Fraser of Africa is a comic strip that ran one page a week in full colour in the British comic
Eagle in 1960–61, written by
George Beardmore and illustrated by
Frank Bellamy. It follows Martin Fraser, a
white hunter in the game reserves of colonial
Tanganyika, as he tracks down an American film star who has gone missing on safari, hunts down European ivory poachers, and helps a
Maasai warrior rescue his tribe from Arab slavers. Bellamy, who had long had a fascination with Africa, corresponded with a farmer in
Kenya who advised him on the accuracy of the wildlife depicted, and used a limited palette of browns and yellows to capture the parched East African landscape, only occasionally breaking into blues and reds. A collected edition reprinting all three stories was published by
Hawk Books in 1990.
In the Skinn & Gibbons interview Bellamy explained how he worked with the printer for Eagle, Bemrose, ensuring the colours he chose would print correctly as he wanted to emulate true African colours in the strip.
Fraser of Africa is a comic strip that ran one page a week in full colour in the British comic
Eagle in 1960–61, written by
George Beardmore and illustrated by
Frank Bellamy. It follows Martin Fraser, a
white hunter in the game reserves of colonial
Tanganyika, as he tracks down an American film star who has gone missing on safari, hunts down European ivory poachers, and helps a
Maasai warrior rescue his tribe from Arab slavers. Bellamy, who had long had a fascination with Africa, corresponded with a farmer in
Kenya who advised him on the accuracy of the wildlife depicted, and used a limited palette of browns and yellows to capture the parched East African landscape, only occasionally breaking into blues and reds. A collected edition reprinting all three stories was published by
Hawk Books in 1990.
In the Skinn & Gibbons interview Bellamy explained how he worked with the printer for Eagle, Bemrose, ensuring the colours he chose would print correctly as he wanted to emulate true African colours in the strip.