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      1,300 cartoons

      • Charles Addams became a regular contributor to The New Yorker, and drew approximately 1,300 cartoons between then and his death in 1988. 58 of these would feature the Addams Family, almost all of which were published in the 1940s and 1950s.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › The_Addams_Family
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  2. Charles Addams was not The New Yorker’s most prolific cartoonist. That honor goes to Alan Dunn, who did an astounding nineteen hundred and six cartoons for the magazine. Addams managed to...

  3. Jan 14, 2010 · Mankoff has written about Addams before. In the 1998 Cartoon issue, he described visiting Addams’s widow, Tee, who had four hundred pencil sketches for cartoons which her husband had left at...

    • The Father of The Addams Family
    • The ITT Hits The Fans
    • The Addams Family Matters
    • Moonbathing Under The Lights of Broadway

    It might stand to reason that the man behind the family, Charles Addams, was a lost soul with a troubled background who brought his pain to the pages of the New Yorker. But in reality, born in 1912 in Westfield, New Jersey, Addams grew up in a warm, loving household as the only child of devoted parents; his father sold pianos. Charles was known to ...

    In a broad sense, “The Addams Family” hit the airwaves in the golden age of broad high-concept low-brow comedies—”My Favorite Martian”, “Green Acres”, “My Mother the Car”—but in a specific sense, the show was a direct response to the planned CBS sitcom, “The Munsters.” Both shows shared some of the same spooky DNA (as well as debuting and getting c...

    “The Addams Family” would find new life in syndication, replayed ad nauseum for decades (and still shown in 30 markets as late as 1991.) Its cult following grew, which led to all manner of ill-fated attempts to bring them back to life, including a guest spot on “The New Scooby-Doo Movies”, multiple animated series, a dreadful 1977 Halloween made-fo...

    The Addams Family opened on Broadway in April 2010 to, once again, middling reviews, but like the spectre of its predecessors, found an audience and ran for nearly two years. Once it left Times Square, however, it became a juggernaut, touring the globe to the tune of a half a billion dollars in ticket sales and becoming the mostperformed high schoo...

  4. Charles Addams became a regular contributor to The New Yorker, and drew approximately 1,300 cartoons between then and his death in 1988. 58 of these would feature the Addams Family, almost all of which were published in the 1940s and 1950s.

    • Marc Shaiman
    • Scott Rudin
    • Barry Sonnenfeld
    • Caroline ThompsonLarry Wilson
  5. Aug 29, 2022 · According to the Smithsonian, Charles Addams now-famous family is only a tiny fraction of his work. There were only 58 Addams Family cartoons, and overall, Addams did around 1,300 for The New Yorker alone.

  6. Feb 21, 2021 · Charles Addams began as a cartoonist in the The New Yorker with a sketch of a window washer that ran on 6 February 1932. His cartoons appeared regularly in the magazine beginning in 1938, when he created the first instance of what became known as The Addams Family.

  7. Oct 27, 2022 · On November 3, the Society of Illustrators will induct the cartoonist Charles “Chas” Addams into its Hall of Fame. Although he drew thousands of cartoons throughout his career, Addams is best known for ghoulish and charming characters who first graced the pages of The New Yorker in the late 1930s.

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