Astounding Science Fiction – October, 1953 (Featuring “The Gulf Between”, by Tom Godwin) [Frank Kelly Freas] [Updated post… [Yet further updated…]]

[Update – December 26, 2020: My search for additional sightings of Frank the Robot has been successful.  I’m happy to report that he’s been captured on video on many occasions, and entirely un-UFO-like, his identity has been definitively verified by amateur and professional observers from locales the world over.  It turns out that he’s not at all reticent about public appearances, seeming to quietly revel in and appreciate public recognition.  True, he doesn’t say much.  (Actually, he doesn’t say anything at all.)  After all, if you’re a metallic man several stories tall, your presence alone speaks for itself.

I’ve also included numerous links about Frank’s creator, Frank Kelly Freas.  Oh, yes…  Note Frank’s resemblance to the robot in Freas’ black & white illustration for Tom Godwin’s story “The Gulf Between”.  A distant relative?

So, to view a better Frank sighting, scroll down a little – just below Stewie Griffin – and enjoy.]

________________________________________

“What the hell is that, a killer robot monster?!”

Frank Kelly Freas’ art gets around, in ways quite unexpected: 

I recently discovered that the plaintive, puppy-dog-eyed, giant robot featured on the cover of the October 1953 issue of Astounding Science Fiction – the inspiration for the cover art of Queen’s 1997 album “News of the World” – was encountered in the latter form by none other than Family Guy’s Stewie Griffin, in the series’ 2012 episode “Killer Queen”.  As you can see in the clip below (original here), Stewie’s introduction to the un-named metal monstrosity – courtesy of Brian Griffin – is a meeting quite memorable.

________________________________________

A MACHINE DOES NOT CARE

“You wanted obedience Cullin – now you have it.
You climbed a long way up by forcing human beings to behave like machines.
But you were wrong in one respect;
no human can ever be forced to behave exactly like a machine,
and no machine can ever be constructed that
will behave exactly like a human.
Machines are the servants of humans, not their equals.
There will always be a gulf between Flesh and Steel.
Read those five words on the panel before you and you will understand.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

It was a good ship,
built to travel almost forever,
and it hurled itself on through the galaxy
at full acceleration;
on and on until the galaxy was a great pinwheel of white fire behind it
and there was nothing before it.

On and on,
faster and faster,
into the black void of Nothing;
without reason or purpose
while a dark-eyed robot stared at a skeleton
that was grinning mirthlessly at a five-word sentence:

A MACHINE DOES NOT CARE
(Tom Godwin, “The Gulf Between”, p. 56)
________________________________________

“God, why does he look sad?!  He’s already destroyed mankind; what else could he want?!”

“I’ll tell you what the news of the world is, we’re in a lot of #@%$*! trouble!”

______________________________

From the YouTube channel of TroyDouglas917, here’s Frank’s opening for Queen + Adam Lambert’s  November 25, 2017, show at 3Arena in Dublin, with great views of Adam Lambert and Brian May.

______________________________

Illustration by Frank Kelly Freas, for Tom Godwin’s story “The Gulf Between” (p. 35).

______________________________

Illustration by Richard Van Dongen, for James H. White’s story “The Scavengers” (p. 121).

______________________________

Illustration by Richard Van Dongen, for James H. White’s story “The Scavengers” (p. 136).

References

Killer Queen, at Internet Movie Database

Adam Lambert – Official Website

Adam Lambert – Wikipedia

Brian May – Official Website

Brian May – Wikipedia

Queen – Official Website

Queen – Wikipedia

Queen + Adam Lambert – Wikipedia

Frank Kelly Freas

Official Website

Wikipedia

SFE – The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction

FindAGrave

JVJ Publishing (Illustrators)

Field Guide to Wild American Pulp Artists

Internet Speculative Fiction Database

GoodReads

Galaxy Press

Wikimedia Commons (Cover Art) – 47 images

Comic Art Fans – some classic, “clickable” (relatively) full-size cover art

Dangerous Minds

invaluable – The World’s Premier Auctions and Galleries – original art for sale

Mad Magazine Covers by Frank Kelly Freas – Doug Gilford’s Mad Magazine Cover Site

1/28/17 – 9/7/20 — 3/23/18 1735

Night Fighter, by Cecil F. “Jimmy” Rawnsley and Robert Wright – 1957 (June, 1967) [Edward I. Valigursky]

A very nice cover by Edward I. Valigursky for Ballantine Books’ 1967 edition of Cecil F. Rawnsley and Robert Wright’s Night Fighter, bearing the artist’s surname at the lower right…

Though the depicted aircraft are (in theory) Mosquito night fighters of Number 85 Squadron RAF, close (well … very, very close) inspection of the plane at the lower left reveals that it bears the code letters “ED I” on its fuselage.  Not so coincidentally, this matches the initials of the artist’s given and middle names: “Edward Ignatius”!  In reality, the squadron code carried by No. 85 Squadron’s warplanes was “VY”. 

Edward Valigursky was an enormously productive and versatile artist, his oeuvre encompassing the fields of military aviation, space exploration, and adventure.  As for the realm of science fiction, during the mid to late 1950s his work frequently appeared as cover art for Amazing Stories and Fantastic, interior art, and, the covers of Ace paperbacks.

Flight Lieutenant Cecil Frederick “Jimmy” Rawnsley

References

Hess, William N., The Allied Aces of World War II, Arco Publishing Inc., New York, N.Y., 1966

Flight Lieutenant Cecil Frederick “Jimmy” Rawnsley, at Wikipedia

Flight Lieutenant C.F. Rawnsley (portrait), at “The Royal Air Force 1939-1945, Vol. I: The Fight at Odds”, at ibiblio.org/hyperwar

Number 85 Squadron Royal Air Force, at Wikipedia

Edward I. Valigursky

Biography, at Pulp Artists

Biography, by Arnie Fenner, at Muddy Colors

Examples of his science fiction art, at 3rdART

Some GGA (“Good Girl Art”), at Grapefruit Moon Gallery

2018 08 31 – 2018 10 14