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FAMOUS FLATFOOT DICK TRACY COULD TEACH TODAY’S GUMSHOES A THING OR TWO |
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| By Frank Kaiser | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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When I was a youngster, the first letter I ever wrote that didn't thank a relative for a Christmas/Birthday present (my B'day is two days after Christmas) begged Bulldog Drummond to please move his radio show back to 7:30 p.m. A schedule change had put him on the air after my bedtime. Captain Drummond, as you may recall, was a '40s James Bond noir-style detective who fought crime of the era, what there was of it. We kids listened to them all: Mr. District Attorney, The Shadow, Gang Busters and others now long forgotten. My favorite crime buster was not on radio, however, but in the comics of the Chicago Tribune. His name was Dick Tracy.
When my dad decided to take me along on his yearly fishing trip to Minocqua, Wisconsin, Tracy happened to be trapped, bound by dastardly criminals to a huge brick of ice, an encased knife just inches from his heart getting closer and closer by the drip-drip-drip of melting ice. I was what, maybe 10? Little Spider Lake and its famous Tiger Musky fishing was a world away from the nearest Tribune delivery. I demurred. I needed to learn how Tracy got out of this one!
Such was our fanatical devotion to this square-jawed cop with an affinity to yellow hats. Real crime in the 1940s was teddy-bear tame compared with today. Gould's genius was to invent both villains and anti-crime devices that took our breath away.
Tracy's love affair with Tess Trueheart was almost as turbulent as his crime fighting, tamed only by their marriage in 1949 after some 18 years of high soap opera. While researching, I learned that the marriage lasted 40 years, producing three children, before Tess asked Tracy for a divorce. Same problem they had before marriage: Tracy's workaholicism. The couple subsequently reconciled, having another kid, Joe Flintheart Tracy, in 1979. Let's see, that would put Tess about 70. But who's counting?
Tracy's extraordinary friends like B.O. Plenty, Gravel Gertie, their daughter, Sparkle Plenty, and inventor, Diet Smith, rounded out the cast. Gould retired from the strip in 1977. By that time there were movies, radio and TV programs, but none reached Dick Tracy's popularity in the comics. As far as I can tell, the strip is still running and Tracy continues to make the world safe for democracy. He'll be 77 in September. Copyright 2008 Frank Kaiser Comment on this week's Suddenly Senior. READ READER RESPONSES TO RECENT COLUMNS HERE PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SUDDENLY SENIOR SPONSOR AND HELP KEEP THE COLUMNS COMING TO YOU GET UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS EVERY DAY ABOUT MEDICARE, SOCIAL SECURITY AND OTHER IMPORTANT SENIOR NEWS. SIMPLY SEND A BLANK E-MAIL TO GET-RXNEWS@SUDDENLYSENIOR.COM. Suddenly Senior is now read by 3.1 million seniors at Websites and 79 newspapers from the St. Petersburg Times to the Mumbai India News. CLICK FOR MORE INFO GET SUDDENLY SENIOR EVERY FRIDAY. SIMPLY TO CANCEL YOUR FREE SUDDENLY SENIOR E-MAIL, BE SURE TO CHECK OUT THE HELPFUL LINKS BELOW SOME OTHER LOOKBACKS TO OUR YOUTH... When Drugstores were Drugstores If you grew up when neighborhood drugstores sold little but medicine and sodas, when prescriptions cost 67 cents, and when Lime Rickeys, Green River, Lydia Pinkhams and Hadacol were “the mostest,” this column’s for you. Heavy Groping at the StarLite Drive-in Were drive-in movies of the 40s and 50s the sexually unrestrained "passion pits" of yore? Or is all that our inner-teenager's imagination? A Geezer’s B-17 Flight into History A story of heroics exactly 60 years ago. Meet pilot, John McLaughlin, then fly the restored WWII B-17 bomber Fuddy Duddy. Climb aboard. It’s going to be a bumpy ride. My Love Affair with the Hepburn Women Here's why I believe Katharine and Audrey were the two standout artists of the 20th Century. It certainly wasn't just their good looks and charm. Frank's wife, Carolyn, finds (to her horror!) her mother's words pouring from her month as she threatens a grandson with a bath. The words have no effect. Years ago, they had no effect on Carolyn. Or, before that, on her mother. Is this in our DNA? Did our Neanderthal forebears use the same empty phases?
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Frank Kaiser frank@suddenlysenior.com http://www.suddenlysenior.com/ Suddenly Senior the nationally syndicated column read by 3.1-million over age 50 in 176 countries who've become senior way before their time.
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