Friday, August 7, 2009

September 7, 1951: Shhh!

Peanuts

This is not the first thing Snoopy has ever said. It is the second. (The first, if you'll remember was "Boo!")

How human is Snoopy? Later he can do just about everything the other characters can except talk, and can even do some other things they cannot, some of them apparently quite special like the "Cheshire Beagle" trick he shows off on multiple occasions. Here he's not gotten his thought balloons yet, but it's obvious he's thinking something. We're just not told what.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

September 6, 1951: Another dog?!

Peanuts

It's a dog other than Snoopy or his brothers! This strip establishes that, for now at least, Snoopy is noticeably smaller than other dogs.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

September 5, 1951: Before the fall

Peanuts

This strip is sort of like a middle-era strip in theme, except instead of Charlie Brown being left at the end to endure his rejection in solitude, Violet makes up with him immediately.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

September 4, 1951: Snoopy's yard

Peanuts

This one shows us, again, that Charlie Brown is probably not Snoopy's owner yet, but that someone owns him, or where else would he have gotten that doghouse? The expectation that his yard should be mown expands Snoopy's personality further; in the middle-era, when his doghouse burned down, it would be revealed that he lost a pool table and a Van Gogh in the fire.

The dial of a rotary phone is also visible here, which things, as I mentioned before, are now receding into memory.

Monday, August 3, 2009

September 3, 1951: Music notation

Peanuts

This is the first strip in which Schulz draws complex music notation, which he said in Peanuts: A Golden Celebration he found challenging yet satisfying to draw. Schroeder's still playing the generic baby, so the two haven't met yet.

I remember that there is a similar early Garfield strip along these lines. Garfield and Odie sing with each other. Jon comes along singing something different, represented by a different note. In the last panel, the animals shout their note at him while Jon reacts in surprise. It's one of the more entertaining early Garfield strips, I seem to remember.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

August 31, 1951: A familiar shirt

Peanuts

It's the first use of Schroeder's trademark striped shirt, which is similar to Linus's later. It's the beginning of the character's progression out of babyhood.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

August 29, 1951: Dog as shark

Peanuts

Ah-ha! It is the first glimmer of Snoopy's capacity for imagination, which if memory serves began when Snoopy fantasized being different kinds of dangerous wild animals.

Friday, July 31, 2009

August 28, 1951: Snoopy's birthday

Peanuts

Should this be considered Snoopy's official birthday? I don't think Schulz planned out his characters' backstories in that much detail, really. Does it seem strange to sing "Happy Birthday" for a dog?

Snoopy is a dog of many emotions: surprise, tearful gratitude, and anticipatory happiness.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

August 27, 1951: Baby vs. Dog

Peanuts

A funny strip, though a variant of the ball throwing one from a few days ago. How about Schroeder's "talk to the hand" gesture in the second panel?

Notice that, to signal the characters eating, Schulz resorted to word balloons saying "chomp chomp" and "smack smack."

Also, it's not their first appearance by any means, but check out the fancy question-marks in the second and fourth panels, which were kind of a Schulz trademark in the early days.

And: scribble of ire!

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

August 24, 1951: The Pitcher's Mound

Peanuts

This seems to be the first instance of Charlie Brown pitching. I can forgive the umpire sitting behind the pitcher for the chance to see Snoopy, in one of his earliest fully-intelligent moments, declaring a ball to CB's consernation. A funny strip!