Charles Monroe Schulz was born on November 26, 1922 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His uncle, possibly in an act of prescience, gave him the nickname "Sparky," after Barney Google's Horse Spark Plug.
Charles grew up loving to draw. Once, he drew a picture of his dog Spike, who relished eating nails and tacks, and sent it in to Ripley's Believe It or Not. They published the prodigy's cartoon verbatim!
As a teenager, he offered drawings to the high school yearbook staff. They turned him down.
After a stint on the military, Schulz took a job as an art instructor at Art Instruction Schools, headquartered in his home town. Never heard of them? Picture a magazine ad of a cute figure with the exhortation "Draw me!" He also took on a side job doing lettering for a Catholic periodical.
But in 1947, he persuaded The St. Paul Pioneer Press to carry a comic called Lil' Folks. The strip included a kid named Charlie brown and an unnamed, but quite intelligent, dog. The next year, he sold some single-panel toons to The Saturday Evening Post. In 1950, he approached United Features with his best Lil' Folks strips. With considerably more savvy than his school's yearbook staff, they agreed to syndicate them under the name Peanuts. The rest was history.
I seriously doubt that any Boomer is unfamiliar with Peanuts. I suspect that a majority of the world's population knows who Snoopy is. That's a pretty impressive statement for a mere comic strip. But Peanuts was much, much more than that.
For instance, how many comic strips became a holiday TV tradition? It's a Charlie Brown Christmas debuted in 1965, and continues to provide our grandkids with memories of their own. Halloween means it's time for It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, which first appeared the next year.
And how many strips inspired a pair of Broadway shows? Or a #2 hit song? Or video games?
And I wish I had a dime for every t-shirt, lunch box, or any other merchandise that featured any of the familiar members of the gang.
But none of it would have come about without the gentle intellectual mind of genius Schulz.
You knew this strip was aimed at kids, naturally, but only adults would appreciate the irony of Lucy spurning selling lemonade in favor of doling out psychiatric help for five cents. And a beagle who is smarter than his master was groundbreaking stuff, later used to great effect by Mr. Peabody in Bullwinkle.
Indeed, it seems a slight on the part of your humble columnist to confine the enormity of Peanuts to a single entry.
Lucy personified the various obstacles one faces in life. Whether it was yanking the football away from Charlie Brown, or berating her brother Linus, or just being her normal crabby self, she was always in character. Her unrequited love for Beethoven fan Schroeder may have contributed to her perennial bad mood, who knows.
Pig Pen could get filthy walking down the sidewalk. Peppermint Patty had a soft spot in her heart for Charlie Brown, and tried hard to bring him up to speed as to what was happening in the real world. Little sister Sally had her own view of things, and showed more savvy than her older brother.
Charlie Brown, who put the phrase "good grief!" into our vocabularies, just couldn't catch a break. His baseball team had Lucy in the outfield, who once dropped a fly ball because "The moons of Jupiter got in my eyes." Any pitch resulted in a line drive that would send him flying, only to land in a disrobed state. He had his own case of unrequited love, this for a mysterious red-headed girl. But every now and then, Schulz would let things pan out well for him.
Then there was Snoopy.
Perhaps the most famous comic strip character in history, Snoopy was not your average beagle.
Born on the Daisy Hill Puppy Farm, he kept family ties with his brother Spike. Snoopy, who never bothered to learn his master's name, had many alter egos. There was Joe Cool, college student. There was the WWI aviator. There was the Beagle Scout, who led his troop of birds. There was also Snoopy the helicopter, his ears providing lift for the pilot, Woodstock. There were many other personages, too, too many to list here.
We Boomer kids took it for granted that Peanuts would always be around. Schulz himself took but a single five-week vacation in 1997. But sadly, on February 12, 2000, the day after the genius went to sleep in death, the final original Peanuts strip was published. View image.
But the prolific Mr. Schulz generated so much material that its reruns continue to entertain us, as well as new generations, and seem just as timely now as they did when they first appeared. The look of the strip settled on its final form by the late 50's, so it's anybody's guess as to when each day's offering may have originally appeared. Many strips wither and die when they revert to reruns, but Peanuts continues to fly high in syndication numbers.
That's good in many ways. For instance, you don't have to explain Snoopy to your grandkids. They are already quite familiar with him.
Comments (5)
Wow! Very nice. I once read that Schulz never really liked the name "Peanuts"; it was mandated by his publisher. He wanted the strip to be called "Good Ol' Charlie Brown." In my city, the title cell for the Sunday strip always said "Peanuts featuring Good Ol' Charlie Brown."
Also - I've been very pleased with "Classic" Peanuts, i.e., the reruns that we've seen in our paper for the last 10 years. Very rarely do they date themselves. In fact, many times they display an uncanny relevance. I think that says a lot about Schulz's genius.
Posted by Mr. Curtains | June 28, 2010 11:42 AM
Posted on June 28, 2010 11:42
I was always a Peanuts fan, and am quite happy that they have continued running "Classic Peanuts" all this time.
I have identified myself at times with Charlie Brown, but always had a link with Schroeder. He played the piano like I do, and was a fan of Beethoven, who has the same birthday as me. One year, I remember Lucy giving Schroeder a pair of Elton John glasses for Beethoven's birthday.
For years I played church organ. When playing for the Sunday School, the call for the kids to come to Gathering Time was "Linus and Lucy." On the day of the final Sunday strip, I found out that Mr. Schulz had passed on through the internet. That day, I changed my offertory to "Christmas Time Is Here" from "A Charlie Brown Christmas," a song I had my children's choir perform a few times. There may have been a few who were confused as to why I was playing a Christmas song in February, but those who knew about the passing recognized my little memorial to one of the greatest cartoonists of our time.
Great article, Ron!
Posted by O2BIrish | June 28, 2010 12:21 PM
Posted on June 28, 2010 12:21
I adore Peanuts.
Growing up I watched all of the specials.
Snoopy is my favorite character and Lucy is my second favorite.
The "Red Baron" with Snoopy, was my favorite of all the mini series, with in Peanuts.
Thank you for the memories,
Sharon
~The Baby Boomer Queen~
Posted by Sharon/Baby Boomer Queen | June 28, 2010 12:41 PM
Posted on June 28, 2010 12:41
This was a great choice, Ron. I was 6 in 65, and I remember that Charlie Brown Xmas (CBX). It was a huge hit where I was in southern Maine. Kids were nuts about him. CBX, along with Rudolph and the Grinch, were the biggest holiday hits, always. CB’s Halloween yearly event was also huge. Its funny that the network had doubts about even airing CBX.
And as a kid, I only liked a few comics in the Sunday paper. Some were adult level and went over my head. But number one and on the front page of the comics section, always, was Peanuts. Through the mid 70s at least, if not all the 70s, Peanuts remained huge. For me, it got a little old in the late 80s but I might be in the minority there.
Snoopy was the big main star. There was a snoopy movie, maybe in the early 70s, Snoopy Come Home. We ate that up, too! Woodstock came along, as did hockey on the bird bath. Mechandising was limited in the 60s but picked up speed. Avon did offer CB and Snoopy glass cups that came with bubble bath in them and then they could be used to drink from.
Charles really seemed to hit a nerve there. Its pretty hard to be a boomer and not remember such a cartoon. I had a few books of Peanuts back in the later 60s. It was one of those sweet pleasures of the time.
Posted by Scott Irv | June 28, 2010 3:11 PM
Posted on June 28, 2010 15:11
Ron
I am so glad you wrote about Peanuts. I can remember, and still have each one, my dad buying me each Charlie Brown book as it came out. I have passed them along to my kids to read and they also have enjoyed them. Peanuts was a big part of my childhood and I can remember anxiously awaiting the specials on TV, still do!
Posted by Deborah Larkin Maze | July 11, 2010 3:47 PM
Posted on July 11, 2010 15:47