Cartoonists honoring ‘Peanuts’ creator Schulz on 100th birthday
Cartoonists across the nation are celebrating the 100th birthday of “Peanuts” creator Charles M. Schulz as only they can — with cartoons.
More than 75 syndicated cartoonists have tucked tributes, Easter eggs and references to “Peanuts” in the funny papers for Nov. 26 to honor the creator of Charlie Brown, Snoopy and company.
“It’s a tribute to probably the world’s greatest cartoonist,” said cartoonist Patrick McDonnell, who creates the daily strip “Mutts” for 700 newspapers. “After ‘Peanuts,’ the cartoon world changed. I think most working cartoonists today would say he was the inspiration for them to become cartoonists.”
The list of participating strips ranges from “B.C.,” “Dennis the Menace” and
“Rhymes With Orange”
to “Zippy the Pinhead” and “Zits.” Each artist was encouraged to come up with their own way to honor Schulz, who was known as “Sparky.”
“We left it all up to them.
Cartoonists are creative people. When you have a daily deadline, you need to have ideas come to you,” said McDonnell. “I think people enjoyed the challenge
of coming up with
something to express their love and admiration for that guy.”
McDonnell, who is a member of the board of directors of the Charles
M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, dreamed up the tribute, and he and “JumpStart” cartoonist Robb Armstrong contacted the various cartoon syndicates with their plan.
“I’m pretty confident that when you open the newspaper that morning, the whole comic page is going to be a tribute to Sparky,” said McDonnell. “I’m personally looking forward to the surprise that Saturday to see what people did.”
For his tribute, McDonnell repaid a kindness Schulz gave him.
In a “Peanuts” strip from 1999, Schulz drew his cartoon boys and girls visiting a museum and Rerun off on the side looking up with respect at a painting of the dog Earl from “Mutts.”
A framed copy of that strip hangs proudly over McDonnell’s drawing table. “I look at it every day and think of what a wonderful gesture that was and what a wonderful man and what a wonderful comic strip.”
So, in return, this Saturday, readers of “Mutts” will see Earl at a museum looking up fondly — his little tail wagging — at a framed image of Snoopy. “Mine’s pretty personal,” McDonnell said.
“Peanuts” made its debut Oct. 2, 1950. The travails of the “little round-headed kid” Charlie Brown and his pals eventually ran in more than 2,600 newspapers, reaching millions of readers in 75 countries. Schulz died in 2000.
“‘Peanuts’ was everything. I read ‘Peanuts’ books every night, and I wanted to be a cartoonist because of that since I was 4. To actually have my own little cartoon character in ‘Peanuts’ — it still boggles,” said McDonnell. “Every morning I look at it, and I still can’t believe it happened.”