Tag Archivio per: Warren Tufts

who’s Joe Shlabotnik ?

who’s Joe Shlabotnik ?

 

Charlie Brown reads some bad news about his hero in the strip from July 30, 1964.

Joe Shlabotnik is a retired major league baseball player and, like all adults, an unseen character in the world of Charles M. Schulz‘s long-running comic strip, Peanuts. He was first referred to by name in the Sunday strip from August 18, 1963, although Schroeder mentions a pianist named “Joseph Schlabotnik” in the February 22, 1957 strip, and a storyline which ran between May 7 and May 10, 1963 revolves around the distress caused to Charlie Brown when his unnamed favorite baseball player is sent down to the minors. Joe Shlabotnik’s less than stellar baseball career would go on to cause a great deal of similar upset to Charlie Brown for many years to come. Nevertheless, Charlie Brown would remain a devoted fan of Shlabotnik.

Charlie Brown creates a Joe Shlabotnik fanzine in the Sunday strip from March 8, 1970.

Christmas With The Cartoonists: Magnus

Christmas With The Cartoonists: Magnus

Lo Sconosciuto (Italian: [lo skonoʃˈʃuːto], The Unknown [One]) is an Italian comics series created in 1975 by Roberto Raviola, better known by his pseudonym Magnus. It has been translated into English as The Specialist.

The series and its eponymous character was created by Magnus after a series of trips abroad and was defined together with his friend, the singer and writer Francesco Guccini. It was the first great creation by Magnus after he had left Editoriale Corno and his partnership with writer Max Bunker, with whom he had created famous series such as Kriminal and Alan Ford. Published in July 1975 by Edizioni Del Vascello (Renzo Barbieri‘s publisher), it is considered his finest achievement. The last Sconosciuto story was released in 1984, though a short prologue for another, never published story appeared in 1996 as a dedication to his friend, the cartoonist Franco Bonvicini, who had recently died.

Source  wikipedia

The Disney Christmas newspaper comic strip

The Disney Christmas newspaper comic strip was an annual tradition from 1960-1987, running daily throughout the month before Christmas. Twenty-seven special Christmas stories are collected in a book for the first time. Plus a special bonus: the 1992-1997 Disney Holiday Stories featuring Aladdin, Pocahontas, Beauty and the Beast, The Little Mermaid, the Hunchback of Notre Dame, and The Lion King! A delightful book for Disney fans of all ages. The Disney Christmas newspaper strip debuted in 1960 with “Peter Pan’s Christmas Story,” in which Captain Hook tries to sabotage Christmas. It was such a success that new stories were created yearly, each self-contained, each featuring characters from another animated movie and leading up to Christmas Eve and the beginning of Santa’s night-time sleigh ride. The “Disney-villain-wants-to-spoil-Christmas” plot was exploited with inventive variations each year. Stories include “Cruella’s Very Furry Christmas,” “Snow White’s Christmas Surprise,” “Dumbo and the Christmas Mystery,” “Cinderella’s Christmas Party,” “The Three Little Pigs’ Christmas Story,” and many more.

Mary Kincaid housewife cartoonist in Michigan

Mary Kincaid housewife cartoonist in Michigan

To Mary Kincaid. an Ann Arbor housewife, it seemed a shame that little boys all around were quitting French classes out of boredom. She herself had minored in French at the University of Michigan, practiced it in Paris, and developed a passion for French literature. Not long ago, she reread Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables and observed, “Hugo has more adventure than Davy Crockett”—a thought that led readily to the idea of putting Hugo into a comic strip.

Amateur Cartoonist Kincaid’s Contes Français now reaches 1,209,000 subscribers to five daily newspapers, from the Toledo Blade to the Detroit News. The plot is Les Misérables, “adapted to a sixth-grader’s interest,” and the grammar is passably taxing. Cosette : “Je voudrais alter voir cette cathedrale, père!” Valjean: “Nous irons demain.” Admittedly no linguist, Mrs. Kincaid checks each strip with a retired French professor, but so far she has not failed to get an A.

Mrs. Kincaid draws the strip between trips to the washing machine and feeding her three children. Editors fault her draftsmanship but marvel at the apparent hunger for a comic strip that totally shuns English. In Toledo, where grade school French is mandatory, the Blade bought the strip after it discovered that 16,321 third-to sixth-graders were toiling at the tongue. A Toledo school official says that “most of our teachers are using the strip in one way or another.” Cartoonist Kincaid now hopes to launch a strip in Spanish, based on The Barber of Seville. She draws it; a Spaniard writes it. As yet, she has not learned Spanish —but she will.

Mary Kincaid housewife_cartoonist in Michigan

1963. Ann Arbor, Michigan. Mary Kincaid ora casalinga a tempo pieno per accudire i tre figli, laureata in lingua francese alla University of Michigan osservava con dispiacere sia i suoi ragazzi che i loro amici abbandonare le lezioni di lingua francese che lei riteneva una lingua affascinante. Kincaid riteneva che la lettura dei grandi classici della letteratura francese come, ad esempio, “I Miserabili” di Victor Hugo, fossero affascinanti quanto i western della TV o i comics che i figli divoravano. Così, lei cartoonist provetta cominciò a realizzare delle strip sviluppando le avventure dai grandi romanzi francesi che amava. Il successo dell’iniziativa andò ben oltre le sue aspettative. La strip venne acquistata da diversi quotidiani dello stato, tra i quali Il “Toledo Blade” e il “Detroit News” con un bacino di utenza totale di 1,209,000 copie giornaliere. E le strips, scoprì la Kincaid con soddisfazione, venivano usate come supporto didattico dagli insegnanti della lingua francese nelle scuole del Michigan. Sull’onda dell’entusiasmo per il favorevole accoglimento del suo lavoro Mary Kincaid si mise a studiare lo spagnolo per trasportare in comics anche i classici di lingua spagnola, partendo dal “Barbiere di Siviglia”.

Last Xtina Comic Strip

Last Xtina Comic Strip

Bamse dal cartone al fumetto Dizionario Movie/comics

Bamse dal cartone al fumetto Dizionario Movie/comics

Scheda tratta dal Volume “B” del Dizionario enciclopedico Cinema e fumetto.

Encyclopedia/dictionary dedicated to comics that were adapted into films, TV serials, TV movies, cartoons, radio serials, theater pieces.

Outis Fumetti Lucca Comics -2 True West

Western della leggenda o Western reale ?

WIP fall 2019

Dizionario Fumetto al cinema volumi D EF

Dizionario Fumetto al cinema volumi D EF

Seconda edizione, disponibile su outisfumetti.com e

Festivaletteratura Mantova