Brick Bradford
Brick Bradford was a science fiction comic strip created by writer William Ritt, a journalist based in Cleveland, and artist Clarence Gray. It was first distributed on August 21, 1933 by Central Press Association, a subsidiary of King Features Syndicate which specialized in producing material for small-town newspapers.
Brick Bradford achieved its greatest popularity outside the United States. The series was carried by both newspapers and comic books in Australia and New Zealand. In France the strip was known as Luc Bradefer and was published in many newspapers. The strip was also widely published in Italy where it was known variously as Giorgio Ventura and Marco Spada and in Greece in the newspaper Έθνος during the 1960s.
Publication history
Ritt grew tired of Brick Bradford in the mid-1940s, and by 1948 he had turned over first the daily and then the Sunday to Gray, who did the strip by himself until his health problems increased. In 1952, Paul Norris took over the daily. When Gray died in 1956, Norris took over the Sunday strip. Norris retired in 1987, and the strip was retired as well with the daily ending April 25, 1987, and the Sundays two weeks later.Characters and story
Brick Bradford was an athletic and adventurous redheaded aviator from Kentucky who continually encountered fantastic situations. Initially, the strip was focused on Earth-bound, aviation-focused adventures, in a similar manner to Lester J. Maitland and Dick Calkins' Skyroads. However, as the strip developed, Brick Bradford increasingly featured fantastic elements in the manner of Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon. Ritt was an admirer of science fiction writers H. G. Wells, Edgar Rice Burroughs and Abraham Merritt, and drew on some of their ideas when writing Brick Bradford. Brick Bradford now became more of a space opera/adventure story, with its tales of dinosaurs, lost civilizations, intergalactic villains, robots and subatomic worlds.By 1935, Brick Bradford's popularity had greatly increased, and it arrived in the Sunday comics sections of major newspapers in 1933, followed by a weekend edition that began November 24, 1934. In the daily strips Brick kept company with his friend Sandy Sanderson, balding and bearded scientist Kalla Kopak, and June Salisbury, Brick's girlfriend and daughter of his ally Professor Van Atta Salisbury. The Sunday strips featured completely different characters and plots. Here Brick was often accompanied on his adventures by Professor Horatio Southern and his daughter April, who was Brick's love interest. Later characters included Brick's pugnacious sidekick Bucko O'Brien and the beautiful, black-haired bad girl Saturn Sadie who reformed and in the end married the stalwart hero.
Brick's enemies included Dr. Franz Ego, a spy; Avil Blue, inventor of a giant robot; and the "Assassins", descendants of the Middle Eastern sect of the same name.
On April 20, 1935, the strip added a large top-shaped time machine invented by Professor Southern called, fittingly, the Time Top which could travel to both past and future and off into the depths of space, presaging Doc Wonmug's device in Alley Oop four years later and the TARDIS on Doctor Who by almost three decades.
Daily strips by Clarence Gray and William Ritt
- D001 In the City Beneath the Sea 270 strips
- D002 With Brocco the Buccaneer 276 strips
- D003 On the Isles Beyond the Ice 282 strips
- D004 Brick Bradford and the Lord of Doom 258 strips
- D005 Adrift in an Atom 288 strips
- D006 In the Fortress of Fear 342 strips
- D007 Brick Bradford and the Metal Monster 342 strips
- D008 Brick Bradford Seeks the Diamond Doll 246 strips
- D009 On the Throne of Titania 768 strips
- D010 Beyond the Crystal Door 462 strips
- D011 The Queen of the Night 468 strips
- D012 The Witch Doctor of Wanchi 162 strips
- D013 The Strange Case of Captain Boldd 192 strips
- D014 Lost Train In Tunnel #10 246 strips
- D015 The Prophet of Thorn 276 strips
- D016 The Colossal Fossil 90 strips
- D017 The Island of the Eye 150 strips
- D018 Smokeballs 60 strips
- D019 The Howling Face 90 strips
- D020 The Legacy of Low Lake 96 strips
- D021 Detour of Doubt 60 strips
- D022 Frame-Up 90 strips
- D023 Mesa Macabre 114 strips
- D024 Moon Maiden 48 strips
- D025 Shadow in the Sky 102 strips
- D026 The Six Seeds of Sibed 96 strips
- D027 Mr. Distance 138 strips
Daily strips by Paul Norris
- D028 Condor Corridor 144 strips
- D029 Operation Back Burner 78 strips
- D030 Oroto Otoro 96 strips
- D031 Poet and Present 60 strips
- D032 Deadline Dilemma 102 strips
- D033 Frogman's Folly 72 strips
- D034 Poet's Revenge 66 strips
- D035 Honey’n’Holly 48 strips
- D036 Temperamental Tessie 48 strips
- D037 Found and Profound 78 strips
- D038 Bauble's Belle 48 strips
- D039 Silent Partners! 90 strips
- D040 The Case of the Vicious Vines 72 strips
- D041 Stowaway 114 strips
- D042 Something Borrowed, Something Blue 72 strips
- D043 Astral Assignment 66 strips
- D044 Return of Paul Bunyan 84 strips
- D045 The Search For Kris Kreg 72 strips
- D046 Time-Top Trials! 126 strips
- D047 Eye of the Needle 54 strips
- D048 Return to Pura 84 strips
- D049 Deep Danger 90 strips
- D050 X-S-S-16 84 strips
- D051 The Search for Doctor Eastland 114 strips
- D052 Man on the Moon 114 strips
- D053 The Sound 90 strips
- D054 Mission to Maga 108 strips
- D055 Steppingstone 210 strips
- D056 Tattletale Tiros 138 strips
- D057 Silent Search 186 strips
- D058 Bradford's Bondage 42 strips
- D059 Botanical Warfare 132 strips
- D060 Adventure in the Aqua-Mole 120 strips
- D061 The Proxima Centauri Run 132 strips
- D062 Lady Loot 78 strips
- D063 Adventure in Andromeda 132 strips
- D064 Operation Chaos 60 strips
- D065 Return to Panola 120 strips
- D066 Cold Caper 138 strips
- D067 Journey to Procyon 78 strips
- D068 Saturn Sadie's Side Trip 138 strips
- D069 Silverslinger 96 strips
- D070 The Treasure of Toolee Tooee 162 strips
- D071 The Agrarians 102 strips
- D072 Strange Sargasso 180 strips
- D073 Search for a Samaritan 120 strips
- D074 Destination Laza 36 strips
- D075 The Radiant Ruins of Ramdan 192 strips
- D076 Ardun's Ark 54 strips
- D077 Flight of Fantasy 72 strips
- D078 Solitary Journey 60 strips
- D079 Gathering on Gwaymus 72 strips
- D080 The Evil Enkar 54 strips
- D081 Galileo's Ghost 72 strips
- D082 Revenge 60 strips
- D083 Tabby's Tantrums 60 strips
- D084 Return to Gwaymus 78 strips
- D085 The Treasure of Tarabagara 60 strips
- D086 Purple Pintar 84 strips
- D087 Search for Urubu 54 strips
- D088 Time and Trouble 78 strips
- D089 Tenacious Tempo 54 strips
- D090 Hoppy's Re-Migration 60 strips
- D091 Tardy Tempo 72 strips
- D092 Double Trouble 60 strips
- D093 Stranded 48 strips
- D094 Phoenix Fever 78 strips
- D095 Going Home 78 strips
- D096 Then There Were Two 66 strips
- D097 Trail of the Tonabera 60 strips
- D098 Polar Poltergeist 78 strips
- D099 Long Way Home 96 strips
- D100 A Change of Plans 102 strips
- D101 A Flight of Ghosts 42 strips
- D102 Old Masters 60 strips
- D103 Cygnus Two 60 strips
- D104 Lore 84 strips
- D105 Search for Succor 54 strips
- D106 Rescue 72 strips
- D107 Stronger Force 48 strips
- D108 Holiday on Hokuku! 84 strips
- D109 Sea of Secrets 66 strips
- D110 The Folly of Petro Leur 114 strips
- D111 Lore Revisited 42 strips
- D112 Beyond Bucala 90 strips
- D113 The Way Home 114 strips
- D114 Eye Spy 96 strips
- D115 Rescue 72 strips
- D116 Dead End 108 strips
- D117 Lost 114 strips
- D118 Dolphins of Dahgara 90 strips
- D119 Wild Wet World 90 strips
- D120 Space Trace 114 strips
- D121 Emigres’ Reversion 96 strips
- D122 Web of Life 144 strips
- D123 Two, Too Many 102 strips
- D124 Runagate 120 strips
- D125 Loose Ends 120 strips
- D126 Iona Incursion 72 strips
- D127 Solar Power Play 78 strips
- D128 Time Trials 84 strips
- D129 The Realm of Ram 138 strips
- D130 Jeopardy 90 strips
- D131 Search for Saturn Sadie 132 strips
- D132 Prekarius Plot 180 strips
- D133 Topaz 132 strips
- D134 Beyond the Limits 90 strips
- D135 The Penny Black 120 strips
- D136 Burawa Bondage 378 strips
- D137 Aggression at Agwon 120 strips
- D138 The Save of Saturn Sadie 108 strips
- D139 What Next? 78 strips
- D140 Mind Over Matter 126 strips
- D141 Flight Tests 108 strips
Sunday strips by Clarence Gray and William Ritt
- S001 The Land Of The Lost 38 strips
- S002 In The Middle Of The Earth 20 strips
- S003 Nameless Empire 32 strips
- S004 Forest Of Terror 9 strips
- S005 The Mayan Empire 16 strips
- S006 Land Of The Swan 36 strips
- S007 The Time Top 8 strips
- S008 Travel Through Time 31 strips
- S009 Pirates Of The 17th Century 31 strips
- S010 The Mummy 39 strips
- S011 The Crown Of The Desert's Kings 47 strips
- S012 On The Seas Of China 24 strips
- S013 The Southern Treasure 27 strips
- S014 Lost People 13 strips
- S015 Cities Of Future 41 strips
- S016 The Men Of The North 28 strips
- S017 Ultrasphere 30 strips
- S018 The Thief Of Light 40 strips
- S019 The Ageless Voice 55 strips
- S020 The Third Millenium 55 strips
- S021 Cities In The Precipice 13 strips
- S022 The Lord Of Doom 31 strips
- S023 Birth Of a Legend 11 strips
- S024 The Aztec Migration 13 strips
- S025 Among The Incas 34 strips
- S026 The Land Of The Unicorn 57 strips
- S027 The Healing Ray 10 strips
- S028 The Way Of Stars 33 strips
- S029 Shada, Prince Of The Black Planet 30 strips
- S030 The Metropolis In Space 33 strips
- S031 The Wonderful Meteor 31 strips
- S032 Coral Labyrinth 34 strips
- S033 Sargasso of Space 41 strips
- S034 Trespassing in Space 34 strips
- S035 The Blue Interlude 46 strips
- S036 Stay In Relaxa 38 strips
- S037 Recalled – Earth 12 strips
- S038 World Of The Future 54 strips
Sunday Strips by Paul Norris
- S039 The Return Of Brick Bradford 24 strips
- S040 Travel In Space 24 strips
- S041 Beyond The Stars 24 strips
- S042 Iperspazio! 24 strips
- S043 Forced Landing 24 strips
- S044 Meteor Rain 24 strips
- S045 A Castle Of Papers 9 strips
- S046 The Indians Of The Space 13 strips
- S047 The Father Of Saturn Sadie 8 strips
- S048 One Undeclared Submarine War
Reprints
Brick Bradford reappeared by 1966 in original comics published by King Comics. Brick Bradford stories appeared as back-up strips in The Phantom #26, 28 and Mandrake the Magician #5–7, 9, 10.
In the 1970s, the Pacific Comics Club reprinted several Brick Bradford stories in book form. Numerous Brick Bradford stories were reprinted in Italian and French booklets.
Collections of comic strip stories
- Brick Bradford in the Fortress of Fear: Daily Strips Jan. 8, 1938– Feb. 11, 1939. Club Anni Trenta, Genova, 1971,.
- Brick Bradford : Voyage In A Coin by William Ritt and Clarence Gray. New York, NY : Comics Stars in the World & Pacific Comics Club, 1976.
- Brick Bradford in the City Beneath the Sea by Ritt and Gray. Papeete-Tahiti, Pacific Comics Club, 1976.
- Brick Bradford in The Middle of the Earth by Ritt and Gray. Papeete-Tahiti, Pacific Comics Club,, 1976.
- Brick Bradford with Brocco the Buccaneer by Ritt and Gray. Papeete-Tahiti, Pacific Comics Club, 1976.
- Brick Bradford in The Land Of The Lost by Ritt & Gray. Papeete-Tahiti Pacific Comics Club, 1981.
- Brick Bradford and the Combustion Furnace: Daily Strips 2/8/1937-1/8/1938 by Ritt and Gray. Toronto, Dragon Lady Press, Issue 5, 1987.
- Brick Bradford: Flight Tests by Paul Norris, in the Strip Adventure Special anthology, Forest Hills, N.Y. : JAL Publications, 1992.
In other media
Brick Bradford, a 15-chapter serial film starring Kane Richmond, was produced by Columbia Pictures in 1947.
Brick Bradford was referenced in the 1965 The Dick Van Dyke Show episode "Uhny Uftz" when Rob believe he has seen a flying saucer with the "Brick Bradford insignia" on it, which he describes as being like a lightning bolt.