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  1. Chic Young. Dagwood Bumstead is a main character in cartoonist Chic Young 's long-running comic strip Blondie. He debuted in the first strip on September 8, 1930. He was originally heir to the Bumstead Locomotive fortune, but was disowned when he married Blondie née Boopadoop, a flapper whom his family saw as below his class.

  2. Blondie and Dagwood, wife and husband who appeared in Blondie, an American newspaper comic strip created by Chic Young in 1930. Originally, Blondie Boopadoop was a flighty flapper 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.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Blondie Was Inspired by 1920s Flappers.
    • Young Sold The Strip by Sending Editors A Paper Doll of Blondie in Lingerie.
    • Dagwood Was Originally The Heir to A Railroad Fortune.
    • Dagwood Went on A Hunger Strike in Order to Marry Blondie.
    • Dagwood and Blondie Scandalously Slept in The Same Bed.
    • The Early Strips Had An Unfortunate Preoccupation with Domestic Violence.
    • Dagwood Endorsed Nuclear Power.
    • Young’s Death Prompted Newspapers to Drop The Strip.
    • The Strip Launched 28 Feature Films.
    • The Strip Caught Flak For Using A Dirty Word in 2004.

    Before Blondie debuted in 1930, cartoonist Chic Young had attempted to create a female-driven strip without a lot of success. Titles like Beautiful Bab and Dumb Dora were some of the more unfortunate ideas, with Young preoccupied by the notion of having a vapid leading lady. For Blondie, Young initially pursued the “dumb blonde” stereotype before d...

    For the debut of Blondie, Young’s syndicate, King Features, launched an aggressive mailing campaignin an effort to entice newspaper editors to pick up the strip. Editors first received a letter “announcing” the engagement of Blondie and Dagwood, which was followed by protestations from the Bumstead family and eventually a cardboard suitcase that ca...

    He might strike you as incapable of tying his own shoes, but there was a time when Dagwood Bumstead carried real potential. Instead of his current working-stiff incarnation, Dagwood was originally heirto his billionaire father’s railroad fortune. But when he married Blondie in 1933, the Bumstead family effectively disowned him, fearing Blondie was ...

    With the Bumstead family highly skeptical of Dagwood’s plans to marry Blondie, the would-be groom decided to earn their blessing by going on a hunger strike that played out in real time. For 28 days, Dagwood refused to eat and grew frail until his family finally consented to the marriage. The narrative stunt drew the attention of new readers, raisi...

    For a good portion of the 20th century, it was seen as proper to depict married couples on television or in comics as sleeping in twin beds, eliminating any hint of carnal activities happening off-screen. (Or in this case, off-panel.) But Young thought this was juvenile andinsistedthat Blondie and Dagwood appear sleeping in the same double bed. Per...

    While Blondie and Dagwood got along without incident, the same couldn’t be said for another couple featured in the strip’s early years. One of Blondie’s earlier suitors, Hiho, married girlfriend Betty and the two became supporting characters in the strip. Hiho and Betty had what could be considered a tumultuous relationship, with each threatening t...

    After the atomic bomb was dropped twice to bring an end to World War II, American citizens understandably grew skittish about the ramifications of wielding such power. To ease their minds, the U.S. military partnered with Young to produce 1949’sDagwood Splits the Atom, a “fun” booklet that sees the character shrunk down in size to help readers unde...

    Although Young’s son Dean had been working on Blondie and was prepared to take over writing duties when his father passed away in 1973, newspapers weren’t so sure. According to Young, more than 600 papers canceledthe strip when his father died, fearing it would suffer a drop in quality. Young persevered and eventually won over the naysayers, reclai...

    In 1938, with Blondie firmly entrenched on the comics pages, King Features and Young agreed to license the strip to Columbia Pictures for a series of live-action feature films. The movies were shot quickly and economically with stars Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake portraying Blondie and Dagwood, respectively. The studio produced 28 features betwee...

    With their relatively trivial subject matter, comic strips rarely have the potential to offend. A 2004 Blondie entry proved to be an exception. In the strip, a character uses the word “scumbag” to describe a baseball umpire. Readers wrote in to Dean Young to lodge complaints, with Mr. Young and his proofreaders apparently unawarethat “scumbag” is a...

  3. Blondie is an American comic strip created by cartoonist Chic Young. The comic strip is distributed by King Features Syndicate, and has been published in newspapers since September 8, 1930. [1] The success of the strip, which features the eponymous blonde and her sandwich-loving husband, led to the long-running Blondie film series (1938–1950 ...

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  5. Dec 20, 2016 · Blondie. turned 86 years old last September — the comic strip, not the character. Blondie the cartoon character shows little signs of having aged since 1930 and appears to live forever on the sunny side of middle age. The comic strip bearing her name also seems ageless despite having been around since Herbert Hoover was president.

  6. Jun 27, 2000 · Maybe it was her attitude, or the fact that Dagwood and Blondie really seemed to love each other--whatever the reason, Americans, along with readers in 54 other countries, couldn't get enough of ...

  7. Blondie (comic strip)One of the longest-running marriages in the funnies is that of Blondie Boopadoop and Dagwood Bumstead. The couple first met in 1930, when Blondie was a flighty flapper and Dagwood was a somewhat dense rich boy, and they were married in 1933. They're still living a happy, though joke-ridden life, in close to 2000 newspapers ...