Spy vs. Spy

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Spy vs. Spy
Author(s)
Current status/scheduleEnded (as of 2021)
Launch dateMad magazine #60 (Jan. 1961)
Publisher(s)DC Entertainment
Genre(s)Political satire
Humor

Spy vs. Spy is a wordless comic strip published in Mad magazine. It features two agents involved in stereotypical and comical espionage activities. One is dressed in white, and the other in black, but they are otherwise identical, and are particularly known for their long, beaklike heads and their white pupils and black sclera. The pair are always at war with each other, using a variety of booby traps to inflict harm on the other. The spies usually alternate between victory and defeat (sometimes both win and both lose) with each new strip. A parody of the political ideologies of the Cold War, the strip was created by Cuban expatriate cartoonist Antonio Prohías, and debuted in Mad #60, dated January 1961.[1] Spy vs. Spy is currently written and drawn by Peter Kuper.

The Spy vs. Spy characters have been featured in such media as video games and an animated television series, and in such merchandise as action figures and trading cards.

Publication history[edit]

Antonio Prohías was a prolific cartoonist in Cuba known for political satire. He fled to the United States on May 1, 1960, three days before Fidel Castro's government nationalized the last of the Cuban free press.[2] Prohías sought work in his profession and traveled to the offices of Mad magazine in New York City on July 12, 1960, with the strips, which he said he had created specifically for the magazine.[3] After an initial rejection but ultimately a successful showing of his work and a prototype cartoon for Spy vs. Spy, Prohías was hired.[4]

Prohías cryptically signed each strip on its first panel with a sequence of Morse code characters that spell "BY PROHIAS". In a 1983 interview with the Miami Herald, Prohías reflected on the success of Spy vs. Spy, stating, "The sweetest revenge has been to turn Fidel's accusation of me as a spy into a moneymaking venture."[4] Prohías was censored by Mad magazine publisher William Gaines on at least one occasion: the strip that eventually appeared in Mad magazine #84 (Jan. 1964) was altered to remove scenes where the spies drink and smoke (Gaines had a strong anti-smoking stance).[4] Prohías evolved his drawing style over the years, making the spies' heads proportionately larger by 1964. In 1965, he began to experiment with not drawing frames on the spies' shades, and this became a consistent trait from late 1966 on, so that the characters' eyes appeared to have no sclera—just very large pupils, all black except for reflective glints. But when a spy was caught in an explosion, sometimes his fully drawn shades would fly along with other items such as hats, boots, and dentures. In the 1980s, overhanging lips were common.

Prohías completed a total of 241 Spy vs. Spy strips for Mad magazine, the last one appearing in #269 (March 1987).[4] After that he drew gag strips for the titles (such as one involving radioactive waste in #287) and wrote several stories for Clarke or Manak to draw, with his last such contribution in #337 (July 1995).[5]

The strips continued, with writer Duck Edwing and artist Bob Clarke creating the majority. Their strips are identifiable by Clarke's drawing style, but signed "'C/e", or "'C/p" in the Prohías-written cases.

Some were largely uncredited, simply being signed "M&S" (MAD 335) or "M&e" (MAD 352).

Peter Kuper took over as the full-time writer and artist for the strip with Mad magazine #356 (April 1997). In 2001, Kuper began drawing it in full color when the magazine made its switch from black and white art. With Mad reverting to a reprint format, Kuper's last Spy strip appeared in issue #18 (the magazine had moved to Burbank in 2018, adopting new numbering starting with #1). The final new Spy cartoon was three pages long, and showed the spies progressing through millennia: evolving from the sea, as Greek pottery, as dueling knights, and ultimately as the only two survivors of a nuclear holocaust that they had caused. They agree to stop fighting, and walk off together arm-in-arm into the shattered ruins of civilization.

Characters[edit]

Cosplay, Comikaze Expo 2011

Black Spy and White Spy (or "Man in Black" and "Man in White") – Wearing wide-brimmed hats and dressed in overcoats, both Spies have long pointed faces. They are identical, except for one being entirely in white and one entirely in black. The Spies were modeled after El Hombre Siniestro ("The Sinister Man"), a character Prohías created in the Cuban magazine Bohemia in 1956.[6] Like the Spies, he wore a wide-brimmed hat and overcoat and had a long, pointed nose. Prohías described the character as someone who "thought nothing of chopping the tails off of dogs, or even the legs off of little girls" and stated he was "born out of the national psychosis of the Cuban people."[4] 'El Hombre Siniestro bore a strong resemblance to the Spies—although, instead of fighting against a set rival, he simply does horrible things to anyone he can find.

The cover copy of The All New Mad Secret File on Spy vs. Spy provides early insight to the characters and Prohías' views on the Castro regime and the CIA:

You are about to meet Black Spy and White Spy – the two MADdest spies in the whole world. Their antics are almost as funny as the CIA's. ... When it comes to intrigue, these guys make it way outtrigue. They are the only two spies we know who haven't the sense to come in out of the cold. But they have a ball – mainly trying to outwit each other.[4]

A gag panel in Mad magazine #122 (Oct. 1968) established Black Spy as a member of the "East." He gets trapped by a White Spy, who is guarding the border to the "West." There is otherwise no indication in the series that Black Spy is pro-communist or White Spy is pro-capitalist.

Grey Spy (or "Woman in Grey") – She debuted in Mad magazine #73 (Sept. 1962) (the strip was temporarily renamed Spy vs. Spy vs. Spy). Grey Spy's appearances were sporadic, but she always triumphed by using the infatuations of Black Spy and White Spy to her advantage. Prohías explained, "The lady Spy represented neutrality. She would decide on White Spy or Black Spy, and she also added some balance and variety to the basic 'Spy vs. Spy' formula."[4] Grey Spy's last appearance under Prohías was Mad magazine #99 (Dec. 1965); she did not appear again until 1988, after Bob Clarke and Duck Edwing took over the strip.

Leaders – They are the barrel-chested, medal-decorated bosses of Black Spy and White Spy, who give them tasks and punish them for their failures. The Leaders were phased out when Peter Kuper took over writing and illustrating the strip.

Spin-offs[edit]

  • A Sunday strip series (39 in total) was released weekly from April 7 to Dec 29, 2002;[7] 2014 in the MAD news, syndicated by Tribune Media Services and featuring Duck Edwing and Dave Manak returning as writer and artist respectively.
  • A series of thirteen strips titled Spy vs. Spy Jr. were published in Mad Kids magazine from 2006 to 2009. It depicted the three Spies as children, playing harmless practical jokes on each other. It appeared in every Mad Kids issue.

Other media[edit]

White Spy as seen in a 2004 Mountain Dew television commercial.
  • Video games based on the strip have been released for the ZX Spectrum,[8] Commodore 64, Atari 8-bit family, Nintendo Entertainment System, Master System, Game Boy, and Apple II.[9] In 1997 GT Interactive announced that it would publish a "Spy vs. Spy" game for the PC in early 1998,[10] but it was cancelled.
  • A "Spy vs. Spy" board game was released by Milton Bradley in 1986.[11]
  • Animated segments of Spy vs. Spy appeared in the unaired 1974 Mad Magazine Television Special, and in the first five seasons of Mad TV (1995 until 2000) with animation by Rough Draft Studios.
  • In 2004, the characters were featured in television commercials for the soft drink Mountain Dew.[12]
  • "Spy vs. Spy" was a skit in every episode of Cartoon Network's animated series Mad. It ran from September 6, 2010 – December 2, 2013 (there was one skit per episode; in total, there were 103 short skits in 103 episodes), including themed skits depending on the time the episode first aired (i.e. a Christmas or Halloween theme). In the first season, the skits were drawn in styles based on the illustrations by Prohías and Clarke; the second season introduced a new three-dimensional stop-motion animation style - these skits were animated by Stoopid Buddy Stoodios (the team behind Robot Chicken). For the remaining two seasons of the show, the shorts were produced exclusively in stop-motion. The sketches followed the style of the comic, with one spy being outwitted by the other, and many of them adapted actual installments of the comic, like the Mad TV shorts. Both spies claimed victory 51 times each, and one of their feuds resulted in a draw.
    • In addition, the aforementioned Robot Chicken spoofed Spy vs. Spy twice. In the Season 2 episode "Password: Swordfish", a skit based around the aforementioned Mountain Dew ads sees White Spy attempting to trounce his adversary by hiding a spring-loaded boxing glove in a soda vending machine, only for Black Spy to simply approach him from behind, shoot him dead, and steal his top-secret plans, rather than using a more elaborate counter-plot as seen in the comic strips. The Season 7 episode "Panthropologie" features a short sketch where Black Spy enacts testicular torture on White Spy, a la Casino Royale.
  • The characters made an appearance on an episode of Family Guy, "Spies Reminiscent of Us", wherein White Spy revealed at the headquarters of Chevy Chase and Dan Aykroyd that they had settled their differences and started a romantic relationship. White Spy was voiced by Family Guy series creator Seth MacFarlane.
  • There is a planned film adaptation that was originally meant to have Ron Howard to direct back in 2011 from a screenplay by John Kamps and Brian Grazer and David Koepp were set to produce but was scrapped.[13] It now has Rawson Marshall Thurber directing and writing the screenplay.
  • In the 1938 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon Porky in Wackyland (directed by Bob Clampett) and its 1949 color remake "Dough for the Do-Do" (directed by Friz Freleng), the Dodo bird inspired an animation style similar to the Spy vs. Spy characters.

Bibliography[edit]

  • The All New Mad Secret File on Spy vs. Spy (Signet, 1965) – reprinted by Warner Books in 1971, and Watson-Guptill in 2009
  • Spy vs. Spy Follow Up File (Signet, 1968) – reprinted by Warner Books in 1971, and Watson-Guptill in 2009
  • The Third Mad Dossier of Spy vs. Spy (Warner Books, 1972)
  • The Fourth Mad Declassified Papers on Spy vs. Spy (Warner Books, 1974) – reprinted by Watson-Guptill, 2009
  • The Fifth Mad Report on Spy vs. Spy (Warner Books, 1978)
  • Mad's Big Book of Spy vs. Spy Capers and Other Surprises (Warner Books, 1978)
  • The Sixth Mad Case Book on Spy vs. Spy (Warner Books, 1982)
  • Prohías' Spy vs. Spy: The Updated Files (Warner Books, 1989)
  • Spy vs. Spy: The Updated Files #8 (Warner Books, 1993)
  • Spy vs. Spy: The Complete Casebook (Watson-Guptill, 2001) – reprinted by DC Comics, 2011
  • Spy vs. Spy: The Joke and Dagger Files (Watson-Guptill, 2007)
  • Spy vs. Spy: An Explosive Celebration (Liberty Street, 2015)
  • Spy Vs. Spy: The Big Blast (Time Inc. Books, 2016)

Spin-offs[edit]

  • Amazingly Stupid MAD (MAD Cartoon Network, 2013)
  • Spy vs. Spy: Casebook of Craziness (MAD Cartoon Network, 2014)

References[edit]

  1. ^ Carabas, Teodora (2007). "'Tales Calculated to Drive You MAD': The Debunking of Spies, Superheroes, and Cold War Rhetoric in Mad Magazine's 'SPY vs SPY'". The Journal of Popular Culture. 40 (1): 4–24. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5931.2007.00351.x.
  2. ^ "Spy vs. Spy Headquarters".
  3. ^ Hall, Gyasi (September 12, 2023). "Rethinking Spy vs. Spy: A Hand From One Page, A Bomb From Another". Longreads. Retrieved November 11, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Spy vs. Spy: The Complete Casebook", Prohías, A. (Watson-Guptill, 2001).
  5. ^ Mad Magazine Contributors-Antonio Prohias
  6. ^ Francisco Pascasio Blanco Ávila (October 31, 2013). "MI 'SOCIO' PROHÍAS". ay-vecino. Retrieved May 19, 2023.
  7. ^ Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 364. ISBN 9780472117567.
  8. ^ "Spy vs. Spy". World of Spectrum.
  9. ^ "In the Studio". Next Generation. No. 30. Imagine Media. June 1997. p. 19.
  10. ^ "GT Interactive Buys Singletrac, Makes Agreements with BMG and Warner Bros. Interactive". GamePro. No. 108. IDG. September 1997. p. 20.
  11. ^ "Spy vs. Spy," BoardGameGeek.com. Accessed July 1, 2015.
  12. ^ "Spy vs. Spy Mountain Dew Commercials," YBCW.com. Accessed July 1, 2015. Archived April 6, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Burwick, Kevin (April 30, 2020). "Spy Vs. Spy Movie Is Back on with Red Notice Director Rawson Marshall Thurber". MovieWeb. Retrieved November 20, 2022.

External links[edit]

Media related to Spy vs. Spy at Wikimedia Commons