:''For the
basketball term, see
Alley oop (basketball).''

Alley Oop USPS stamp
'Alley Oop' is a
syndicated
comic strip created in
1932 by
American cartoonist
V. T. Hamlin, who wrote and drew ''Alley Oop'' through four decades for NEA (Newspaper Enterprise Association). Initially, ''Alley Oop'' was a
daily strip which had a run from
December 5,
1932 to
January 3,
1933. Beginning
August 7,
1933, the early material was reworked for a larger readership. "Alley Oop" is also the name of the strip's title character.
A mix of adventure, fantasy and humor, the strip added a Sunday
full page, on
September 9,
1934. It also appeared in
half page,
tabloid and
half tab formats, which were smaller and/or dropped panels. During World War II, the full page vanished due to the drive to conserve paper, and it was reduced to a
third of a page.
When
V. T. Hamlin retired in 1971, his assistant Dave Graue took over. The last daily by Hamlin appeared
December 31 1972, and his last Sunday was
April 1 1973. From his studio near Caesar's Head, North Carolina, Graue wrote and drew the strip through the 1970s and 1980s until
Jack Bender took over as illustrator in
1991. Graue continued to write the strip until his August, 2001, retirement; on
December 10,
2001, the 75-year-old Graue was killed in
Flat Rock, North Carolina when a dump truck hit his car. The current ''Alley Oop'' Sunday and daily strips are drawn by Jack Bender and written by his wife Carol Bender.
''Alley Oop'' was one of the comic strips characters commemorated by a U.S. postage stamp.
Characters and settings

V.T. Hamlin's ''Alley Oop'' for December 24, 1948.
The character's name derived from the "let's go" phrase 'allez oup', used as a cue by French gymnasts and trapeze artists. Alley Oop was a sturdy citizen of the
prehistoric kingdom of Moo who rode his pet
dinosaur, Dinny, carried a stone
war hammer, dressed in nothing but a pair of fur shorts, and obviously would rather fight dinosaurs in the jungle than deal with his fellow countrymen in Moo's capital (and only) cave-town. In spite of these exotic settings, the stories were mostly
satires of American
suburban life. The first stories centered on his dealings with his fellow cavemen -- his friend Foozy and his girlfriend Ooola, Moo's King Guzzle and Queen Umpateedle, the King's Grand Wizer and assorted citizens. Oop and his pals had occasional skirmishes with the rival kingdom of Lem, ruled by King Tunk. The names ''Moo'' and ''Lem'' are apparent references to the fabled lost continents of
Mu and
Lemuria.
On
April 5,
1939, in a calculated move to vary plotlines, Hamlin introduced an unusual plot device -- a
time machine invented by the 20th-century scientist Dr. Elbert Wonmug (who bore a rather suspicious resemblance to the Grand Wizer). The name Wonmug was a bilingual reference to
Albert Einstein, since ''Ein Stein'' translates as ''One Mug'' in German. Arriving in the 20th Century, Alley Oop became a test pilot for Dr. Wonmug, embarking on expeditions to various periods and places in history, such as
Ancient Egypt,
Arthurian England and the
American Old West. Oop accompanied
Cleopatra, King Arthur and
Ulysses in his adventures and even traveled to the moon. Modern characters included the sometimes villain, sometimes hero G. Oscar Boom.In recent years,a new assistant, a woman named Ava, was added.
Oop in pop culture

Ed Emshwiller's 1959 illustration of Philip José Farmer's "The Alley Man"
The long-run success of the strip made the character a pop culture icon referenced in both fiction and pop music. An educated Neanderthal known as Alley Oop is a character in
Clifford D. Simak's witty,
Hugo-nominated science fiction novel ''The Goblin Reservation'' (1968).
The cover story for the June,
1959, issue of ''
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction'' was
Philip José Farmer's ''The Alley Man,'' with a thinly disguised Alley Oop as the central figure in a novella about the last Neanderthal who has survived into the 20th Century. In a 1960 review,
P. Schuyler Miller described this Hugo-nominated Farmer tale as "a robust, rambling comic tragedy of a dying species, trying to keep its heredity straight, clinging to its old legends, holding its own against the G'yaga, the False Folk who have inherited the Earth. The roaring, rutting, one-armed Old Man Paley who lives on the city dump and hunts the Old King's hat of power through its alleys, who guzzles beer and seduces social workers with equal facilities, is Alley Oop as seen by
Eugene O'Neill."
In 1960 Hamlin's character became the subject of a
one-hit-wonder song, "
Alley Oop," by the
The Hollywood Argyles. With words and music by Dallas Frazier, it begins like this:
:(Oop-oop, oop, oop-oop)
:(Alley Oop, oop, oop, oop-oop)
:There's a man in the funny papers we all know
:(Alley Oop, oop, oop, oop-oop)
:He lives 'way back a long time ago
:(Alley Oop, oop, oop, oop-oop)
:He don't eat nothin' but a bear cat stew
:(Alley Oop, oop, oop, oop-oop)
:Well, this cat's name is-a Alley Oop
:(Alley Oop, oop, oop, oop-oop)
The Hollywood Argyles' recording was a #1 hit in 1960, and there were competing versions that year by Dante & the Evergreens (#15) and the Dyna Sores (#59). British satirical art rock/pop group
The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band also recorded a version of Alley Oop released as their second single in October 1966, and
Dave Van Ronk recorded a version in 1968 with the Hudson Dusters.
One line in the lyrics, "he got a big ugly club," does not describe Oop's war-hammer (a stone head tied to a shaft) but instead suggests a more typical cartoon caveman's rough conical wood
club, such as that carried by Oop's own king. Alley-Oop was a segment in
Filmation's 1970's animated series
Fabulous Funnies alongside
Broom-Hilda,
Nancy and Sluggo and
The Captain and the Kids.
Syndication
At its peak, ''Alley Oop'' was carried by 800 newspapers, and today it appears in more than 600 newspapers. In 1995, it was one of 20 strips showcased in the
Comic Strip Classics series of commemorative
postage stamps. ''Caveman: V.T. Hamlin & Alley Oop'' (2005), an award-winning documentary film by director-novelist
Max Allan Collins, is narrated by Michael Cornelison and features interviews with
Will Eisner and Dave Graue.
In Mexico, the character was widely syndicated as "Trucutú", and as "Brucutu" in Brazil.
Reprints
Many ''Alley Oop'' daily strips, and a few Sundays, have been reprinted by
Dragon Lady Press,
Comics Revue,
Kitchen Sink,
Manuscript Press and
SPEC Books.
External links
★
''Alley Oop''
★
Alley Oop Watch: Critique of current ''Alley Oop''
★
''Caveman: V.T. Hamlin & Alley Oop''
★
Clark J. Holloway on ''Alley Oop''
★
Toonopedia: ''Alley Oop''