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  1. Little Orphan Annie

    Little Orphan Annie

    1932 · Holiday · 1h

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  1. Little Orphan Annie was a daily American comic strip created by Harold Gray and syndicated by the Tribune Media Services. The strip took its name from the 1885 poem "Little Orphant Annie" by James Whitcomb Riley, and it made its debut on August 5, 1924, in the New York Daily News.

    • Ended
    • August 5, 1924
  2. A comedy drama family film based on the comic strip by Harold Gray, starring Mitzi Green as Annie and Buster Phelps as Mickey. Annie and Mickey have adventures in an orphanage, with a rich dowager, and with a mysterious Santa Claus.

    • (93)
    • Comedy, Drama, Family
    • John S. Robertson
    • 1932-11-04
  3. A classic American poem about a fictional orphan girl who tells spooky stories to scare the children. Read the full text, learn about the author and the poem's legacy.

  4. Little Orphan Annie, American newspaper comic strip depicting the adventures of a plucky street urchin. Little Orphan Annie enjoyed an extraordinarily long life in newspapers, on stage, and in film. Making her first appearance on Aug. 5, 1924, Annie—who was conceived as an 11-year-old escapee from.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. " Little Orphant Annie " is an 1885 poem written by James Whitcomb Riley and published by the Bobbs-Merrill Company. First titled " The Elf Child ", the name was changed by Riley to "Little Orphant Allie" at its third printing; however, a typesetting error during printing renamed the poem to its current form.

    • United States
    • "The Elf Child"
    • Indianapolis Journal
    • November 15, 1885
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  7. A film adaptation of the comic strip about an orphan girl who helps a boxer, starring Ann Gillis and Robert Kent. See the plot summary, cast, reviews, trivia, and more on IMDb.

  8. Dec 6, 2016 · Topics. orphan, radio, 1931, newspaper, comic strip, children. Language. English. The Little Orphan Annie radio program, which began in 1931, was the first newspaper comic strip to make the leap to nationwide radio, and the first radio program aimed at children. Each episode was broadcast twice, once from Chicago for the Eastern half of the ...

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