The transition period certainly bought some changes. I think of it ending in 2004 rather than 2003, as that was when Jimmy unoficially replaced Parkins as Dennis' secondary artist, and when the issue number and date stopped being displayed on the cover front and centre and instead displayed in tiny letters near the barcode. (never liked that). Mind you, Jimmy Hansen had drawn several Dennis strips before '04 (The first one I have is the issue dated 7 December 2002) and he seemed to be emulating Parkins' incarnation quite significantly (on the cover of the said issue, Dennis' expression looks identical to that of the cover of the 7th September 2002 issue)
Duroing this time we got a lot of artists who had either never drawn for the beano or had never drawn for a comic before. There was the Jimmy hansen who had drawn for the Dandy since 1993 (and had worked in comics since the 70's) but didn't draw for the Beano until 1999. Then there was mike Pearse, who did excellent long stories involving lots of characters which I previously mentioned, along with The 3 Bears and Singled Out. There was also Jon Rushby, who's style I don't really mind, It does have some real charm to it, but at one time It just got to the point where his work became incredibly cluttered- not a very good thing for a comic strip to be. He once drew a deputised Bash Street Kids strip in October 2001, and I've never seen anything so messy.
I think I could probably owe my hate of Graeme Hall down to one thing- Vic niell had preceded him, and he was great. I suppose you could say People growing up with his Billy whizz were spoilt.
but they may not have liked Niell's Billy- I can think of reasons why people may have disliked his Billy- He changed a fair bit, such as his hair (He made his original hairs go curly to start with, and then changed the hairstyle completely) and I recall a user on this forum referring to Niell's Billy as a "smiling nit". Graeme Hall further enforced some of the changes (such as the head shape) Vic Niell made to make him even less recognisable. There was also the problem with speed- G. Hall didn't seem to be able to (or perhaps just didn't want to) convey speed like the other artists. In his earliest strips, Billy was often seen with Blurred Spinning legs like what Parkins and Metcalfe did previously. However, in some cases it seemed more like Billy wasn't actually moving at any real speed, but rather his legs were slipping fiercely against the ground. In other cases, he appeared to be simply strolling while the word "Whizz!" or "Zoom!" is seen in great big letters. In one case, (in an issue from January 2003) One of Billy's ancestors, who is similarly super-fast, proves that the world is round as one country's day is another's night. He is meant to be whizzing across the world, but he actually appears to be
plodding rather than running and yet a huge "Zoom!" in big letters is shown to convey speed.
I could write a book about G. Hall, but to be honest there are more important things in the world than a non-current comic artist. I still have more to talk about. This transition Period also introduced the likes of Chris McGhie and Duncan Scott- both brought in around 2000 or 2001 to draw Rhyme Time, and Both Went on to draw different strips later on. I like both these artists, and I think they're underrated. Duncan scott especially, he's brilliant, and really has a fun style that not only works well in comics but wouldn't go amiss on something such as birthday cards.
Then there was Dave Eastbury. I have no idea what his earliest work may have been but I think his first work in the Beano was Freddie Fear unless I'm very much mistaken. In my opinion, it looked like his early Freddie Fear strips were drawn to match the style of David Easington, who drew Little 'Orror. I think this was intentional, because In the 7th September 2002 issue, there's a painting of Little 'Orror on the wall of the Castle where Freddie lives. To be honest, I think Dave's earlier strips for the Beano looked somewhat static, with very little movement, and his Freddie Strips weren't very convincing (mind you, DC Thomson never utilised the Comedy-Horror style strip in any of their comics, any strip set in a spooky sort of setting were always pure humour, though John Geering's Number 13 conveyed a sense of Atmosphere you didn't get in Freddie Fear, Especially in the Black and White strips). I think since Dave changed his style in 2009, his work has looked much better.
Wayne Thompson is another artist who I think started work for the Beano during this time; I believe his first Beano work may have Been the one-off Phone-a-Fiend. His earliest Billy Whizz strips did look quite good; aside from the tracksuit he esentially reverted Billy back to the way he'd been drawn by Mal, David and Trevor before him. But as everyone else has mentioned it didn't take long for his style to deteriorate and at one point he even forgot to give Billy some pupils in his eyes (Had Billy gotten blinded at whizzspeed?) And I think as he began to draw Jak for the dandy his style further deteriorated- his earlier Jak strips were quite good but soon he was drawing in some sort of Bridge-style (across between his earlier style and his more current style) and he was soon drawing strips in about a thousand different styles- many in a single strip. These days I think his style looks much better, more pleasing to the eye and more fun to look at.
Mind you, This transition period saw the Beano lose three Johns- Geering, Dallas and Sherwood. All three with different styles and all three leaving were a great loss. Of course John Geering and John Sherwood died, and Dallas retired, so they couldn't keep them even if they gave them no choice. Aside from John Dallas, they were nevr properly replaced. Metcalfe's Les Pretend simply wasn't as good as John Sherwood's, and John Geering's strips both ended.
Then we saw the death of Bob Nixon, who I suppose was properly replaced when his strips were exhausted in 2003. Tony O'Donnel emulated Nixon's style quite well on Ivy, but his strips also contained traces of Trevor Metcalfe, Jimmy Glen and even a slight tinge of Mal Judge. To be honest I'd have liked to see him draw Roger, I think his style suite him better than Barry Appleby, whose style I never really liked much, and I actually prefer seeing the Reprints of Nixon's work in the current Beano, even though I've already read a lot of them. (As a matter of Fact, Jimmy Glen did a good looking Roger in a game in the 2008 annual. I presume he'd Semi-retired by 2003 though, as he was no longer drawing any strips. Jimmy never did draw Roger. Shame really, because his Roger would've been better than Tom Lavery's, which didn't do anything except make Frank McDiarmid's Roger look good.)