Friday, March 18, 2011
November 21, 1953: The Trepidation of an Engine
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
In those days, comic artists would draw all four panels of a strip, even if nothing much changes between them. Notice how the scribble of the grass sort of trails off to the bottom-right of the frame. I think Schulz was going for a stylistic effect there.
Labels:
charliebrown,
snoopy,
trepidation,
wagon,
whew,
worry
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.
Labels:
bach,
charliebrown,
das,
der,
die,
german,
language,
mischevious,
music,
personality,
piano,
schroeder
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
November 19, 1953: Third use of "Fuss-budget"
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
Fuss-budget became one of those terms that identified Peanuts, like "good grief!" It's probably about time to stop calling out every usage, though.
Labels:
fussbudget,
lucy,
mother,
patty,
pride
Monday, March 14, 2011
Sunday, March 13, 2011
November 17, 1953: Lovecraftian horror!
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
Oh it's not Nyarlathotep, the Crawling Chaos; or Shub-Niggurath, Black Goat of the Woods with a Thousand Young. It's just Linus. Just little, innocent Linus!
OR IS IT?
This is a retread of the "girls in stadium boots" strip from just ten months back, although the horror is more vague here. Notice that it's entirely Charlie Brown who's getting worked up. Lucy knows exactly what's going on.
Oh it's not Nyarlathotep, the Crawling Chaos; or Shub-Niggurath, Black Goat of the Woods with a Thousand Young. It's just Linus. Just little, innocent Linus!
OR IS IT?
This is a retread of the "girls in stadium boots" strip from just ten months back, although the horror is more vague here. Notice that it's entirely Charlie Brown who's getting worked up. Lucy knows exactly what's going on.
Labels:
blush,
charliebrown,
embarassment,
horror,
linus,
lovecraft,
lucy,
sleepingbag,
thump
Saturday, March 12, 2011
November 16, 1953: You'll like it because it mentions Shubert!
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
Another of the "Charlie Brown: Budding Cartoonist" series. In these strips Schulz pokes fun at his own pretensions, but they also show how engaged he was with his craft.
One thing I really like about all these is that, for all of C.B.'s faults as a cartoonist, he at least knows enough to work large. Held edgeways, that sheet of paper is as tall as he is, sans head.
Another of the "Charlie Brown: Budding Cartoonist" series. In these strips Schulz pokes fun at his own pretensions, but they also show how engaged he was with his craft.
One thing I really like about all these is that, for all of C.B.'s faults as a cartoonist, he at least knows enough to work large. Held edgeways, that sheet of paper is as tall as he is, sans head.
Labels:
art,
cartoonists,
charliebrown,
humor,
puns,
schroeder,
shubert
Friday, March 11, 2011
Sunday, November 15, 1953: The Great Experiment
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
More to add to the list of Snoopy's powers:
8. Super hearing
9. Teleportation (induced by hearing candy wrapper)
For his sake, I hope we can add:
10. Immune to canine chocolate toxicity
This strip actually reads better without the two lead panels. Try it out! We don't need to be told twice that they're running an experiment. All the important facts are presented without the optional panels, and they aren't repeated.
Finally, importantly, the strip is just funny.
Labels:
candy,
charliebrown,
chocolate,
citylimits,
experiment,
funny,
krinkle,
shermy,
snoopy,
snoopypowers,
sunday,
teleportation
Thursday, March 10, 2011
November 13, 1953: Excitable, isn't he?
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
Patty doesn't mean to drive Charlie Brown to hysterics, but it is kind of frightening to think about. The space-filling overtelling of one of the characters here is acceptable, as it improves the joke.
It struck me just now that gender relations in Peanuts are already surprisingly equalized. This is far from stereotypical girl behavior. Patty gets used more as being a foil for Charlie Brown than for being female. Maybe girls are considered to be more impish, and that explains why Patty is happy to point out C.B.'s mistake in the first panel; it's hard to imagine Shermy being happy there.
Look at that expression of fear in panel 3. It's really a kindness that Charlie Brown doesn't realize that he'll actually be in school for 46 more years.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
November 12, 1953
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
This is the second instance of the "Snoopy dance" that I count, and it's livelier and more Snoopy-like here. We can probably add this to his list of powers:
7. Ability to dance (polka, hopak)
More shockingly, it features Schroeder saying something positive about polka!
Snoopy's tongue in panel 2 is strange because it's of realistic length for a dog, that is to say, it's loooong. Also, the way that his front legs flap about is unusually realistic. These are very entertaining drawings of early Snoopy.
Labels:
charliebrown,
dance,
music,
polka,
schroeder,
snoopy,
snoopydance,
snoopypowers
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
November 11, 1953: Schroeder conducts in front of Snoopy, Take 2
Read this strip at gocomics.com
The previous Sunday strip had mostly the same idea, but with a different payoff.
I think this could be taken to show how careful Schulz is to mine his premises well. As I've said before, drawing a daily comic strip is one of the most creatively demanding occupations one could hope to find. Imagine the pressure of having to come up with one joke a day for the rest of your life. Schulz is showing good sense by getting additional gags out of his premises.
Labels:
blush,
conducting,
embarassment,
exclamationpoint,
questionmark,
schroeder,
snoopy
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