For today's stroll you'll need a pair of brown lace up shoes and maybe a yellow shirt!

We're off to meet Charlie Brown!


Perhaps we know him from the newspapers or from the movies, but however we know him...he's been a part of most of our lives. But just where did he come from?


Wishy-washy hero of the comic strip Peanuts Charlie Brown is the wishy-washy child hero of the newspaper comic strip Peanuts. Charlie Brown is a lovable loser who dreams of hitting the game-winning home run but usually strikes out. He first appeared in Li'l Folks, a comic feature by Charles Schulz, which debuted in the St. Paul Pioneer Press in 1947. In 1950 a new version of Schulz's strip was syndicated as Peanuts. For the next 50 years, Charlie Brown and his nutty beagle Snoopy appeared in newspapers around the world. As the popularity of the strip soared in the 1960s, the Peanuts gang also appeared in books, TV specials, and even an in off-Broadway play titled You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown. A few of Charlie Brown's traits became particularly famous: his phrase of dismay, "Good grief!"; his unrequited love for the unseen little red-haired girl; his philosophical discussions with his blanket-carrying chum, Linus; and his annual (failed) attempts to kick a football held by Linus's sneaky sister Lucy. Schulz drew the strip right up until his death in 2000; since that time it has continued in reruns in hundreds of newspapers.


Charlie Brown's younger sister is named Sally... His father is a barber, as was Schulz's real-life father... Charlie Brown was played by Gary Burghoff in the original 1967 off-Broadway cast of You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown... Schulz named Charlie Brown after a friend he met at an art class in Minneapolis... Charlie Brown and Snoopy were the name of the command module and the lunar module on Apollo 10, the final test flight before Apollo 11 put Neil Armstrong on the moon.


The movies that we know and love, "It's the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown!", "A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving" and "A Charlie Brown Christmas", and many, many others, all started out as television specials but now are available on DVD. Share these treasures with your children and grandchildren. Gather them around after that Thanksgiving feast you're preparing and watch "A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving", you'll feel like a kid again !!






Strolling Down Memory Lane with Candy - Main Page