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==Collections==
==Collections==
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*''Nancy'' (1961), [[Pocket Books]] (''The Fun-Filled Cartoon Adventures of Nancy'')<ref>{{cite web|title=GDC entry|url=http://www.comics.org/series/14129/|accessdate=25 March 2012}}</ref>
*''Nancy'' (1961), [[Pocket Books]]
*''Everything I Need to Know I Learned from Nancy: The Enduring Wisdom of Ernie Bushmiller'' (1993), Pharos Books
*''Everything I Need to Know I Learned from Nancy: The Enduring Wisdom of Ernie Bushmiller'' (1993), Pharos Books
*''Nancy's Pets'' (1991), [[Kitchen Sink Press|Kitchen Sink]]
*''Nancy's Pets'' (1991), [[Kitchen Sink Press|Kitchen Sink]]

Revision as of 08:35, 25 March 2012

Nancy
Nancy strip from June 5, 1960
Author(s)Ernie Bushmiller
Launch date1938 (title changed from Fritzi Ritz)
Syndicate(s)United Feature Syndicate
Genre(s)Humor, Children, Teens, Adults
Nancy
Nancy character
First appearanceJanuary 2, 1933
In-universe information
GenderFemale
FamilyFritzi Ritz (aunt)

Nancy is an American daily and Sunday comic strip, originally written and drawn by Ernie Bushmiller and distributed by United Feature Syndicate. The character of Nancy, a slightly chubby and precocious eight-year-old, first appeared in the strip Fritzi Ritz about the airheaded flapper title character. Larry Whittington began Fritzi Ritz in 1922, and it was taken over by Bushmiller three years later.

Publication history

On January 2, 1933, Bushmiller introduced Fritzi's niece, Nancy.[1] Soon she dominated the daily strip, which was retitled Nancy in 1938. Comics historian Don Markstein detailed the evolution, as the readership of Fritzi Ritz increased:

Bushmiller's bold, clear art style, combined with his ability to construct a type of gag that appealed to a very broad audience, brought the strip to new heights of popularity — and his introduction of Fritzi's niece, Nancy, in 1933, carried it higher yet. Two important developments occurred in 1938. Sluggo Smith, Nancy's friend from the "wrong side of the tracks", was introduced in January; and later that year, Aunt Fritzi's name was dropped from the title of the daily strip, which continued as Nancy. At the same time, Bushmiller's Sunday page underwent a similar change. Formerly, half of it had been devoted to Fritzi and the other half to her boyfriend, Phil Fumble. Phil's half was taken over by Nancy. Years later, when newspaper space became tighter and cartoonists were no longer allowed whole pages to themselves, Fritzi's half disappeared, and the transformation was complete. Fritzi Ritz was a bit player where she had formerly been the star.[2]

Fritzi Ritz continued as a Sunday feature until 1968. At its peak in the 1970s, Nancy ran in more than 880 newspapers.

Al Plastino worked on Sunday episodes of Nancy in 1982-83 after Bushmiller died. During that period, David Letterman showed on TV a Nancy panel with Plastino's signature and made a joke about Plastino as a superhero name. (Letterman's writers were apparently unaware that Plastino was known for his superheroes.)

The strip has continued to the present day by different writers and artists. These have included Mark Lasky (1983), Jerry Scott (1984–94), Guy Gilchrist (1995— ) and Brad Gilchrist (1995— ).[3] The strip has an international popularity, especially in Japan and South America. It runs as Periquita in several dozen Spanish-language newspapers.

Art style

Bushmiller refined and simplified his drawing style over the years to create a uniquely stylized comic world. The American Heritage Dictionary illustrates its entry on comic strip with a Nancy cartoon. Despite the small size of the reproduction, both the art and the gag are clear, and an eye-tracking survey once determined that Nancy was so conspicuous that it was the first strip most people looked at on a newspaper comics page.

In a 1988 essay, “How to Read Nancy”, Mark Newgarden and Paul Karasik offered a probing analysis of Bushmiller’s strip:

To say that Nancy is a simple gag strip about a simple-minded snot-nosed kid is to miss the point completely. Nancy only appears to be simple at a casual glance. Like architect Mies van der Rohe, the simplicity is a carefully designed function of a complex amalgam of formal rules laid out by the designer. To look at Bushmiller as an architect is entirely appropriate, for Nancy is, in a sense, a blueprint for a comic strip. Walls, floors, rocks, trees, ice-cream cones, motion lines, midgets and principals are carefully positioned with no need for further embellishment. And they are laid out with one purpose in mind—to get the gag across. Minimalist? Formalist? Structuralist? Cartoonist![4]

Characters

  • Nancy Ritz,[5] a girl who is constantly in the state of a daydream or a confused plot.
  • Fritzi Ritz, Nancy's aunt, with whom she lives. The character was gradually phased out beginning in the mid-1980s before being dropped entirely by the end of the decade. She subsequently returned as a main character in 1995 when the strip was taken over by brothers Brad and Guy Gilchrist. In the current version of Nancy, Fritzi works as a music reviewer and is often seen wearing T-shirts of musical acts, especially country performers.
  • Sluggo Smith,[6] Nancy's best friend, introduced in 1938. Sluggo is Nancy's age and is a poor ragamuffin-type from the wrong side of the tracks. There are strips that appear to place Sluggo as Nancy's boyfriend. He is portrayed as lazy, and his favorite pastime seems to be napping.
  • Rollo, the stereotypical but nonetheless friendly rich kid. In the early 1940s, the rich kid was known as Marmaduke. It is possible that the name was changed to avoid confusion with Marmaduke, an unrelated comic strip by Brad Anderson that debuted in 1954.
  • Irma, Nancy's nondescript girlfriend.
  • Spike (aka Butch), the town bully who frequently knocks out Sluggo. Sluggo occasionally gets one over on Spike, however.
  • Oona Goosepimple, the spooky looking child who lived in a haunted house down the road from Nancy's house. She only appeared in the comic book version of the strip, during John Stanley's tenure in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
  • Marigold, Sluggo's tomboy cousin.[3]
  • Pee Wee, a neighborhood toddler.
  • Poochie, Nancy's nondescript dog. In current strips, Nancy also has a cat named Rocky and a goldfish called Goldie.

Awards

Bushmiller won the National Cartoonists Society's Humor Comic Strip Award for 1961 and the Society's Reuben Award for Best Cartoonist of the Year in 1976.[7]

In 1995, the strip was selected as one of the 20 in the "Comic Strip Classics" series of commemorative U.S. postage stamps.

Comic books

Nancy appeared in comic books—initially in a 1940s comic strip reprint title from St. John Publications and later in a Dell comic written by John Stanley. Titled Nancy and Sluggo, St. John published #121-145 (1955–57). Titled Nancy, until retitled Nancy and Sluggo with issue #174, Dell published #146-187 (1957–62). Gold Key published #188-192 (1962–63). Dell also published Dell Giants devoted to Nancy (#35, #45 and "Traveltime"), and a Four Color #1034.[3]

Nancy was reprinted in the UK comic book, The Topper, from the 1950s through the 1970s. Nancy also had its own monthly comic book magazine of newspaper reprints in Norway (where the strip is known as Trulte) during 1956-59.

Animation

Nancy was featured in three animated shorts by the Terrytoons studio in 1942–43: School Daze, Nancy's Little Theater and Doing Their Bit. In 1971, several newly created Nancy and Sluggo cartoons appeared on the Saturday morning cartoon series, Archie's TV Funnies, which starred the Archie Comic Series characters running a television station. Nancy appeared along with seven other comic strip characters: Emmy Lou, Broom Hilda, Dick Tracy, The Dropouts, Moon Mullins, the Captain and the Kids and Smokey Stover. The series lasted one season. In 1978, she was also featured in several segments of Filmation's animated show The Fabulous Funnies.

Cultural references

Bushmiller's art work has inspired other artists:

Collections

Comic strip
  • Nancy (1961), Pocket Books (The Fun-Filled Cartoon Adventures of Nancy)[8]
  • Everything I Need to Know I Learned from Nancy: The Enduring Wisdom of Ernie Bushmiller (1993), Pharos Books
  • Nancy's Pets (1991), Kitchen Sink
  • Bums, Beatniks and Hippies / Artists and Con Artists (1990), Kitchen Sink
  • Nancy Dreams and Schemes (1990), Kitchen Sink
  • How Sluggo Survives (1989) Kitchen Sink
  • Nancy Eats Food (1989), Kitchen Sink
  • The Best of Ernie Bushmiller's Nancy by Brian Walker (1988), Henry Holt
  • The Nancy Book (2008), Siglio Press
  • Nancy Is Happy: Complete Daily Strips: 1942-45 (2011), Fantagraphics Books
Comic book
  • Nancy Vol. 1: The John Stanley Library (2009), Drawn and Quarterly
  • Nancy Vol. 2: The John Stanley Library (2010), Drawn and Quarterly

References

  1. ^ "January 18, 2009 Nancy strip". Retrieved 2010-03-09.
  2. ^ Don Markstein's Toonopedia
  3. ^ a b c Toonopedia: Nancy
  4. ^ Newgarden, Mark and Karasik, Paul. "How to Read Nancy", 1988.
  5. ^ "September 7, 2009 Nancy strip". Retrieved 2010-03-09.
  6. ^ "June 10, 2008 Nancy strip". Retrieved 2010-03-09.
  7. ^ Reuben Award: Ernie Bushmiller
  8. ^ "GDC entry". Retrieved 25 March 2012.

Further reading

  • Strickler, Dave. Syndicated Comic Strips and Artists, 1924–1995: The Complete Index. Cambria, California: Comics Access, 1995. ISBN 0-9700077-0-1