When I was a little kid at Burt School in Burt Michigan I always knew who the rich kids were by the quality of toys they'd bring to school. Whether it was Popeye battling a Japanese tank(made in Japan no less) or a pair of really cool mounted knights in armor which jousted by pulling a little string to activate a spring-driven motor, they had the most breath-taking toys. Poorer kids (like me) had Auburn rubber toys. I saw a lot of those Auburn firetrucks and motorcycle cops. On one particularly memorable Christmas (I may have been five years old) my parents got me an Auburn military train. Now make no mistake, this wasn't an electric train set - it had no tracks, but it was a rubber (meaning flexible plastic) black locomotive and red caboose with two gray flatbed cars in the middle. On the flatbeds were those wonderful Auburn military vehicles - tank, truck, half-track (my favorite), and jeep towing a howitzer. It was very cool though I used the vehicles way more than I did the train; and I used those cool vehicles in endless bedroom floor battles.
Back to the rich kids, they would show up with the most delightful little figures with remarkable detail and a complete back story, they were those wonderful little men from Marx...
Louis Marx, the man who brought so much imaginative play
to so many children - the "baby-boomers" of today
The Marxmen I became most familiar with were the cool Civil War guys from the Blue and Gray playset. Although my big brother Joe had a second-hand Fort Apache I didn't connect it to Marx as I was not yet all that familiar with the brand. I was only vaguely aware of other sets including Rin Tin Tin, the Army Training Camp, and the fodder for this post - the 7th Cavalry.
Here's a group of Paragon (dark blue) and Toy Soldiers of San Diego (TSSD) cavalry figures.
Here's a similar grouping of Marx 7th Cavalry troopers. Let's do a little side-by-side, shall we?
The Marx wounded guy (with original playground dirt) is less demonstrative than his Paragon comrade though perhaps more convincing. I love the revolver dropping to the ground.
Sword guy from Marx is pretty minimalist with oddly calm expression and nice suspenders. The paragon guy is richly detailed and Sam Neil-esque in expression. Call it sentimentality, but the Marx guy has more appeal to me.
Running guys. The Marx mennonite (judging by his hat) on the left and the TSSD guy on the right; both running to, or from, who knows what?
Again, for level of detail there is no comparison, TSSD wins hands-down. But for the magic of childhood memories give me the guy on the left (with the playground patina archivally intact).
The pistol-packin' Paragon on right is defiantly standing his ground, the Marx guy is an
armed man in a hurry!
The sculpting of the Marx figures is the definition of elegance - simple beauty. I love detail as much as (actually more than) the next guy, but there is something about the clean lines of Marx figures that has always appealed to me.
Direct your attention to the detail. Check out the locks on the carbines. TSSD has the detail but they both seem equally lethal in intent.
Pardon the blurriness but look at the difference in holsters - Paragon on the left and Marx on the right. By comparison the Marx effort is more the "suggestion" of a holster. It worked for this kid.
Look at the difference in bases. TSSD provides sculpted terrain, Marx takes a guitar pick approach.
The former gold standard of army men. The stuff childhood dreams are made of.
Louis Marx was a master of marketing and a genius for capturing the imagination of a generation of kids. I always find myself thinking warm thought of him in the holiday season, I hope you do too.
By the way, as the years rolled along I've been able to reconnect with a couple of those kids from my playground days. As it turns out, they weren't rich at all...
they merely had better hand-me-downs than the rest of us.
Soldier on!
Mannie
This just in!...
Since posting this entry I came across several more of these Marx cavalrymen. I can now account for all but three of the full set.
Missing are the walking guy, the standing shooting guy, and the clubbed-musket guy.
A very nicely sculpted bugler. One thing the Marx figures had that is often lacking in the modern figures is accurate anatomy and very natural animation...
as evidenced in this marching guy...
and this very vigilant trooper.
I like this relaxed cavalryman with neither sword overhead or pistol in hand. Seldom do we see a merely relaxed soldier pose such as this.
Splendid sculpting and a very nice post-war kepi.
I'm happy to have reunited this group. Now only if the last three would show up.
Mannie I remember that the rich kids where I live, the "summer cottage" kids had Timpo, Herald, and Britains. Plastic figures, sometimes "Swoppets". Maybe an Elastolin here and there.
ReplyDeleteAnother great post.
Wonderful little essay, Mannie! I completely missed the later 54mm "Bill Lemon" sculpts of the 7th cavalry. Mine were the "Ft. Dearborn and Rin Tin Tin 45mm and 60mm guys, respectively. Found my first aqua-cav guy at a flea market in 1984 and it opened a whole new world!
ReplyDeleteWhat I would not have given to have had some of these chappies as a kid. Never even knew they existed. I had to settle for bits of straw and highly explosive clods of dried clay, paper figures or Betta Bilda bricks for my soldiery. Mind you, once past the housing (good for urban fighting anyway), Betta Bilda made very passable tanks, armoured cars, artillery and what not.
ReplyDeleteNot to mention battleships (Napoleonic or WW2), bombers and interceptors...
Such fun days...