Misplaced Pages

Baby Face Finlayson

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Beano character

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Baby Face Finlayson" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2011) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Baby Face Finlayson
Character from The Beano
Publication information
Star ofBaby Face Finlayson
Features inLittle Plum
First appearance
  • Issue 1553
  • (22 April 1972)
Last appearance
  • Issue 3660
  • (10 November 2012)
Appearance timelineIssues 1553 – 3660
Author(s)Uncredited
Illustrator(s)
In-universe information
Full name"Baby Face" Finlayson
FriendsJessie James, Sid the Kid, Goo Goo McGoo
EnemiesSheriff "Marsh" Mallow of Cactus Gulch

Baby Face Finlayson is a fictional character in a comic strip in the UK comic The Beano, first appearing in issue 1553, dated 22 April 1972. Baby Face Finlayson "The Cutest Bandit in the West" is an outlaw from the American Old West, and is, in fact, a baby.

His name is derived from the real-life American gangster of the 1930s Baby Face Nelson (real name Lester Joseph Gillis).

Publication history

He was originally a minor character in Little Plum, but was later given a spin-off strip of his own. He rode around in a motorised pram, stealing everything that wasn't tied down, whilst shouting "Yuk Yuk!". He had a number of accomplices, including Jessie James, Sid the Kid and Goo Goo McGoo who were also, apparently, babies. Their chief nemesis was Sheriff "Marsh" Mallow of Cactus Gulch.

When the strip returned in 1980, the Wild West theme was dropped, and the setting was moved to England. The tagline was also changed to "The Cutest Bandit Around". However, in the final strip of the second series, he was posted back to America by the angry Beano editor, whom Baby-Face had tried to kidnap. On both occasions, the strip was drawn by Ron Spencer.

Subsequent appearances

In issue 3181, dated 5 July 2003, he cameoed in a Little Plum strip, when he stole Little Plum's wigwam. He sped off in his pram, crashed into a buffalo so Little Plum thought he had learned his lesson, until he steals Little Plum's clothes without him noticing and rides off. In September 2004 he reappeared again for five weeks in his own strip, this time drawn by Emilios Hatjoullis. He has appeared in the Beano Annual every year since then. In 2006 Baby Face returned as a villainous gangster in the Bash Street Kids adventures "School's Out" and "Hot Rod Cow", written and drawn by Kev F Sutherland. He appears in the 2008 Beano annual in the story "Pluggy Love", where Danny believes that Plug's girlfriend is evil as he thinks Baby-Face is her father. It turns out she's his babysitter and her father was pushing his pram. He appeared once again in the 2009 annual in "Reservoir Dodge", where after discovering a Weather-Predicting device Roger and Walter sold him is fake, he tries to kill them and invites a group of other fictional villains over, like the Joker, a Dalek, a devil, and Bully Beef. Other Beano characters try to help Roger, but are also placed above the piranha fish tank. However Alexander the Lemming and Winston the Cat push the tank over, forcing the villains away.

Baby-Face Finlayson returned to The Beano in the Funsize Funnies in #3660 drawn by Alexander Matthews.

References

  1. "Big Bad: Baby Face Finlayson in the longer strips by Kev F Sutherland". TV Tropes. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  2. alexander matthews (12 November 2012). "Alexander's Cartoon Blog: Beano Bonzanzo". Alexandercartoons.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
DC Thomson comics
Currently running comics
Adventure comics
Girls' comics
Humour comics
Pre-school comics
Notable strips
Comic annuals
Character annuals
Notable artists
Notable writers
See also
Category
The Beano
Stories
1938-1939
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
Other media
Spin-off media
Adaptations
Creator staff
D.C. Thomson artists
Freelance artists
History
Category
Categories: