initiated legal proceedings against IPC in the same way as he did with Thomson's. It's true that the Odhams/IPC/Fleetway characters never had the longevity or success of his DCT ones, but surely the principle of the matter supercedes any material considerations?
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