Friday, August 3, 2012
Sunday, July 17, 1955: The Eternal Battle
Who is better: R. Crumb or George Foreman?
Who is better: Alfred E. Neuman or a cardboard cutout of Darth Vader?
What I'm asking in my roundabout way is, what criteria are they using? Apparently they're going by the personal flaws of their opponents, which I guess is as objective a measure or anything.
Peanuts would eventually earn a long history of abstract first panels, but I have to admit I don't quite get this one. Is that supposed to be an olive branch? It wouldn't fit in with the theme of the strip, which is that neither side is willing to give an inch.
Monday, July 23, 2012
June 27-July 2, 1955: More from Davy Crockett
From the Wikipedia entry on "Coonskin Cap" (accessed 7/23/2012):
"In the 20th century, the iconic association was in large part due to Disney's television program Disneyland and the first three "Davy Crockett" episodes starring Fess Parker. In the episodes, which once again made Crockett into one of the most popular men in the country, the frontier hero was portrayed wearing a coonskin cap. The show spawned several Disneyland Davy Crockett sequels as well as other similar shows and movies, with many of them featuring Parker as the lead actor. Parker went on to star in a Daniel Boone television series (1964-1970), again wearing a coonskin cap.
"Crockett's new popularity initiated a fad among boys all over the United States as well as a Davy Crockett craze in the United Kingdom. The look of the cap that was marketed to young boys was typically simplified; it was usually a faux fur lined skull cap with a raccoon tail attached. A variation was marketed to young girls as the Polly Crockett hat. It was similar in style to the boys' cap, including the long tail, but was made of all-white fur (faux or possibly rabbit). At the peak of the fad, coonskin caps sold at a rate of 5,000 caps a day.[4] By the end of the 1950s, Crockett's popularity waned and the fad slowly died out. The fad is recalled by numerous cultural references, such as the wearing of coonskin caps as part of The Junior Woodchucks uniform in Disney's Donald Duck comics."
Peanuts was never above making, and making fun of, pop cultural references. The caps feature in this and the next four strips, making for one of Peanuts' earliest sequences.
June 28:
Another version of the previously-described "everybody or everything" style of joke, where the humor comes from watching an animal doing something in a human style. These jokes would lose their impact as Snoopy became humanized.
June 29:
I like Schulz's approach to drawing these caps, which is just different enough from Peanuts' normal art style to add punch to the joke.
June 30:
Good use of motion lines here, it is easy to picture Snoopy's motion in your head. This strip would probably be funnier it it cale before the June 28 strip, which already used the dog-wearing-cap sight gag.
And so Davy Crockett caps leave the strip. But probably not for long.
July 1:
Well, the Davy Crockett fad lasted a good while but it did eventually peter out. Those Davy Crockett shows were kind of like the Star Wars of the age. I don't know myself where that will end, but I hope it comes along soon.
July 2:
I recognize the name Willie Mays, but I guess Duke Snider's name didn't echo across the cultural landscape in the same way.
Friday, November 18, 2011
February 6-13, 1955: Square Balloons and Valentine's Day
We have a fairly uninteresting Sunday strip to lead off, so I included the following week with it. And then just to go that little bit farther, I included the next Sunday strip in with it.
Well, they can't all be winners. Although the sight of a snowman with extremely long arms is kind of amusing. Next!
More of Linus' square balloons. This does make it a lot easier to store them. By the way, I like how the cartoon convention that blown-up balloons automatically float upward is ignored here. People don't typically exhale helium dammit.
I wonder if Charles Schulz drew this one in response to letters asking Violet's question.
This is a good example of something Schulz is good at, taking an absurd premise and elaborating upon it entertainingly. I believe it's not impossible to create a balloon that would blow up into a cube, but I don't know if you could do it with just latex.
We've seen Lucy at the piano before, and we've seen Schroeder cut her down, but this, I think, is the first time when the setting retreats into the background and it's really settled into the Schroeder/Lucy formula. This strip could just as well shown up ten years later.
Chagrimace. More willful ignorance from Lucy. I guess some skepticism is healthy, but what a thing to be skeptical of.
Every year, thousands ones of children accidentally construct cages around themselves using building sets. Won't you please give today to the cause of outlawing these horrible toys?
Particularly noteworthy: this is the first time Linus makes an utterance that isn't obviously either baby talk or an internal monologue. From here, it's only a matter of time before he starts quoting the Old Testament.
That car in the first two panels is entirely a throwaway, but it helps to underscore just how much the world has changed in the years since 1955.
That's an uncharacteristically mocking attitude from Schroeder in panel 2.
This is the first strip that focuses on Charlie Brown's problems with Valentine's Day, I think. Although the object of his affections isn't the Little Red-Haired Girl, this is definitely the kind of silly mistake he'd make with her later.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
January 10-15, 1955: Lucy is hard on toys
A disturbing insight into Lucy's attitude towards property.
For some reason this strip reminds me of that disco version of Beethoven's 5th Symphony.
That's kind of hyperbolic. Lucy didn't even know what a metronome was before Monday!
Girls in Peanuts tend to be rather more rough-and-tumble than in other strips. Lucy, of course, eventually gets to where she won't think twice about returning a slug in the jaw for an insult. "Peppermint" Patty won't even be arriving on the scene for many years yet.
When someone tells you to close your eyes, yeah, it's usually a good idea not to if you can get away with it. Anyway, why doesn't Violet just rummage through her candy bag facing the other way?
An enthusiastic speech by Schroeder, boldly staking his claim as the neighborhood artist.
Saturday, October 15, 2011
December 6-11, 1954: The Fussbudget Sonata
This is an intensified version of a previous snubbing strip. Charlie Brown still hasn't quite started taking snubs to heart.
December 7
Charlotte Braun won't be with us long folks. I mentioned before, I seem to remember, that her niche would be taken over by Lucy (whose fussing becomes better-illustrated as Schulz turns up her volume), and some parts of her character design would later be refined and used for Sally.
December 8
Charlotte Braun rarely appears in collections -- I think gocomics' archive and of course the Fantagraphics volumes are pretty much it.
December 9
Come on now, Lucy isn't really that bad a girl, at least not yet.
December 10
There's something about the way Lucy looks straight up that looks a little weird. In the second panel, is that her chin or her cheek?
December 11
Is this an early example of Schroeder warming slightly to Lucy, or is it sarcasm on his part?
Lucy has been described, and has self-identified, as a fussbudget before, but I think here it's starting to become a defining attribute. I think a lot of people's impressions of the characters originated from the early collections (some of which I read as a kid in first grade -- I devoured all their Fawcett Peanuts collections), and we're just starting to get to the era where strips would frequently be drawn from for those reprints. That's the era that started frequently referring to Lucy as a fussbudget, so they would come to figure prominently in perceptions of the character.
The paddleball bit with Charlie Brown is a wholly unnecessary, but nice, touch.
Monday, August 22, 2011
September 28-October 3, 1954: Beethoven, Forget it, Serif hey, I'M NOT, Fancy signals, Fancy signals and Dog explosions
As someone who's often guilty of just the thing Charlie Brown is doing here, I have to say I find this hilarious.
Lucy seems to have the ability to exclaim, not just in serif lettering, but with lowercase letters too! This isn't even the fanciest writing we'll see this week.
Charlie Brown's spirit hasn't been beaten down quite so much yet.
How do the girls hear those fancy signals? Does Charlie Brown adapt a different tone of voice? Those typefaces are very well-rendered. Schulz was a true artist, but he was a great craftsman too. All of this done for a throwaway joke one Friday in 1954. I wonder if he worked from reference typefaces when he drew this one.
(This strip is a copy of the previous one in gocomics' browse order. I don't know what's supposed to go here.)
Those are some great backgrounds in panels one and three. They must have taken Charles Schulz a long time to do! The juxtaposition of the deceptively simple characters and the elaborate, realistic backgrounds is one of the many little joys of classic Peanuts.
Sunday, August 7, 2011
Week of August 23-28, 1954: Charlie Brown still has an ego
Only the second bit of negativity we've heard from Pig-Pen, the first being in his introduction.
That's not Snoopy, someone switched his bust of Beethoven for a figurine of the RCA dog!
Is this sarcasm from Schroeder, or condescension?
Charlie Brown still has some of the old ego in him, I see. I wonder when is the moment when that's finally pounded out of him, and when it happens, if ultimately it's Lucy, or Patty and Violet who are the cause
Her beleaguered mother has resorted to trying to play her and Linus against each other. Lucy takes the long view here. Lucy is forward-thinking in the next Sunday strip too, although she doesn't look quite so far ahead.
This is a fairly standard comic inversion. Not really terribly noteworthy, but I've commented on all the other strips this week, so why not?
(If I do leave strips out, I will still link to the gocomics page for the absent strips. I don't think it's proper to present strips I don't have much to say about, since I'm hosting these copies to avoid hot linking gocomics, and not to provide an alternate archive of strips. As I said before, they are presented here for commentary purposes only.)
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Sunday, July 18, 1954: The nature of nothing
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
From the Wikipedia article on Virgil Thomson:
"[...] Thomson was famous for his revival of the rare technique of composing "musical portraits" of living subjects, often spending hours in a room with them before rushing off to finish the piece on his own. Many subjects reported feeling that the pieces did capture something unique about their identities even thought nearly all the portraits were absent of any clearly representational content."
A sly strip. Schroeder's looks of concentration, followed by his throwing his hands up, are important for understanding that he's giving up. I think it works better this way, allowing us to see him throwing in the towel, than being told directly that he's got nothing, which would seem a bit harder on Charlie Brown's feelings.
Monday, April 25, 2011
January 19, 1954:
January 20, 1954:
January 21, 1954:
Let's do a few this time:
January 18: This strip is a callback to December 16, 1953. Like that earlier strip, Schroeder's legs reveal attention to how they're braced against the fence. Nowadays it seems weird that a kid would get off of school for his birthday, or that of any random classical composer. That fence is weird -- it's in both strips. This must be the edge of Schroeder's yard. Chagrimace!
Of note for trivia contests: Schroeder's birthday is January 18.
January 19: It would be so easy to derive a political message from this strip.
January 20: This strip is something of a callback to July 2, 1953. In that strip the kids are saddened by the prospect of being left with a babysitter. Here, they're gloating at the prospect of the other being left behind. Gradually, their relationship is evolving.
January 21: I like this one for how the shape of the notes in the last frame fill in the space between the top and the piano.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Sunday, January 3, 1954: More of Lucy's infatuation with Schroeder
We've recently seen more hints about Lucy's developing self-centered personality. We've seen a little of it before in one prior strip, but this here is the true beginning of Lucy's long-running crush on Schroeder, what Charles Schulz had been known to call her "weakness."
While Lucy can be bossy, crabby and fussy, in some ways she's rather admirable. She has a very strong personality, is (usually) very confident, and doesn't often take 'no' for an answer. The second panel here is a good depiction of this side of her. Generally the Schroeder strips depict Lucy at her best, although this is far from universal.
Panel three is rather abrupt if the first two panels, which newspapers sometimes remove, are missing. The only previous hint of Lucy having a crush on Schroeder was that other strip almost a whole year back.
Most Lucy vs. Schroeder strips make the musician a bit more inscrutable. We're usually on Lucy's side in the struggle. That had yet to develop in this strip, which is more egalitarian in presenting clash of the characters' wants.
We get another somersault here.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Christmas Day and New Year's Eve, 1953
December 31, 1953:
The Christmas strip is another message to the reader, which I don't think generally work for Peanuts, but at least there's a joke to it this time. It's funny that, if you give him enough space, Charlie Brown draws his letters with serifs.
The New Year's Eve strip isn't holiday-specific, but is funny. It's something of a follow-up. I love Schulz's giant serif Zs, which we can take to indicate the sound, and loudness, of Snoopy's snoring. Schulz returns to this particular gag later.
The motion lines make it look like Snoopy is being thrown out of a basement.
Friday, April 1, 2011
Sunday, December 13, 1953: Schroeder's ready for the big time
Read this comic at gocomics.com.
Sometimes with these I think Schulz throws in realistically-proportioned adult objects just to demonstrate that he can draw well technically. Of course Schroeder couldn't actually play the adult piano because his arms are too short; he'd barely be able to reach the keys unless the bench were right up against it.
I notice that, in some of the Sunday strips we've seen, there's a blank spot between a couple of the panels in the bottom row. It's really noticeable because it always seems to overlap two of the panels. Is this the result of some problem with their source documents?
Thursday, March 17, 2011
November 20, 1953: "Aus Der Tiefe"
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
There are certain personality characteristics that Peanuts characters exhibit. Here is exhibited one that we might call "mischevious." Snoopy has it definitely, and Lucy might have some of it. Charlie Brown used to have to, as we see here, but kind of grows out of it.
Yet another reason to love Peanuts: you have just read a strip about the pronunciation of a German particle. That's not something you'll typically find in Dennis the Menace.
In panel 2, Charlie Brown is sitting on the far end of Schroeder's toy piano. That thing must be really heavy to avoid being upended.