Gulf Today

‘PEANUTS’ WAS SCHULZ’ WAY OF TEACHING LIFE’S LESSONS

- BY VIKAS DATTA

He can be hailed as creator of the longest-running, most popular comic strip ever, which saw its characters used from selling insurance (Metlife) to nickname an Indian Air Force chief (NAK Browne). But Charles Schulz’s “Peanuts” was not only a cartoon series featuring a group of children and a dog but a depiction of life in both its most heartwarmi­ng and bitterswee­t moments.

“Peanuts” was a phenomenon, with the 17,897 strips of its run from October 2, 1950, to February 13, 2000 - a day after Schulz’s death - making it “arguably the longest story ever told by one human being”, as per American academicia­n Robert Thomson.

It was also a story that resonated well across the globe, appearing in 2,600 newspapers in 21 languages across 75 countries in its heyday. “Peanuts” can still be read in several places, including India (though these are actually reprints), and has inspired animated versions, amusement parks, parodies and spin-off merchandis­e, apart from the fame of its principal characters - Charlie Brown and his beagle, Snoopy.

But while we can go on about shy and nervous Charlie Brown, Snoopy, bossy Lucy van Pelt, Linus and his blanket, the Great Pumpkin, Peppermint Patty and other characters, equally deserving of attention is its industriou­s but shy creator, whose 95th birth anniversar­y is on Sunday, and his inspiratio­ns.

Charles Monroe Schulz (1922-2000) was not only the son of a barber like Charlie Brown, but there were many other incidents and persons from his life mirrored in “Peanuts”. Charlie Brown for one was named after a drawing school colleague and many other of Schulz’s friends inspired the character’s own friends in name or deeds.

Born in Minneapoli­s (Minnesota) on November 26, 1922, Schulz was gifted at drawing right from an early age and determined to make it his profession. “The only thing I ever wanted to be was a cartoonist. That’s my life. Drawing,” he said later.

After a brief spell in the US army during World War II, he returned to Minneapoli­s and plunged into his dream ield. His irst regular series was a weekly one-panel “Li’l Folks”, which ran locally from June 1947 to January 1950.

Though he had more disputes with United Features, which sparred him over his contract (even considerin­g replacing him in the 1970s) and always priced the copyright over what he - even having become rich - could pay, the syndicate deserves credit for sticking with “Peanuts” even after a poor start: The strip debuted in just seven newspapers, two of which dropped it within the irst six months.

But “Peanuts” steadily gained ground as Schulz began to get more confident and inventive, and went undeterred even after heart surgery in the early 1980s left him with “shaking hands”. However, he was forced to give it up in December 1999 after suffering strokes and being diagnosed with cancer - to which he succumbed in the following February.

But Schulz, in the process of the work, not only relived parts of his own life or exalted his profession (“A cartoonist is someone who has to draw the same thing every day without repeating himself”) but taught some invaluable lessons - about being popular without being aggressive or ambitious, about companions­hip, regard for others, equality but above all, never letting go of your dream. That is his greatest contributi­on.

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