Bozo (comic strip) explained

Bozo
Creator:Francis "FoXo" Reardon
Website:https://www.gocomics.com/bozo
Began:1925
Ended:1955
Syndicate:The Times-Dispatch, Chicago Sun-Times Syndicate, Universal Press Syndicate/Universal Uclick/Andrews McMeel Syndication (2021–present)

Bozo the first pantomime-style comic strip, was created by the cartoonist Francis X. Reardon (with the pen name Foxo Reardon, or FoXo Reardon), who penned it beginning from 1921, until his death in 1955. Bozo is called America's original pantomime comic strip. Bozo ran both as a daily comic strip as well as on Sundays.[1] [2] [3]

The word "bozo", that was practically unknown in the 1920s, was popularized by the cartoonist Foxo Reardon through this weekly newspaper strip, decades before the appearance of Bozo the Clown.

About Bozo Comics

The character Bozo was created by Foxo Reardon at age 16.[4] Starting as early as 1925, the comic strip appeared as a local weekly in The Times-Dispatch until it achieved national and international syndication through the Chicago Sun-Times Syndicate in 1945. Bozo appeared in the Richmond Times-Dispatch on Sunday for twenty years before it was syndicated nationally and internationally by Field Enterprises in 1945.[5] Bozo was syndicated from 1945 to 1955.[6] [7]

In 1943, the Times-Dispatch called Bozo "the world's first pantomime comic strip", predating comics like Henry, The Little King, and other pantomime-style comics that arrived in the 1930s. Unlike most other pantomime comics where at least one or the other character may speak a word or a sentence, any of the characters in Bozo did not originally speak a word.

From an article in the Richmond-Times Dispatch on March 24, 1935, the cartoonist himself, FoXo Reardon, says that, "Bozo and Bozanne were born in 1924 and I had to do 'em in pantomime because I hadn't learned to spell yet... ...But now I know all about spelling because the editorial department bought a new dictionary and I swiped the old one...", and the article goes on to say that, "So now every once in a while Bozo opens that big mouth of his and says something, but his pantomime is still his best humor."

The Times-Dispatch conducted a 1935 survey of 1,500 readers and found Bozo to be the second most popular comic, behind "Bringing Up Father". Once it reached syndication, the Chicago Sun-Times Syndicate conducted a similar survey where readers voted it the most popular comic carried by that syndicate. The Chicago Sun-Times Syndicate promoted Bozo as the world's original pantomime comic strip. The Bulletin of the Virginia Press Association (in page 8 and page 15) dated May 1946 called Bozo "The Mighty Nobody an Antidote For Blues".[8]

These classic Bozo comics are being republished by Andrew Mc Meel's comics website Go Comics since February 22, 2021.

Main characters

External links

Bozo on Go Comics

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Team. GoComics. 2021-07-26. A Firsthand History of 'Bozo', the World's First Pantomime-Style Strip GoComics.com. 2021-09-23. GoComics. en.
  2. Web site: About Bozo Comic Strips - GoComics. 2021-09-23. www.gocomics.com.
  3. Book: Reardon, Michael T.. Whistling down the halls : the times and cartoons of America's original pantomime comic strip artist. 2008. 978-1-59393-149-0. Albany, GA. 232606246.
  4. Web site: 2021-07-27. Bozo by FoXo. 2021-09-23. The Daily Cartoonist. en-US.
  5. Web site: Foxo Reardon. 2021-09-23. lambiek.net. en.
  6. Web site: 2021-03-03. A New Panel and An Old Strip Added to GoComics. 2021-09-23. The Daily Cartoonist. en-US.
  7. Book: American Newspaper Comics. 2012. en. 10.3998/mpub.2133963. Holtz. Allan. 9780472117567.
  8. Book: Bulletin. 1944. Virginia Press Association.. en.