Times Colonist

Comic strip characters drop pants for charity

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NEW YORK — Fans of newspaper comics will instantly notice something missing in many of the strips this Friday — pants.

More than 25 cartoonist­s behind strips from Blondie to Zippy the Pinhead are celebratin­g the quirky holiday No Pants Day in a way that helps charities get clothing to those in need.

Participat­ing artists, including some in the Times Colonist, are drawing their characters without trousers and urging readers to donate clothing to thrift and second-hand stores hard-hit by COVID-19.

“This was a great way to help bring communitie­s together but also have a little bit of a laugh,” said Tea Fougner, comics editor at King Features Syndicate. “Just the idea of No Pants Day, I think, is something that everybody can feel a little bit closer to this year than in previous years.”

No Pants Day, held on the first Friday in May, is believed to have been started by a group of students at the University of Texas who thought leaving the pants at home on the first Friday in May would be a fun way to end the semester. A winter spinoff was created called No Pants Subway Ride.

Comics creators have noticed that the COVID-19 pandemic has effected people’s ability to get clothing and charities have not gotten as many donations as typical.

In a gracious move among comic strip distributo­rs, King

Features reached out to fellow syndicator­s Tribune Content Agency, Andrews McMeel Universal and Washington Post Writers Group to pull off Friday’s event.

Cartoonist­s were contacted in February about the project, and the finished comics started to come in by March. In some cases, artists needed a quick brainstorm­ing session to figure out ways to approach the request.

Not Bill Griffith, the artist behind Zippy the Pinhead. “He emailed me back right away and he said: ‘Well, not wearing pants is Zippy’s thing,’ ” said Fougner.

Organizers left it up to the individual cartoonist­s — some other participat­ing strips include Shoe, Arctic Circle, Hi and Lois, Rhymes with Orange, Mallard Fillmore and Sally Forth — how to incorporat­e the message. The strips range from medieval knights to modern office workers, all sporting underwear.

“You’ll see a variety from some cartoonist­s who took a really direct approach where they have their characters in the comic donating clothing to people,” said Fougner. “And some folks just depicted the characters not wearing pants or put a little happy No Pants Day message in the comic.”

Olive Brinker’s Rae the Doe has a character donating clothes at an LGBT centre while Dennis the Menace urges readers: “Give to a charity that helps people in need of clothing, like Room to Grow.”

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