Charlie Brown was modeled after Charles Schulz.
“We always say that each of the characters represents a piece of
our dad,” Craig Schulz, Charles’ son, says in a new book about
the production of the new movie, The Art and Making of the
Peanuts Movie. “Charlie Brown was his real self, while Snoopy
was what he wanted to be.”
There are 17,897
Peanuts comic strips. They ran between 1950 and 2000, each one
drawn by Schulz. Schulz died from colon cancer at age 77, the
day before the last original strip ran.
Charles Schulz did not
choose the name Peanuts (nor did he like it). Charlie Brown
first appeared as a character in a comic strip called Li'l
Folks, but when Schulz approached the United Feature Syndicate
about a publishing deal in 1950, the syndication service thought
the name was too close to two other comics it ran at the time,
and changed it to Peanuts. Schulz never liked the new name; he
thought it "made it sound too insignificant."
Iconic Peanuts
characters like Lucy and Linus didn’t show up until years into
the comic. The Peanuts gang in CGI in The Peanuts Movie (2015).
Design by Tyler Carter, Color by Robert MacLenzie. © 2015
Peanuts Worldwide LLC. © 2015 Twentieth Century Fox Film
Corporation. All rights reserved.
The first Peanuts strip featured Shermy, Patty (a separate
character from Peppermint Patty), and Charlie Brown. It ran in
seven newspapers in October 1950.
In the early Peanuts
strips, Lucy was younger than Charlie Brown. In her first comic
strip in March 1952, Lucy was a toddler. Later, Schulz decided
to make her Charlie Brown’s peer. Lucy would later be the
character to observe “Happiness is a warm puppy” in an April
1960 strip.
Linus did not speak for
the first two years of Peanuts strips. He appeared as Lucy’s
security-blanketed younger brother in September 1952, but did
not get a line in the comic until 1954.
Franklin’s first
appearance in the Peanuts comic was in July 1968. In it,
Franklin recovers Charlie Brown’s lost beach ball. At the time,
Franklin’s inclusion was seen as controversial, and Schulz
received letters complaining about the character.
Snoopy has his own star
on the Hollywood walk of fame, right next to Schulz's.
Schroeder loves
Beethoven (and his house at 1770 James Street is a nod to the
composer’s birth year) but the first piece he played in the
strip was Sergei Rachmaninoff’s "Prelude in G Minor."
In most of the Peanuts
comics, Marcie has no eyes. Marcie’s glasses mask her eyes
throughout most of the original comic, only appearing in rare
moments, like a May 1980 strip where Peppermint Patty tries to
convince her to wear her glasses on top of her head.
The little red-haired
girl is never fully seen in the Peanuts comic strip. The daily
strip only showed the object of Charlie Brown’s affections once,
in silhouette, in 1998. He did get to meet her in the television
special 'It’s Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown', which aired in
1977.
Snoopy has five
siblings. Spike was the first Snoopy brother, introduced in 1975
and named after Charles Schulz’s childhood pup. Snoopy’s other
siblings include Marbles, Olaf, Andy, and his only sister,
Belle.
If you look closely,
you will notice that Snoopy’s eyes are on the same side of his
nose. It looks natural in the comic, but was a particular
challenge to animate in 3D.
Even the U.S. Postal
Service loves A Charlie Brown Christmas. In 2015, to mark the
65th anniversary of the comic and the 50th anniversary of the
television special, the USPS released Forever Stamps with images
like Snoopy ice skating, Linus kneeling with the Christmas tree,
and Charlie Brown checking the mail for a Christmas card. The
Peanuts gang also got a commemorative stamp from the USPS in
2001.