The Start of the Miss Mizzou Skit Shows

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IMAGE: Marvel by user CODYody on flickr. Some rights reserved.

How did the Miss Mizzou skit shows get started? When the first Miss Mizzou contest was explained in an issue of the 1956 Alumnus Magazine, a calendar was mentioned but no skits. By the next year, the Savitar yearbook mentions that there were “Miss Mizzou Skits” in a couple of places, so they must have started that year. How elaborate were these early skits?

Take this photo from the 1957 Savitar yearbook, which shows what looks like a potential Miss Mizzou contender backed up by several other girls. The setting of this photo looks fairly informal with the men in the photo sitting on couches in some type of lounge environment. By 1957-1958, it looks like the skits had grown to include a stage show. A photo from the 1958 Savitar yearbook shows a photo of a women in a trench coat on a stage surrounded by several other girls.

The Miss Mizzou skits stayed as a stage show until the final show in the Fall of 1970. That year they actually did not produce a calendar; only the skit show. This means that in theory there should have been 15 calendars produced and 15 skit shows produced. Taken together, that’s 16 years total of the Miss Mizzou contest.

The Miss Mizzou Parking Sticker

The  Columbia  Daily  Tribune  printed  this  article  December  15,  1958,  showing   the  new  Miss  Mizzou  parking  stickers  created  by  the  Chamber  of  Commerce.   Used  with  permission  of  the  Columbia  Daily  Tribune.

IMAGE: The Columbia Daily Tribune, December 15, 1958. This shows the new Miss Mizzou parking stickers created by the Chamber of Commerce. Used with permission of the Columbia Daily Tribune.

In the Miss Mizzou book I mention the Miss Mizzou parking stickers from 1958. Two things about the stickers that I didn’t get to include in the book:

  • I found an original version of this sticker in Milton Caniff’s archives at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum in Ohio. It felt like a flexible vinyl sticker that you could easily remove, and it was essentially black ink on a dark red vinyl.
  • I found another interesting thing at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum about this sticker: the original drawing used on the left side. The original Caniff drawing actually shows quite a bit more leg; perhaps someone at the local level colored in more of her trench coat to make her more modest? After the events of 1958 featuring Miss Mizzou, I’m sure the Chamber of Commerce didn’t want to take any more risks than necessary with this character.

I wonder if anybody in Columbia still has an original copy of this sticker?

Marilyn Monroe’s “College Days”

IMAGE: Marilyn Monroe greets the troops during her Korea USO tour, 1954. From USMC Archives on flickr. Some rights reserved. (Monroe is actually wearing army fatigues in this cropped photo.)

IMAGE: Marilyn Monroe pauses for a photograph while in Korea for a USO tour, 1954. From USMC Archives on flickr. Some rights reserved. (This is a cropped photo.)

Oddly enough, just as Miss Mizzou was being introduced in the “Steve Canyon” comic strip in September of 1952, Marilyn Monroe showed up on the cover of “Look” magazine that month dressed as a college coed wearing a Georgia Tech sweater. This would have no doubt have appealed to the college audience who was obsessing on Miss Mizzou in Columbia. How did Monroe find herself in this role?

Georgia Tech had finished their 1951 season undefeated as the Southeastern Conference (SEC) Champions, which gave them optimism for their 1952 season. Monroe had apparently been hired to be on the cover of their 1952 football press guide, and the image was such a hit that “Look” magazine did a feature giving coverage to the hopeful team. (Georgia Tech won its second straight SEC crown that year.)

Higher education wasn’t something Monroe was usually associated with during her career though. Monroe had never finished high school, and only took a couple of college courses during her lifetime. In a way, Monroe’s real life lack of education reflected that of the Miss Mizzou character she inspired, who never did go to college in the comic strip.

Columbia Landmarks & Miss Mizzou

In the “Steve Canyon” comic strip Miss Mizzou occasionally name dropped some landmarks located in Columbia, Missouri. Here are a few examples:

IMAGE: Steve Canyon Sunday comic strip, October 5, 1952 — Copyright 2014 the Milton Caniff Estate.

IMAGE: Steve Canyon Sunday comic strip, October 5, 1952 — Copyright 2014 the Milton Caniff Estate.

In this first example from 1952, she drops veiled references to two local spots. She declares that she was once known as “Empress De Hink.” This is a reference to Hinkson Creek near campus—a popular spot for students to hang out. In the second panel she mentions the “Cannonball Express,” which is a reference to the Wabash Railroad Station in town. The reference is of course a play on the folk song “Wabash Cannonball.”

IMAGE: Steve Canyon daily comic strip, August 19, 1954 — Copyright 2014 the Milton Caniff Estate.

In this example from 1954, Miss Mizzou mentions the University of Missouri R.O.T.C. which is based in Crowder Hall on the MU campus. The R.O.T.C. was probably mentioned here because they accompanied Bek Stiner around town during her visit to campus in 1952. In the second panel one might think that Caniff is referencing the local Veteran’s Hospital, but apparently it wasn’t built until the 1960’s. In 1975 the hospital was named the Harry S. Truman Memorial Veterans’ Hospital.

IMAGE: Steve Canyon daily comic strip, August 10, 1962 — Copyright 2014 the Milton Caniff Estate. Courtesy of the Columbia Daily Tribune.

In this example from 1962, Steve Canyon gets a distress letter from Miss Mizzou. To verify it’s really her, she references the historic MU Columns. The columns are the most recognizable icon associated with MU; they are the surviving remnants of the burning of Academic Hall in 1892.

Monroe’s 1952 Calendar & Miss Mizzou

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IMAGE: Steve Canyon daily comic strip, September 30, 1952 – Copyright 2014 the Milton Caniff Estate. Miss Mizzou makes a joke about Marilyn Monroe’s calendar.

Milton Caniff had various influences going into the creation of Miss Mizzou. One of the largest was rising film star Marilyn Monroe who had a nude calendar released in 1952. Caniff even got a little “meta” with the comic strip above September 30th, 1952, where he has Miss Mizzou joke about a “Marilyn Monroe calendar fan club.” What influence did Marilyn Monroe’s 1952 nude calendar have on the creation of Miss Mizzou? Let’s examine the creation of the calendar further.

Marilyn Monroe’s career had been stalled somewhat during the later 1940’s. She had been let go from her studio contract in 1947, but still landed film roles here and there. She approached photographer Tom Kelley in the spring of 1949 for modeling work, and he photographed her for a beer ad in a bikini. At the suggestion of a calendar publisher, Kelley asked Marilyn to pose nude.

At first Marilyn refused, but she gave the idea some more thought. She mulled over the fact that she had met Kelley in 1947 after having some car trouble and he had lent her some money she never had repaid. He was apparently unaware of this, but it was something that possibly weighed on her conscience. She also needed the money that the calendar would bring to get her impounded car back. Monroe was still hesitant because she was afraid of what the photos could do to her career, but she finally agreed to pose for them. Kelley reassured her that his female partner would be at the session and they would retouch the photos so nobody could recognize her.

Kelley took the nude photos, but they were still somewhat recognizable as Marilyn. The photos were used for calendars, but didn’t become popular until her film career started getting more recognition. This came to a head during March of 1952 when a newspaper reporter asked Marilyn about the photos in an interview.

It must be said that there are a couple different stories circulating about how the photo scandal started. Some think that Monroe leaked the photographs the press, while others say that Jerry Wald, the producer of her next film “Clash By Night,” was involved with leaking the photos. Regardless of how it went down, “Clash By Night” was released on June 18th that year and did well at the box office because of the press.

The photos put Monroe and her movie career in jeopardy as flaunting sexuality in Hollywood could put an end to her career. She explained that she posed for the photos because she was “broke and needed the money.” Coupled with the story of her troubled upbringing, this public relations move lead to sympathy for Monroe and her plight as a struggling actress. Around this time she also started dating Joe DiMaggio who’s perceived moral purity also helped Monroe in the public eye.

The photos and the scandal helped her career substantially. She landed the cover of Life magazine in April with a story explaining about the photos and talking about her background. This continued throughout the year as she landed several magazine covers and news stories.

Caniff’s first correspondence about Miss Mizzou dates to May 29th, 1952, so it wouldn’t have been too long after Monroe’s Life profile. Miss Mizzou in the comic strip is a character who dreamed of Hollywood fame, but came up a little short. Caniff even described Mizzou as someone who was like Marilyn Monroe but didn’t “hit the jackpot in hollywood.” My theory is that Monroe’s nude photos and her subsequent explanation to the press about her career struggles helped inform the back-story for Miss Mizzou.

It must be kept in mind that Monroe was still a somewhat small time celebrity when Caniff would have been conceiving Miss Mizzou in May. While Monroe had gotten some publicity at that point, I’m thinking that it would have been possible for the press to move on to another person had Monroe not been starring in five films that year. Her career was gaining momentum, but Caniff would have had no idea Monroe would become as big as she eventually did. Monroe’s fame didn’t solidify until 1953 with several films including “Niagra” in January, “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” in July, and “How to Marry a Millionare” in November. In December of 1953, the first issue of Playboy launched with Monroe on the cover, and she became the first playmate of the month.

One of my observations in my Miss Mizzou book is that her popularity came from the people, and not solely from Caniff’s promotional savvy. Oddly enough, Monroe felt the same thing about her popularity: “If I am a star, the people made me star. No studio, no person, but the people did.” Actor Joseph Cotton agreed: “A lot of people will tell you it’s all publicity. That’s malarkey. They’ve tried to give a hundred girls the same publicity build-up. It didn’t take with them.”

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IMAGE: Steve Canyon daily comic strip, Janurary 7, 1953 – Copyright 2014 the Milton Caniff Estate. Pipper the Piper makes a joke about Marilyn Monroe’s calendar.

One last comment about the calendar: The “Marilyn Monroe calendar fan club” joke that was referenced at the top of this post was also repeated in the above Steve Canyon strip from January 7th, 1953. The character who makes this comment is Pipper the Piper, who was seemingly based on newly elected U.S. senator and eventual U.S. President John F. Kennedy. (The character’s personality was also based on David McCallister Jr. as comics historian Bruce Canwell notes in the introduction to Steve Canyon Volume 4.) This is of course an interesting footnote considering that Monroe and Kennedy were allegedly romantically linked a few years after this appeared.