Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Ex flame inspired ‘Peanuts’ character

- By Michael Cavna

The Washington Post

Last summer, day after day, I called the Little RedHaired Girl. And night after night, I wondered whether I would ever actually get to talk with her.

The Little Red-Haired Girl — actually, the real woman who inspired the iconic “Peanuts” character — was Donna Johnson Wold. And she proved as elusive as Charlie Brown’s dream crush.

Then, last July, I finally spoke with Ms. Wold, who was warm and humble and utterly endearing, as well as reassuring that she had built a fulfilling and rewarding life. More than six decades ago, she had chosen her longtime firefighte­r husband over Charles M. Schulz. Mr. Schulz, the world-famous “Peanuts” creator, turned that heartache into art with the scarlet-haired character, who was featured anew in last November’s “The Peanuts Movie.”

“Oh, we dated for about two years,” Ms. Wold told me of her relationsh­ip with “Sparky” Schulz; both he and Allan Wold proposed marriage. “I loved him. I guess I chose Al because I knew all Al’s friends, who became my friends. I didn’t really know Sparky’s friends.”

“But it was a long time ago,” added Ms. Wold, speaking by phone from the Minneapoli­s area, where she had lived her full life, traveling and camping and adventurin­g (she loved the Grand Tetons) and becoming a mother to four and a foster mother to scores more.

Allan and Donna Wold married in 1950, the same year that “Peanuts” debuted.

Mr. Schulz would introduce his mysterious, Donnainspi­red character to “Peanuts” — “Peanuts Movie” director Steve Martino readers on Nov. 12, 1963, as Charlie Brown said dreamily: “I’d sure like to eat lunch with that little redhaired girl.”

“She’s the object of his affection,” Jean Schulz, Sparky’s widow, told me last year. “We can’t [really] know her . ... There’s this mystique and this fantasy.” And in last year’s CG-animated movie, she said, the filmmakers made “that experience ephemeral.”

“She is kind of the catalyst for this film ...,” “Peanuts Movie” director Steve Martino told me prior to the film’s release, in which redhaired child actress Francesca Capaldi voiced the character. “We’re still inspired by that beautiful silhouette that Sparky drew.”

Ms. Wold lived in the shadow of that silhouette for more than a quarter-century, acknowledg­ing her role as inspiratio­n in 1989, upon the release of the Schulz biography “Good Grief.” “It got her out in the spotlight just a little, not too much,” Allan Wold told the Star Tribune in Minneapoli­s.

And she reportedly named some of her foster children after some of the “Peanuts” characters.

Donna Mae Johnson Wold died Aug. 9 of heart failure and complicati­ons from diabetes, the Star Tribune reported over the previous weekend. She was 87.

She is survived by her husband; her daughters Sally Wold, Peggy Baumtrog and Susan Trulen; a sister, Margaret Olson; seven grandchild­ren; and 13 greatgrand­children. “I’ve had a good life,” Ms. Wold said last summer. “A very happy life.”

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