Leo Bachle

Leo Henry Bachle (November 23, 1923 – May 2003),[1] a.k.a. Les Barker, was a Canadian comic book artist in the era of the Canadian Whites, and later became a comedian.

Biography

Born in Toronto in November 1923, Bachle attended Danforth Collegiate and Technical Institute.[2]

In late 1941, fifteen-year-old Bachle was hired by John Ezrin, the manager of Bell Features in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, to come up with something exciting for the company's growing comic book line. He created the character Johnny Canuck, which debuted in the first issue of Dime Comics in February 1942. In the first Canuck story he confronts Adolf Hitler which helped to propel Dime Comics to becoming the best-selling comic in the Bell line.

Leo became one of Bell’s key artists, drawing characters such as Wild Bill, The Invisible Commando, Chip Piper, Southpaw, Super Sub, and The Brain. Bachle's success led to the company to hire a number of new, young artists, including Ross Saakel[1] and Jerry Lazare.[3]

Bachle's character, Johnny Canuck, was considered invaluable to the war effort. It was considered valuable enough to Bell for the company to acquire the copyright from Bachle in December 1944.[4] He later went to New York City, where he did work for Timely Comics, L.B. Cole and Max Gaines.[1]

in 1950, Bachle changed his name to Les Barker and gave up drawing comic books.[2] He became a well-regarded comedian and toured the globe performing his unique comedy act known as Quick on the Draw.[2] The tours included appearances with such entertainers as Liberace, Mickey Rooney, Rich Little and Marlene Dietrich.[2][1]

In the 1970s, Barker had acting roles in several film and television productions, including Welcome to Blood City, 125 Rooms of Comfort, Class of '44 and Norman Corwin Presents.[5]

Bachle died in Toronto in May 2003 at Scarborough Grace Hospital.

Legacy

In 1995, Canada Post put Johnny Canuck on a postage stamp, which was part of a series with other notable Canadian comic-book heroes.[2]

In 2005, Leo Bachle was among the first batch of Canadian comic book artists inducted into the Joe Shuster Awards Canadian Comic Book Creator Hall of Fame.[6]

gollark: <@237009011801718785> The one I heard of was 12:6:1 (clicks:UVs:OVs).
gollark: Dealing with people bugging you about prizes: constantly deny the existence of your prize, act as if it doesn't exist, and sort it out of the way on your scroll.
gollark: Apparently you can near-instantly trade 2G Aeons for hatchlings. Huh.
gollark: κongraτulaτions.
gollark: We could crowdsource the random number instead...

See also

Further reading

  • Allen, Julet (June 9, 2003). "Superhero creator aimed for justice ; Couldn't fight in war, so produced Johnny Canuck Later became beloved comedian and animator". The Toronto Star. p. B5.
  • Bachle, Leo (2015). Richey, Rachel (ed.). Johnny Canuck. Foreword by Seth; Leo Bachle biography by Robert Pincombe; other stories by André Kulbach and Paul Dak. Toronto: Comic Syrup Press. ISBN 978-0-9940547-0-8.
  • Kocmarek, Ivan (July 29, 2015). "Johnny Canuck". comicbookdaily.com.

References

  1. Pincombe 2015.
  2. Allen 2003.
  3. Kocmarek, Ivan (August 12, 2015). "Gerald Lazare: Canadian War Time Comic Book Artist". comicbookdaily.com.
  4. Kocmarek 2015.
  5. Les Barker on IMDb
  6. Stump, Greg (July 2005). "Sim, Cooke among Shuster Winners". The Comics Journal. Fantagraphics Books (269): 48. ISSN 0194-7869.(subscription required)



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.