Ballard Chronicles
Lee Jacobs wrote these pulp-style parodies for the Spectator Amateur Press Society (SAPS) during the late-50s/early 60s, featuring Wrai Ballard as the Resourceful Hero and various SAPS members in supporting roles. The first chronicle was a Mickey Spillane takeoff, "Wrai Ballard, Private Eye," while the second featured "Six-Gun Ballard, the Musquite Kid."
A group of LASFS members organized by Bjo Wells (later Trimble) formed Unicorn Productions, a limited film company, which made two films for showing at conventions, a fantasy joke entitled The Genie (with Fritz Leiber, Forry Ackerman and Bjo) and The Musquite Kid Rides Again, an adaptation of LeeJ's second chronicle, which had (among others) Terry Carr, Charles Burbee and Dick Eney in featured roles.
During the filming of the latter, Terry reportedly said to Burbee, "I understand you have a big part," and Burbee famously replied, "Yes, I do, but I'm not going to whip it out and show it to you."
Issue | Date | Pages | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | |||
2 | |||
3 | April 1960 | SAPS #51. Includes The Musquite Kid Rides Again |
From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959 |
(Lee Jacobs) Tales of SAPS in parody-pulpstyle, featuring Wrai Ballard as the Resourceful Hero and other SAPS in characteristic supporting roles. First chronicle was a Spillaneish "Wrai Ballard, Private Eye", while the second featured "Six-Gun Ballard, the Musquite Kid". SAPS got a kick out of them while they lasted, and adopted nicknames from them with glee ("sweet unspoiled Miss Nanshare", "Dude Jawn Davis", etc). It's all a part of SAPS' private joke-world. |
Publication | 1950s—1960s |
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