Video: Milton Caniff Draws the Dragon Lady While Talking With Shel Dorf in 1983

February 28, 2010

Milton Caniff holding Charlie Roberts' Dragon Lady drawing and Charlie's endorsed check to Milt (photo courtesy of Charlie Roberts)

Milton Caniff holding Charlie Roberts' Dragon Lady drawing and Charlie's endorsed check to Milt (photo courtesy of Charlie Roberts)

In 1983, fan Charlie Roberts sent Milton Caniff a request for a sketch of the Dragon Lady character from the Terry and the Pirates comic strip and enclosed a check for it, hoping it would be adequate. On May 11, 1983, Milt did Charlie’s sketch while talking to Shel Dorf and being videotaped by Tom French. He also signed Charlie’s check over to the National Cartoonist Society’s Milt Gross fund for cartoonists in need.

The following video of this informal “chalk talk” is from the Shel Dorf Archives and was kindly made available by Charlie Roberts. The interview was originally videotaped by Tom French, who ran the San Diego Comic-Con dealers room for many years. At the time of this video recording, Shel was the letterer for Caniff’s comic strip Steve Canyon. The interview is divided into five parts and there is a description of the highlights of each part following the video player. (You may also see an eleven-part videotaped interview of Milton Caniff done by Shel Dorf and Tom French in 1982 at https://www.sheldorftribute.com/2010/01/26/shel-dorf-interviews-milt-caniff-in-november-1982-video/.)

(If you click on it and hover your mouse pointer over the video player, you’ll see arrows you can click to move to the next or previous part along with “thumbnail” images at the bottom that you can click on to jump ahead or behind to a particular part. Also, if you are reading this via email or a newsreader, you’ll probably need to visit the site to view the video at https://www.sheldorftribute.com/2010/02/28/video-milton-caniff-draws-the-dragon-lady-while-talking-with-shel-dorf-in-1983/)

Part 1 of 5: This segment’s highlights include the following: Mort Walker’s military service, lays out sketch with pencil and then switches to ink brush, how Caniff felt about art requests from fans, the secret of drawing women, signs Charlie Robert’s check for the drawing over to the National Cartoonist Society’s Milt Gross Fund for cartoonists in need.

Part 2 of 5: This segment’s highlights include the following: left-handed people having trouble with lettering, begins coloring the Dragon Lady, Caniff’s inspirations for the Dragon Lady including an actual Chinese pirate and Joan Crawford, similarity to the queen in Show White, Raiders of the Lost Ark, film High Road to China as “another Terry and the Pirates”, why the Dragon Lady became his most famous character, a real Dragon Lady-type character in Texas named Vashti Silver.

Part 3 of 5: This segment’s highlights include the following: continues coloring the Dragon Lady sketch, on Dragon Lady having cut off Big Stoop’s tongue, on flawed villains and heroes, the only thing the Dragon Lady was afraid of, the Burma character, Somerset Maugham, Midwestern Chinese pidgin, the Beast From the East – a real courtesan character Caniff had wanted to use.

Part 4 of 5: This segment’s highlights include the following: why the Dragon Lady turned good during WWII, Casablanca — the movies and the place, when Ingrid Bergman was his neighbor and was shunned by society, how Joan Crawford felt about being the model for the Dragon Lady.

Part 5 of 5: This segment’s highlights include the following: Noel “Bud” Sickles could do a lot of things that Caniff couldn’t do, never got the hang of mechanical drawing, Caniff on lettering, Charlie Roberts’ letter requesting the drawing, why George Wunder finally quit doing Terry and the Pirates, Shel predicts a complete printed collection of Caniff’s run on Terry and the Pirates will one day be printed as an American treasure, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Sherlock Holmes, when Caniff met Mrs. Arthur Conan Doyle.

Charlie Roberts March 3, 2010 at 1:53 am

Nice touch that Milton Caniff autographed the art to “Joan and Charlie”. My wife Joan was with me when we drove to the Museum of Cartoon Art for Milton’s chalk talk in 1983.
We had only been together for two years, and it was the first time she had met a famous cartoonist.
This original is framed along with two photos of Joan and Milton. He also graciously autographed those photos.
Milton Caniff was a great example of “the bigger they are, the nicer they are”, and we’re extremely proud of the original art along with the friendship of Shel Dorf and Tom French.
Mike Towry deserves a lot of credit for all his hard work in hosting this site, which is important for future generations of collectors worldwide.

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