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Encyclopedia Britannica
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Blondie and Dagwood

comic strip characters
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Blondie and Dagwood, wife and husband who appeared inBlondie, an Americannewspapercomic strip created byChic Young in 1930. Originally, Blondie Boopadoop was a flightyflapper and Dagwood Bumstead was the bumbling playboy son of a millionaire industrialist. The two were married, and Dagwood was promptly disinherited from the family fortune. Blondie and Dagwood had a son in 1934 (Baby Dumpling, later called Alexander) and a daughter in 1941. Hundreds of thousands of readers participated in a mail-in contest to name the Bumstead baby, and she was eventually dubbed Cookie.

TheBlondie strip chronicled the everyday life of the Bumstead family, Dagwood’s comical misadventures with hisirascible employer Mr. Dithers, and Blondie’s levelheaded, often zany, handling of life’s minor and major crises. A stay-at-home wife and mother for the first 60 years of the strip’s existence, Blondie opened a successful catering business in the early 1990s. Dagwood, a lovable bungler whose well-meaning but usually inept behaviour reinforced thestereotype of the bumbling husband, lent his name to theDagwood sandwich, a staple on restaurant menus acrossNorth America. In the strip it is a gravity-defying architectural wonder containing meats, cheeses, vegetables, and some visual surprises.

In more than 20 films (1938–50) Blondie was played byPenny Singleton and Dagwood by Arthur Lake. Two television series were made (1957 and 1968), and an animated TV movie appeared in 1987. At the height of its popularity, thesyndicated comic strip was translated into 35 languages and appeared in more than 2,000 newspapers worldwide.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated byMichael Ray.

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