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Mr. Red

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mascot of the Cincinnati Reds
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(May 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Mr. Red
Mr. Red (wearing alife vest for a promotion)
TeamCincinnati Reds
DescriptionMan with a baseball for a head
First seen1953
Related mascot(s)Mr. Redlegs
Rosie Red
Gapper
Websitewww.mlb.com/reds/fans/mascots

Mr. Red is an officialmascot forMajor League Baseball'sCincinnati Reds. The character first appeared in 1953 as a cartoon figure based on a 19th-century "Red Stockings" ballplayer, with a baseball for a head. Over time the design evolved into multiple forms, including the long-running "Running Man" logo and later live costumed mascots.

The modern Reds employ two mascots descended from the original character: a clean-shavenMr. Red and a mustachioed retro version known asMr. Redlegs. Both appear regularly alongside the team's other mascots,Rosie Red andGapper.

History

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Origins

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The character is widely credited toCincinnati Enquirer sports cartoonist Harold E. Russell, whose caricature-style drawing of a 19th-century Red Stockings–era ballplayer appeared on the cover of the 1953 Reds yearbook and became the visual ancestor of the modern mascots.[1][2] (The character was first depicted in the March 4, 1953, issue ofThe Sporting News.)[3]

Henry "Hank" Zureick, the Reds' publicity director and editor/producer of the team's yearbooks and programs in the 1950s, is often associated with early uses of the character in team publications, and some later sources have attributed the creation to him; however, contemporary accounts and logo historians most commonly credit Russell for the design.[4][5]

Logos and patches

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The unnamed character first appeared on a Reds uniform as a sleeve patch in 1955. The patch featured his baseball-shaped head, clad in an old-fashioned white pillbox baseball cap with red stripes. (He was described in a 1956Sporting News article as "an emblem of a baseball made it into the face of an old-time player, complete with a black mustache, surmounted by an old-style square cap around which are two thin black stripes."[6]

The following season, 1956, saw the Reds adopt sleeveless jerseys, and the character was eliminated from the home uniform. He was moved to the left breast of the road uniform,[7] and remained there for one season before being eliminated entirely.

Running Man

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In 1961, a new "Running Man" version of the character appeared, showing the old-fashioned mustachioed Red Stockings ballplayer in motion (running left to right).[8]

In 1968, when the team later adopted a no-facial-hair policy, the mustache was removed, leaving a clean-shaven Running Man — with a modern baseball cap — that served as the Reds' primary logo through the "Big Red Machine" era of the 1970s and into the early 1990s. This new design was created by Jerry Burnett, an artist at Nolan, Keelor and Stites, a Cincinnati ad agency.[5]

From 1968 until 1992, the Running Man logo was shown with uniform number 27. During this period, no Reds player wore the number, which became closely identified with the mascot. According to logo historianTodd Radom, the number was chosen in homage toDal Maxvill, aSt. Louis Cardinals infielder and the favorite player of then-ownerFrancis L. Dale's young son[9] (Dale was head of the ownership group that purchased the Reds in 1967).[10]

In 1999, the Reds redesigned their uniform and the Running Man character — now running right-to-left — was reintroduced as a sleeve patch on the undershirt.

Live mascots

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Mr. Red - first iteration

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The previous version of Mr. Red, photographed in 2005.

Quoting logo designer Todd Radom, "According to 1982 newspaper article, the first live Mr. Red mascot was introduced in 1973 at the suggestion of the wife of team CEODick Wagner." The mascot wore uniform number 73.[8]

Many national viewers saw Mr. Red in Game 5 of the1975 World Series, when he appeared on screen during the NBC broadcast.[a] Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, matching the team logo, the Mr. Red mascot wore uniform number 27.[citation needed]

Mr. Red disappeared in the late 1980s, supplanted as the Reds mascot by then-ownerMarge Schott'sSt. Bernard dogs.[8]

The costumed Mr. Red mascot was reintroduced in 1997. In 2002, Mr. Red was joined by "Gapper," a new furry mascot created byDavid Raymond (the originalPhillie Phanatic),[11] in commemoration of the franchise moving toGreat American Ball Park.

The head of the original costumed Mr. Red was sometimes described by fans and performers as unsettling. The large, rigid fiberglass head featured stark black eyes and a fixed grin, which one performer recalled as looking like it was "taking [his] soul."[12]

Mr. Redlegs mascot

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In 2007, Mr. Red was retired, replaced by a retro 1950s version known as "Mr. Redlegs," complete with handlebar mustache and old-fashioned baseball uniform.[2] In August 2008, a female companion named "Rosie Red" — named in honor of the group that supports the team, theRosie Reds — was introduced.[13]

Mr. Red - second iteration

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A new, rebranded/redesigned Mr. Red mascot was unveiled at Redsfest for the 2012 season.[12] The redesigned head featured softer proportions, colored eyes, and a friendlier expression, and was generally considered a more appealing update to the character.

Mr. Red now appears regularly on the field with Gapper, Rosie Red, and Mr. Redlegs.[14]

Performers

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Charles "Chuck" Kindig, at the time a high school junior, was the first person to wear the Mr. Red costume, starting in 1973.[15] A man named Jerry Walke also performed as the mascot in the "early days of Mr. Red." Walke "also was a football player forCapital University inBexley, Ohio.[16]

When Chuck Kindig left to attend college, "his younger brother Thomas 'Tom' Kindig became Mr. Red. Tom was the mascot from the fall of 1974 through [the] 1979 season."[15]

Dylan Moody was the full-time Mr. Red by 2014, staying in that role until 2016 (when he took over the Mr. Redlegs suit).[8]

Timeline

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PeriodPrimary design / useMustache?Informal nameNotes / sources
1953 (debut)Cartoon of a 19th-century "Red Stockings" ballplayer (cover of the 1953 yearbook)Yes— (later referred to as Mr. Red / Mr. Redlegs)Design credited to Harold E. Russell; first appeared in Reds publicity materials produced by Hank Zureick.[2][4]
1955–56Sleeve patch (1955) and road-jersey emblem (1956)YesAppeared on Reds uniforms as a patch; removed after uniform redesign.
1961"Running Man" iteration appears in team yearbook/logoYes (initially)Running ManRunning Man art later evolves into the team's primary logo.[5]
c. 1968Running Man depicted clean-shaven (aligns with team facial-hair policy)NoRunning ManReferred to as "Cincy Red" in 1968;[8] used through the "Big Red Machine" era.
1999 redesignRunning Man revived as sleeve/secondary patchReturned as secondary logo in uniform redesign.
1972–1980sFirst costumed mascot (live Mr. Red) debuts at Riverfront StadiumMr. Red (costumed)Debuted 1972; widely seen in 1975 World Series; mascot disappeared in late 1980s.
1997Costumed mascot reintroducedMr. RedReturned to field appearances.
2007Retro mustachioed costumed mascot introducedYesMr. RedlegsBased on original 1950s art.
2012Clean-shaven costumed Mr. Red reintroducedNoMr. Red

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^See the DVD version available on A&E Video.[original research?]

References

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  1. ^Suess, Jeff (April 4, 2019)."Our history: Enquirer sports cartoonist designed Mr. Redlegs".The Cincinnati Enquirer.
  2. ^abcBrookbank, Sarah (Feb 15, 2019)."Quadruple bobblehead celebrates 150 years of Reds History".Cincinnati Enquirer.
  3. ^"New Emblem".The Sporting News. March 4, 1953.
  4. ^ab"Henry J. Zureick obituary".The Cincinnati Enquirer. February 9, 1997 – via Newspaper.com.
  5. ^abcRadom, Todd (April 22, 2021)."Cincinnati, City of Logo Champions".Todd Radom Design.
  6. ^The Sporting News. April 25, 1956.{{cite news}}:Missing or empty|title= (help)
  7. ^"New Duds".Times-News. May 8, 1956.
  8. ^abcdeRadom, Todd (Aug 20, 2013)."Sports Logo Case Study #5—Mr. Red".Todd Radom Design.
  9. ^Radom, Todd (February 4, 2014)."The Mystery of Cincinnati's Mr. Red and His Number 27".Todd Radom Design.
  10. ^"New Owners Bar Franchise Shift: Dale, Temporary Head of Syndicate, Says Reds Will Remain in Cincinnati".The New York Times. Dec 6, 1966.
  11. ^Orso, Anna (Sep 10, 2018)."The newest member of Philadelphia's mascot family: Phang, the Union-loving blue snake".Philadelphia Inquirer.
  12. ^abDehner Jr., Paul (June 25, 2020)."Stories and sweat from under the head of Mr. Redlegs".The Athletic.
  13. ^"Rosie Red".MLB.com. RetrievedOctober 2, 2025.
  14. ^Grob, Dave."A Look at Mr. Red".CrosleyField.com. Archived from the original on 21 June 2016.
  15. ^abKindig, Jr., Charles E. (2022)."Sports Logo Case Study #5—Mr. Red".Todd Radom Design.
  16. ^Davis, Sr., Gary (2019)."Sports Logo Case Study #5—Mr. Red".Todd Radom Design.

External links

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