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Wednesday, January 31, 2007

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jb

The Bears mascot has rodent teeth(!) and the Cubs mascot is sporting some very formidable looking fangs. I guess this is from when the Cubs were serious contenders and didn't care who knew it. Today they might as well be wearing wooden dentures. As for the Rickey Rat teeth on the Bears mascot, that looks a bit odd. This image is probably from the Poppa Bear/George Halas era when the Bears were a force to be reckoned with...on a regular basis. I reckon the mouse /rat motif is indicative of the popularity of Disney's mouse and others from around the same time. Also, look carefully at the rat. He has only one eye! A cyclops if you will, perhaps reinforcing the Bears unofficial moniker...Monsters of the Midway. Makes you glad they didn't choose a lizard as their mascot. The Cub art is better with its actiony look, shading and cool, late art deco style. That is a good picture for a program.

And as to the material for above post. You go to press with the material you have, not the material you wish you had.

Dan

Hey, John: I was really wondering what you'd make of
those pieces--thanks for the quick deconstruction
(which, I must admit, made me laugh out loud).

Historical context: In 1941, the Bears were coming off
perhaps the most famous (or infamous) thrashing one
team ever administered to another: the 73-0 victory
over the Redskins in the NFL championship game. The
team was also precisely at the point (the 1940 season)
during which it appropriated the University of
Chicago's "Monsters of the Midway" moniker as well as
the Maroons' stylized letter "C" that the Bears still
use today. Halas was self-consciously trying to
upgrade the team's image.

I've got more on the origin of the song, but suffice
it for now to say that its appearance in 1941 was a
coincidence; the indications I get from people who
have some knowledge of the events is that the song
came over the transom and was not produced on commission.

Tom O'Grady

Otis Shepard was PK Wrigley's personal art director as well as a staff designer and illustrator for the Wrigley Chewing Gum Co. He studied under the great poster artists from the '30's (as his work so clearly depicts). I personally think he should have a day a Wrigley Field. He for instance designed the uniforms of the Ladies Professional Baseball League (A League of Their Own)...


http://heckadude.blogspot.com/2009/01/otis-shepard-chicago-cubs.html

Dan

Tom: Thanks for that information. Those scorecards and their stylized cover art were a staple of my early Cubs experience. Do you happen to know if anyone's ever put on a show of his work? That'd seem like a natural for the Chicago Historical Society or the Chicago Public Library (or a Wrigley Field museum -- I haven't been inside the park for years. Do they have one now?)

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