Firstly, a quick update, and then a poser to end
on (as posted out on Facebook earlier).
Since January (and, admittedly, aided
tremendously by Lockdown #3) I’ve been adding in a considerable amount of
material not originally featured, and some upgrades to iron out some
inconsistencies that became apparent once I began revisiting those files, largely
untouched since 2007.
I’d forgotten just how much work was involved when I
originally compiled the indices to almost everything published by Marvel in the
UK since 1972 (and since 1967 by World Distributors and TV21), so it’s only now
that I've nearly reached a point where I can start proofing it all before
moving back to finish off all that remains, the last few chapters of the book
and some of the Doctor Who Magazine content.
I've also made some unexpected discoveries with regards to some of the foreign material that John Freeman has kindly flagged up on his Down the Tubes site over the past year or so, as well as discovering some originated material published during the past few years that I was entirely unaware of.
In the meantime, here’s a
poser guaranteed to get you rummaging through your collections of Marvel's
1970s weeklies :)
Captain Britain #7 was unique in two ways, both in relation to
any other issue in the 1976/77 series, and indeed to any other Marvel UK weekly
at the time.
Firstly, it contained a staple of other British comics, the
pull-out, cut and fold booklet - in this case, an edited version of Howard the
Duck’s first appearance, perhaps answering readers demands that Howard feature
somewhere in the weeklies. More importantly, and the reason for this posting,
is that #7 gave 100 lucky readers the chance to win one of five Stan Lee-signed
copies of Bring on the Bad Guys, with the other 95 receiving an undisclosed
prize instead.
As pictured, turning to the regular Fun Page feature by Owen
McCarron, readers needed to focus their attention on a special box in the
bottom right corner, just in case their copy contained an additional special
message.
You’ll have guessed where I'm headed with this, I’m sure! What was the
message? I've never seen a copy to learn if it was indeed an expensive
over-print, as the text implies. #17 later revealed that the message was 'Excelsior', although whether all hundred copies were purchased at the time and every single copy mailed in to High Holborn to win a prize isn't clear.
However, just in case they weren’t all given up,
I thought that you might fancy checking out your copies of #7 just in case you
have that special message inside. While you’re rather too late to redeem the
original prize, of course, if anyone does have the special page lurking in
their collection and can provide a high quality scan for us, they can at least
bask in seeing a very rare page from a comic in their collection in print for
all to view.
Who knows, maybe there's still a copy or two somewhere across the globe. After all issues of the series were imported into the US and Canada, and no doubt across the Antipodes too. Happy hunting :)