Thanks for posting this, Michael.
Penny
On Sun, 13 Feb 2000 03:57:13 -0800, "Dog3" <do...@mindspring.com> wrote:
>x-no-archive: yes
>
>``Peanuts'' creator Charles M. Schulz dies at 77
>
>His contributions will be missed.
>
>Michael
>
>Feb. 13, 2000 | 2:52 a.m.
>
>By MARY ANN LICKTEIG Associated Press Writer
>SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Charles M. Schulz, the cartoonist who delighted the
>world with the adventures and adversities of Charlie Brown, his friends and
>a dog named Snoopy, died on Saturday on the eve of the publication of his
>last ``Peanuts'' strip. He was 77.
>
>Schulz, who was diagnosed with colon cancer and suffered a series of small
>strokes during emergency abdominal surgery in November 1999 and announced
>his retirement a few weeks afterward, died in his sleep at about 9:45 p.m.,
>his son Craig Schulz said.
>
>Schulz had seemed fine earlier in the day and had gone to his daughter Jill
>Transki's home in Santa Rosa. Only his wife, Jeannie, was with him when he
>died at home, Craig Schulz said.
>
>His wildly popular ``Peanuts'' made its debut on Oct. 2, 1950. The travails
>of the ``little round-headed kid'' and his pals eventually ran in more than
>2,400 newspapers, reaching millions of readers in 68 countries.
>
>His last strip, appearing in Feb. 13 Sunday editions, showed Snoopy at his
>typewriter and other Peanuts regulars along with a ``Dear Friends'' letter
>thanking his readers for their support.
>
>Over the years, the Peanuts gang became a part of American popular culture,
>delivering gentle humor spiked with a child's-eye view of human foibles.
>
>One of the strip's most endearing qualities was its constancy.
>
>The long-suffering Charlie Brown still faced misfortune with a mild, ``Good
>grief!'' Tart-tongued Lucy still handed out advice at a nickel a pop, a joke
>that started as a parody of a lemonade stand. And Snoopy, Charlie Brown's
>wise-but-weird beagle, still took the occasional flight of fancy back to the
>skies of World War I and his rivalry with the Red Baron.
>
>The strip was an intensely personal effort for Schulz. He had had a clause
>in his contract dictating the strip had to end with his death. While battlin
>g cancer, he opted to retire it right then, saying he wanted to focus on his
>health and family without the worry of a daily deadline.
>
>``Why do musicians compose symphonies and poets write poems?'' he once said.
>``They do it because life wouldn't have any meaning for them if they didn't.
>That's why I draw cartoons. It's my life.''
>
>In his final daily strip, published Jan. 3, 2000, a thoughtful Snoopy sat
>atop his doghouse with his typewriter. In a text message signed by Schulz,
>he thanked fans for their ``wonderful support and love.''
>
>``Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Linus, Lucy ... how can I ever forget them,'' the
>message read.
>
>Although he remained largely a private person, the strip brought Schulz
>international fame. He won the Reuben Award, comic art's highest honor, in
>1955 and 1964. In 1978, he was named International Cartoonist of the Year,
>an award voted by 700 comic artists around the world.
>
>The 1965 CBS-TV special ``A Charlie Brown Christmas'' won an Emmy and rerun
>immortality, and many other specials followed.
>
>There was a hit musical, ``You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown,'' with Gary
>Burghoff, later Radar O'Reilly on ``M-A-S-H,'' playing Charlie. The book
>``The Gospel According to Peanuts'' explored the philosophical and religious
>implications of the strip.
>
>When Schulz announced his retirement, Mort Walker, the creator of comic
>strips ``Beetle Bailey'' and ``Hi and Lois,'' said he and Schulz wept when
>they spoke on the phone.
>
>``He did something entirely different from what all the rest of us did. I
>write and draw funny pictures and slapstick; it's a joke a day,'' Walker
>said at the time. ``He delved into the psyche of children and the fears and
>the rejections that we all felt as children.''
>
>The characters also appeared on sheets, stationery and countless other
>products. Schulz several times was listed as one of Forbes magazine's
>best-paid entertainers, most recently in 1996, when his 1995-96 income was
>estimated at $33 million, ranking him No. 30 on the magazine's list.
>
>In 1990, when the Peanuts gang turned 40, the government of France named
>Schulz Commander of Arts and Letters, one of that country's highest awards
>for excellence in the arts.
>
>Despite the success, Schulz struggled with depression and anxiety, according
>to his biographer, Rheta Grimsley Johnson. But the struggle only improved
>his work, she found, as he poured those feelings of rejection and
>uncertainty into the strip and turned Charlie Brown into Everyman.
>
>``Rejection is his specialty, losing his area of expertise. He has spent a
>lifetime perfecting failure,'' Johnson wrote in her 1989 book, ``Good Grief:
>The Story of Charles M. Schulz.''
>
>Schulz was born in St. Paul, Minn., on Nov. 26, 1922, and studied art after
>he saw a ``Do you like to draw?'' ad.
>
>He was drafted into the Army in 1943 and sent to the European theater,
>although he saw little combat.
>
>After the war, he did lettering for a church comic book, taught art and sold
>cartoons to the Saturday Evening Post. His first feature, ``Li'l Folks,''
>was developed for the St. Paul Pioneer Press in 1947. In 1950, it was sold
>to a syndicate and the named changed to Peanuts, even though, he recalled
>later, he didn't much like the name.
>
>The popularity of the strip soared in October 1965 when Snoopy turned his
>doghouse into a Sopwith Camel for the first of many engagements with the
>Baron. The following year, a group called the Royal Guardsmen had a No. 2
>single, ``Snoopy vs. the Red Baron.''
>
>Charlie Brown, named after a friend at art school, was to some extent the
>cartoonist's alter ego, and Snoopy was inspired by a dog he had as a child
>that Schulz recalled as ``the smartest and most uncontrollable dog that I
>have ever seen.'' The little red-haired girl, Charlie Brown's unrequited
>love, was based on a girlfriend who rejected Schulz's proposal of marriage
>in 1950, according to Johnson.
>
>Schulz went on to marry Joyce Halverson in 1951. They divorced in 1972 and
>he married Jeannie Forsyth two years later.
>
>In his later years, he spent much of his time at his Redwood Empire Ice
>Arena in Santa Rosa, about 60 miles north of San Francisco, where he
>frequently played hockey or sipped coffee at the rink's Warm Puppy snack
>bar.
>
>When ``You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown'' was revived on Broadway in 1999,
>it had a multiethnic cast that at first concerned Schulz. He said he wasn't
>racist but, ``I thought, 'This is mine. I did this thing. Nobody helped me.
>I did the whole thing and now you're going to come in and show me how
>wonderfully open-minded and liberal you are.''
>
>He said he finally was persuaded that unorthodox casting was ``a very New
>York thing to do.''
>
>``So I said, 'Well, if that's what they're going to do, all right,''' he
>said. ``If ... people are willing to accept it, willing to accept that
>Lucy's leaning on the piano playing up to a black Schroeder. All right,
>let's see how it goes.''
>
>
>
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Kaefer said:
>Oh, how sad. Peanuts has been around my whole life. My deepest
>sympathies for Charles Schulz's family and children everywhere who will
>miss out on new Peanuts cartoons.
>
>Thanks for posting this, Michael.
>
>Penny
>
>
>On Sun, 13 Feb 2000 03:57:13 -0800, "Dog3" <do...@mindspring.com> wrote:
>
>>x-no-archive: yes
>>
>>``Peanuts'' creator Charles M. Schulz dies at 77
>>
>>His contributions will be missed.
>>
>>Michael
>>
The GirlGang Web Pages http://www.gmspider.com/GGHome.htm
Joe Cult Pages http://www.gmspider.com/GGJoeCult.htm
>Wow, he just retired. Sad. He will be missed by children of all ages.Today
>there is a whole section Peanuts strips in the paper. A keeper for sure.
There is? Man, I wish I was in the states to get my hands on that. I
will call my daughter later today and maybe she can get it for me.
Would love to hold onto that for my grandson. Thanks for letting me
know.
Penny