Uncle Scroge 241 del 1990 pubblica la storia "Zio Paperone e la lattuga mimetica" restaurata e ricondotta all'origine mediante le vignette ridisegnate da Don Rosa ma anche rimettendo a posto i dialoghi e in Uack! (25 anni dopo!) ripropongono la storia sbagliata?
Sta sera verifico anche i dialoghi italiani ma mi sembra di aver visto che la storia pubblicata su Uack! è la stessa di Zio Paperone non solo nelle vignette ma anche nei testi.
Qui sotto l'articolo scansito da US 241 in cui tutta la questione viene spiegata ... mi sembra che la faccenda sia ben spiegata e molto più grave della storia delle GM ... in fondo io mi sto comprando Uack" per avere meglio rispetto a Zio Paperone (di cui ho una collezione completa) e invece ...
THE CRUELEST CUTS OF ALL
By the time Carl Barks started work on "How Green Was My Lettuce," he had already been the victim of unplanned page cuts in some of his previous stories. For example, a total of five pages were excised from "Back to the Klondike" (Uncle Scrooge Four Color 456), including the famous "barroom brawl" sequence, because his editors objected to, as Barks put it, the "violence and dance hall atmosphere!' That art was saved and restored to the story when Gladstone printed it in Comic Album No. 2. Two pages were also dropped from "Mythic Mystery" (US 34), this time to make room for last-minute advertisements, but they have never surfaced. Barks probably thought he had solved the ad-vertising problem, even if he could never totally anticipate what his editors might find objection-able. In a 1961 letter he commented, "Scrooge #35 will have no unplanned cuts. I found out about the ad stunt in time to write the book's material to fit." For almost the next three years his stories were printed as drawn, but eventually pages were cut from two 1964 adventures, "Rug Riders in the Sky" (US 50) and "How Green Was My Lettuce" (US 51), once again to make room for ads. "Rug Riders in the Sky" lost only one page. "No doubt readers got more pleasure from the Bullwinkle Cheerios ad that was made possible by the scrapping of that page," Barks observed in 1989 notes written for The Carl Barks Library. It is not known if the deleted page is still extant. "How Green Was My Lettuce" is a different matter. Of the two pages excised from it, one and three-fourths pages have been found and restored to the story for this edition. Combined with pub-lished page two, they comprise the second, third, and fourth pages of the story. The still missing quarter-page has been newly drawn by Don Rosa and inserted where it logically seems to fit: as the second tier of restored page 2. Astute readers comparing the originally published page 2 (shown here) with the same panels In the restored version will notice some changes have been made in the published art. This was done in the belief that Barks' editors at Western had tampered with his art to make the story work after deleting so much material. Our goal was to restore the sequence to a close approximation of its intended form. To begin with, the words "Wak! Gophers!" in panel 4 here have been deleted because the next sequence in the excised portion reveals that Scrooge does not yet know about the gophers. he words "Now what?" in Scrooge's dialogue n panel 5 have been changed to "Suddenly?" because McDuCk had just exclaimed "Wak! Now what?" in the previous panel when the deleted portions are restored (see page 3, panel 7). And finally, a small black dot, intended to represent Scrooge running from his bin, has been whited out of panel 7 and an additional dialogue balloon has been given to one of the nephews. He now asks "Where's Unca Scrooge?" This was done to lead into Donald's dialogue in the next restored panel, which reads: "I don't see him, but there's a two-ton sack of money coming out of the door!" (page 4, panels 4 and 5). A reader unaware of the deletions in "How Green Was My Lettuce" might have thought the published page two was poorly written and frenetically paced. He might also have shook his head in bewilderment at the caption that begins the next page (5). It reads: "the bin is indeed under-mined by gophers!" and the "indeed" makes no sense without reference to Scrooge's comment in the previous deleted panel ( "But I've a strong idea now it's all caused by gophers!"). Fortunately, Barks managed to avoid any further butchering of his work for the remainder of his tenure on Uncle Scrooge. His stories clearly work best when published intact, as he conceived, wrote, and drew them.
—Byron Erickson