Monday, 7 September 2015

Picture Post No. 4 The Dan Dare Badge

'Because things don’t appear to be the known thing; they aren’t that what they seemed to be neither will they become what they might appear to become.'

Posted by Martin Cohen and Ken Sequin

 

Team affiliations: Interplanetary Space Fleet


Hey, have you got Dan Dare's cap badge?

Alas, no, sigh...  yet another aspirational challenge failed... this one long ago from the small ads in boys magazines in the 1950s along with other, pointed advice about beach physiques and stamp collecting. Dan's 'authentic' cap badge in brilliant red, black and yellow, that is, with its steel torpedo shaped spaceship at the centre? Surely everyone would want such a badge - but there was a catch. You had to be a member of the Horlicks Spacemen's Club to get one. Not an insurmountable obstacle to be sure, but money was involved.

Dan, or to give him his full title, Colonel Daniel McGregor Dare, was a very British hero, with very British values, such as all parents might hope their boys would aspire to. Throughout the 1950s he rocketed around the Solar System pulling off incredible feats of piloting skills and facing up to the most awful predicaments with a stiff jaw and those famous way eyebrows. Curiously, his spaceship, Anastasia, was named after his Aunt.

There was of course a serious side too to the strip (and the popular radio serialisation) because Dan was in fact involved in fighting evil, personified in the scheming Venusian dictator, the Mekon. Not that they went on about it much, the founder of the Eagle (the comic Dan appeared in), the Rev. Marcus Morris, was vicar of the Southport church of St James at the time, and another clergyman, Rev. Dr. Chad Varah, wrote key scripts in the early years. Of more pressing import to badge wearers, was to be involved in battling the fiendishly cunning oppressor of the the reptilian inhabitants of that watery planet known as 'the Treens'. Unfortunately, for all Dan's policeman-like efforts, the Mekon escaped at the end of each story ready to return with an even more inventive scheme for the conquest of Earth…

More affiliations…

The Eagle  folded long ago (in 1969) but Dan still jets around from time to time. As well as several new comic incarnations, there have been more radio serialisations, and some musical appreciations too. Pink Floyd founder Syd Barrett wrote Dan Dare into his song 'Astronomy Domine', from the band's debut album The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, with the line 'Stairway scare, Dan Dare, who's there?' Elton John recorded 'Dan Dare (Pilot Of The Future)' for his 1975 album Rock Of The Westies and the British punk rock group The Mekons included a song 'Dan Dare' on their album The Quality of Mercy is not Strnen (sic).

As to the badges, well, its not too late, you can buy brand new ones plated in 24 carat gold for the surprisingly modest price of about £10. But the 'authentic' badge, was not made of metal, but of plastic.That's the space age!

Things you don’t want anyone to know when wearing the badge

Colonel Dan Dare was originally 'Chaplain' Dan Dare of Space Fleet, with rather dull pastoral duties. Only at the very last minute did he swap hats to become the dashing space pilot that boys and girls might really aspire to follow.

8 comments:

docmartincohen said...

Anastasia, I ask you! The kids deserve better...

Thomas O. Scarborough said...

> There was of course a serious side too to the strip

I listen to children's stories on the radio with great interest, as to what the "serious side" really is. Sometimes I hope it isn't what I think!

docmartincohen said...

What was it - and what do you hope it is not?!

Tessa den Uyl said...

Would you gentleman think it is important for children to have some kind of fiction hero in their childhood to inspire or look up to?

docmartincohen said...

Plato said it was important - and that the heros must be clean-living folks! He complained about all the awful things that went on in the theatre. For myself, I think literature should refelct the highest values - and not even just for children!

Thomas O. Scarborough said...

Not only in childhood Tessa. I think that there are people we look to all the time, in my case Martin and yourself not excluded. At the same time, I think there is a danger in what we look to or up to. Is it merely a construct, which really does not exist?

On Martin's earlier question, I haven't listened to children's stories to remember them. I heard one children's story, apparently innocent, which I hoped was not conveying ethnic elitism. Every story has a meaning, even if it is about ducks or fairies.

Tessa den Uyl said...

Maybe we look for those characters that inspire us, fiction or not, for we're in need to feel inspired. I think comics are of different expression though then other forms of literature. In the work by Moebius and Jodorowsky just the drawing is sometimes 'breathtaking' and can open up a lot of inspiration. However it appears that computer games start to play a rather nasty mind trick on adolescents (and not only); that separating fiction from reality becomes more difficult. One issue brought up for that is the isolation in which this gaming takes place, the world is substituted by a computer screen and on that screen one interacts with 'friends' in a game in which the identification with the characters of the game (taken by the players) can become much more attractive then real life. The paper print keeps that distance between fiction and reality apparently more divided. I think the paper print, the radio transmission, the tv and then the computergame show some kind of evolution of the comic, the function of the hero has changed, and almost physically its position....

docmartincohen said...

I do assure Thomas that I exist! At least, I do whilst I assert the fact - vide Descartes. I agree that a healthy human trait is to 'look to others' all the time, not exaclty passively, but empathetically.

All of which does connect to this concern with computers - a topic I (am I repeating myself?! sorry if so) I researched long ago... I do beleive that computers in ALL their forms are a danger to both young and mature minds. The reason is that they change the way we intereact. Just look at the mindless agressio of comments people post under news stories. (Not here, touch wood!) The machine is like a servant that anyone can order to do things - and the machine usually obeys. When it doesn't fury is often the response. That's unhealthy in itself. Similarly, the realtino ship fo human to human is replaced by that mediated by the machine - the interenet as now - and it is an easy step to make the machine primary and the world secondary.

In other words, going back to our central issue, isn't the problem not just the message - but the medium too?

As to the medium Dan flew in - weekly comics - I felt there was something very friendly about that format - so much simpler than a book...

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