It's fun to see Charles Schulz delineate grown-ups and cars and such. It shows that the simplicity in Peanuts was a chosen exile.
Update: Jim Sasseville drew these panels. Did not know that. Maybe it was not a chosen exile of simplicity for Schulz. Thank you commenters.
Charles Schulz — It's Only a Game — 1958
2 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Schulz didn't draw this strip. He brainstormed gags and then turned the drawing duties over to Jim Sasseville. A better look at Schulz drawing non-kids can be found in his cartoons for church publications (e.g. Teenager Is Not a Disease).
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2 comments:
Schulz didn't draw this strip. He brainstormed gags and then turned the drawing duties over to Jim Sasseville. A better look at Schulz drawing non-kids can be found in his cartoons for church publications (e.g. Teenager Is Not a Disease).
Here's a good interview with Jim Sasseville, the artist who drew that for Charles Shulz.
Five Cents Please.
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