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The Dingbat Family

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American comic strip

The Dingbat Family
Author(s)George Herriman
Launch dateJuly 20, 1910 (1910-07-20)
End dateJanuary 4, 1916 (1916-01-4)
Alternate name(s)The Family Upstairs
Syndicate(s)King Features Syndicate
Genre(s)Gag-a-day
Followed byKrazy Kat

The Dingbat Family (alsoThe Family Upstairs) is a comic strip by American cartoonistGeorge Herriman that ran from June 20, 1910,[1] to January 4, 1916.[2] It introduced Herriman's most famous pair of characters: Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse, who later featured in Herriman's best-known stripKrazy Kat (1913–1944).[3]

Publication and history

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George Herriman moved from California to New York to work for theNew York Evening Journal.[1] Six days after his arrival, Herriman began the daily stripThe Dingbat Family, starring E. Pluribus Dingbat and his family.[3]

From August 10, 1910, to November 15, 1911, the strip ran under the titleThe Family Upstairs.[4] During this period, the Dingbats fruitlessly attempted to deal with their irritating, noisy neighbors who lived in the apartment above them; the family upstairs was never seen in the strip.[5] The original title returned after the strip of November 15, 1911, when the Dingbats' building was demolished to make room for a department store and they and their upstairs nemeses parted paths.[4]

Critics do not regard the strip highly, but it provided the vehicle for a fruitful situation: a cat-and-mouse that began as filler in the bottom of the strip's panels and later graduated to a tier of its own at the bottom of the strip.[6] In the episode for July 26, 1910, the mouse threw a pebble (not yet the famous brick) at the family cat—called "Kat"—which hit the cat on the head.[3] The antics of this mouse and "Kat" continued to appear in the bottom portion ofThe Dingbat Family. Herriman said he did this "to fill up the waste space".[3] About a month after its first appearance, the "Kat" crept up on the sleeping mouse and kissed it loudly. The mouse awoke saying, "I dreamed an angel kissed me", while the "Kat" crept away and said, "Sweet thing".[7] In July 1912, while Herriman had the Dingbats on vacation, Krazy Kat and Ignatz Mouse took over the strip, which was retitledKrazy Kat and I. Mouse for the duration.[8] On October 28, 1913,Krazy Kat debuted as an independent strip on the daily comics page.[6]

The Dingbat Family ended January 4, 1916, and Herriman replaced it the next day withBaron Bean (1916–1919).[2]

Reprints

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  • The Family Upstairs, By George!, Volume Two, edited by Bill Blackbeard, Nov. 25, 1910 to Feb. 15, 1911, SPEC Productions, includes the first appearances of Ignatz, Krazy, and the Family Upstairs.
  • The Family Upstairs, By George!, Volume Three, edited by Bill Blackbeard, Sept. 12, 1910 to Nov 23, 1910, SPEC Productions.
  • The Family Upstairs, By George!, Volume Four, edited by Bill Blackbeard, Nov. 25, 1910 to Feb 15, 1911, Spec Productions.

References

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  1. ^abMcDonnell, O'Connell & Havenon 1986, p. 50.
  2. ^abBlackbeard 2011, p. 9.
  3. ^abcdMcDonnell, O'Connell & Havenon 1986, p. 51.
  4. ^abMarkstein.
  5. ^Blackbeard 2011, p. 8.
  6. ^abMcDonnell, O'Connell & Havenon 1986, p. 57.
  7. ^McDonnell, O'Connell & Havenon 1986, pp. 52, 54.
  8. ^McDonnell, O'Connell & Havenon 1986, p. 59.

Works cited

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