The new Macy's Charlie Brown Balloon

News Clippings
and
Press Releases



Charlie Brown and the elusive football balloon made their way down Broadway in the 76th annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York on Thursday, Nov. 28, 2002. More than two-and-a-half million spectators were expected to line the streets to watch the two-and-a-half-mile march through Manhattan. (AP photo/Suzanne Plunkett)


These articles are arranged from the most recent down, so you'll always find the newest news about Charlie Brown and his friends toward the top; older articles will be located further down, or on previous pages.



World's biggest Snoopy theme park to open in China

January 15, 2003

Japantoday.com

HONG KONG — The world's largest theme park featuring Snoopy, Charlie Brown and other Peanuts' characters will open in Shunde City, a leading production center for electrical appliances in China, in May, the developer said Tuesday.

The 40,000-square-meter park, to be located in the new downtown of Shunde in booming southern Guangdong Province, will be the first of its kind in the mainland China.

The Asia-Pacific licensing agent for the U.S. comic strip characters said it is planning to open two more theme parks in the mainland over the next five years.

"We hope to have one park in the eastern part of China and another in the north, likely in Nanjing and Beijing, respectively," Raymond Mok, chairman of RM Enterprises (BVI) Ltd., said after a press conference in Hong Kong.

Mok said his company also wants to open a Peanuts attraction in the planned Universal Studios in Shanghai, which could open in 2006, under a business cooperation model similar to that used in Osaka in Japan.

The "Snoopy Fun Fun Garden" in Shunde will be built in five phases, with attractions including a Peanuts' school, a 15-meter-tall Snoopy dressed in a space suit, a camping site and canoe ride, and a mini-sized golf course for children.

A Snoopy playground will also be erected in a business and commercial complex within the nearby private residential estate Jiaxin Citigarden.

The whole project will involve an investment of 100 million yuan ($12.1 million) and its first phase is expected to open May 1, the developer, Shunde Jiaxin Realty Development Co, said.

"To attract more tourists, we will initially open the park to the public for free," managing director Chen Jiye told reporters.

Chen said he hopes more than three million tourists will visit Shunde each year, up from the present 1.5 million, after the opening of the Snoopy theme park.

Shunde was chosen as the park's site because the city is located in the center of the Pearl River Delta region in Guangdong Province and is within easy reach of other Chinese cities, the developer said.

Shunde is 50 minutes from Guangzhou by car, more than an hour from Hong Kong by jetfoil.

Officials from the Shunde government said the authorities aim to turn the downtown, where the Snoopy theme park is located, into a new hub for city administration, business, culture, tourism and residence.

With a population of 1.7 million, Shunde is China's largest production center for domestic appliances, including air conditioners, microwave ovens, electric fans and rice cookers. It is also the largest freshwater fish farming and eel farming center in the country.


Surrounded by Snoopy Woman admits obsession

December 31, 2002

By Jacob Bennett
The News-Enterprise (Hardin, Kentucky)

Sometimes Susan Masters is Joe Cool.

Sometimes she's silly. Sometimes she's philosophical.

Sometimes she's the World War I Flying Ace?

Metaphorically, perhaps. Masters, 37, is the county personnel/payroll clerk. She hunts Snoopy memorabilia the way the flying ace hunted the Red Baron.

Here's a very short list of Snoopy merchandise she's gathered in more than two decades of collecting Several stuffed animals, cups, mugs, plates, baby spoons, flags, a light up Snoopy Santa, a ceiling fan, an alarm clock and a smoke detector.

Last year, she put up a Christmas tree with Snoopy ornaments and Snoopy lights. Her prized possession is a Snoopy leather jacket.

"I always say I'm the easiest person to shop for," Masters said. "But people say it's getting harder because they don't know what I have and what I don't."

Masters loves Snoopy because of his multi-faceted personality. He's silly and smart, laid-back and philosophical. She sees herself in many of those traits.

"That's kind of the way I feel I am," she said.

Among the many faces of Masters mother of three, wife to husband Gary, soccer coach.

Masters was 13 when she bought her first Snoopy item, an 18-inch-tall stuffed animal. She saved her allowance for several weeks to afford its $24 cost. She bought it at Coast to Coast Hardware in Elizabethtown, where she later worked.

Her first job was at McDonald's. By a stroke of luck, she worked there when the company offered "Camp Snoopy" glasses. She collected them all.

"He's been with me through thick and thin," Masters said.


Now planning 'Peanuts on Parade' IV

December 28, 2002

By Karl J. Karlson
The St. Paul Pioneer Press

Either Woodstock or Linus will star next summer in St. Paul's tribute to Charles Schulz, planners said Friday, confirming that such an event is almost sure to happen.

Lee Koch, vice president of the Capital City Partnership, which oversees the event, said the organization wants to do it, previous sponsors want to do it and the Schulz family wants to do it. However, details haven't been inalized.

Koch said TivoliToo the St. Paul firm that made the Snoopy, Charlie Brown and Lucy statues for the three previous summer events is designing possible statues of Lucy Van Pelt's brother, Linus, and of Woodstock, the yellow bird who follows Snoopy around in Schulz's famed comic strip "Peanuts.''

"We're sending the designs to the Schulz family within a week,'' Koch said Friday.

Hart Johnson of TivoliToo said the firm wants to take part again and that "it's fun that both characters are so well liked that it's a hard decision of which to do. Maybe we'll have time for both.''

During visits to her late husband's hometown, Jean Schulz has supported the idea of continuing the practice of displaying the artist-decorated statues of "Peanuts'' characters around the city. The tribute started after Schulz, who used his St. Paul childhood as a source for much of his "Peanuts'' material, died in February 2000.

The formula has been successful in raising money. More than $1 million was raised in statue auctions, enough to pay for permanent bronze "Peanuts" sculptures, which will be unveiled this spring in a new downtown park.

Koch said no decision has been made about holding another statues auction next summer.

"We don't need to raise any more money for the bronzes,'' she said, adding that the scholarships also funded by the auctions are being increased.

The events also attract people to St. Paul and are a boost to the economy, according to the St. Paul Convention and Visitors Bureau. On Friday, the agency said last summer's "Looking for Lucy'' event drew 800,000 people to the city and contributed $50 million to the local economy.

The estimates are based on the number of people who registered at the bureau's "dog house" information booth, hospitality industry reports and industry-accepted figures on how much visitors spend.

The bureau estimated that "Peanuts on Parade'' in 2000 with statues of Snoopy attracted 450,000 visitors and had a $20 million to $25 million economic impact. The bureau estimated that "Charlie Brown Around Town'' in 2001 drew 700,000 visitors with an impact of $44 million.


Area boy finds solace in lost, then found toy

December 19, 2002

By Judi Brinegar
The Courier-Tribune (North Carolina)

RANDLEMAN — Little Zachary McQueen has a best friend that most little boys would envy.

His name is Snoopy and he is a 12-inch stuffed animal that Zachary received when he was born.

From a Band-Aid on his paw, to a hospital ID tag to the missing button on the flap of his union suit, Snoopy has been loved — and loved hard — by a little boy who has faced a load of health problems since his birth eight years ago.

For Zachary, Snoopy is not a toy — he is as real as you or I.

Zachary was born at Women's Hospital on Dec. 17, 1994 — two months prematurely. His mom Beverly said that he stopped developing when she was 28 weeks pregnant.

"They had to do an emergency C-section and he has had a lot of health problems since his birth," said Beverly. "He weighed 2 pounds, 10 ounces at birth and was just 14 inches long."

Zachary has faced three operations in his short lifetime — two for hernias and one for kidney problems. He also has seizures and is on medication, trying to get them under control. And Snoopy was with him every step of the way.

"His Aunt Kim gave him the Snoopy back then and Snoopy has been to every doctor's visit and was present at every MRI that Zach has had since."

Looking a little sheepish, Zachary admitted that Snoopy has a habit of getting lost though.

Once at the Outer Banks, once in a packing box during a move, and more recently, when Zachary's family stayed with his grandma in Seagrove during Randolph County's recent ice storm.

"We lost our power at home and because Zachary (who has sleep apnea) needs electricity for his CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure), we had to go to stay with my mom," said Beverly. "When we got back home a week later, we got busy going to visit Santa and then going to see the lights on Burney Road.

"When we got ready for bed that night, we realized that Snoopy was missing. I don't know who cried harder — Zachary or me."

For Zachary, Snoopy was a friend who had always been there for him.

"He has been with me all the time. He is not just any Snoopy," said Zachary.

The McQueen family turned the house upside down looking for Zachary's best buddy.

"We walked from room to room praying for Snoopy to be found safe and sound," said Beverly. "I called my mom, looking for him. We were even going to put an ad in the paper for him."

"I was even going to pay for it myself," added Zachary.

"Zachary and I went into another room together to pray about it and we couldn't pray for crying so hard," admitted Beverly.

Soon, Grandma Gloria called with the good news that Snoopy had been found.

"He can't ever be replaced," said Beverly. "Snoopy is such a part of our lives and we just wanted everyone to know that if they see a toy laying abandoned somewhere that it does mean something special to a child somewhere.

"My mother said that if she ever finds a lost toy, she will put an ad in the paper to help it get returned to its owner."

So, this little boy who loves his buddy Snoopy enough that he dressed as Charlie Brown for Halloween, is glad that Snoopy was found safe and sound.

"He is the bestest stuffed animal that ever lived," said Zachary as he hugged Snoopy. "He has been with me all the good times and all the bad times."


Good grief! Parodying Peanuts

December 19, 2002

By Malcolm Mayhew
The Dallas-Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Robert Smigel seems to get paid to do two things

Write funny cartoons for Saturday Night Live.

And irritate people with them.

The mind, and pen, behind SNL's popular "TV Funhouse" segments have goofed on everyone from Michael Jackson to Larry King to Barbara Walters to a good number of this country's past and present presidents to Disney to Christina Aguilera. If you're in the spotlight, chances are Smigel's gonna getcha sooner or later.

On last week's SNL, however, Smigel ventured onto what some consider sacred turf Charles M. Schulz's beloved holiday cartoon, A Charlie Brown Christmas. How, some people are asking, could he do this without getting sued?

The segment featured the Peanuts gang waving their arms to magically transform people and things. Peppermint Patty and Marcie, for instance, were transformed into giant, voluptuous lesbians.

"I think it's terrible," says Edna Poehner, Schulz's former secretary who works at the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center in Santa Rosa, Calif. "I've had several calls today from people who were just horrified."

Horrifying, perhaps. But is it illegal?

According to both SNL's people and Schulz's representatives, no. Even with the Peanuts franchise under copyright, both camps say no laws were broken.

"I can't imagine the network would have allowed that to go on the air if there were legal questions about it," says Marc Liepis, a spokesman for NBC. "There was at least approval or acknowledgment from [Schulz's] people."

Melissa Menta, a spokeswoman for the New York-based United Media -- which with the Schulz family owns the rights to Peanuts, says "no one's up in arms over it."

"They created their own animations," she says. "It was a parody."

That's the key, lawyers say.

Jeffrey Collins, an attorney for the Pennington Baker law firm in Fort Worth, says parodying an already established body of work is completely legal.

"You have a lot of leeway with parodies," he says. "A lot of these silly movies you see today are parodies of other movies, and they're legal."

Parodies fall under a legal umbrella called "fair-use exception," says Fort Worth lawyer Guy V. Manning. Permission, in these cases, is not necessarily required.

"To parody someone else who has put themselves out in the public, particularly if that other person is making a political commentary, is a quick way of rebuttal using their own work," says Manning. "Weird Al Yankovic was doing something similar. I imagine he did that with permission, but fair use assumes you don't have permission. I'm not saying what SNL did is fair use, it's just that it might be."

Smigel has been in this boat before. He has carved a career out of parodying people. A veteran writer for Saturday Night Live, he appeared as one of the beer-drinking commentators on SNL's popular "Da Bears" sketches. He then trailed SNL writer Conan O'Brien to NBC's Late Night With Conan O'Brien in 1993, serving as the show's head writer and co-producer.

After working with O'Brien, then, briefly, Dana Carvey, Smigel returned to SNL, his over-the-top cartoons in hand. Thus began his "TV Funhouse" segments, now a celebrity-bashing staple of the show.

If Smigel has indeed been tromping on legal rights, Manning says he probably would have been sued a long time ago.

"Sometimes it can be argued either way," he says. "But if it's a true parody, no laws have been broken."


Celebrating Sparky's life

Schulz Museum and Research Center in Santa Rosa is a dignified tribute to Peanuts creator

December 2002

By Cory Golden
California Construction Link magazine

Charles "Sparky" Schulz died in his sleep on Feb. 12, 2000, the night before his final "Peanuts" strip brought Charlie Brown and Snoopy to newspapers around the world for the last time. In the 30 months that followed his death, his widow, Jeannie Schulz, oversaw the completion of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center.

"I think it's helped," she said recently. "There's no doubt all the things I had to do kept me closer to Sparky. It's kept me in his world."

The $8 million, 27,384-sq.-ft. museum on Hardies Lane in Santa Rosa - designed by C. David Robinson Architects and built by general contractor Oliver & Co. - opened Aug. 17.

The notion of a museum first came up in 1995, when Jeannie Schulz began moving her husband's work from a safe into archival boxes. Two years later, the idea picked up momentum when the couple saw the work of a kindred spirit in Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani.

Using natural materials, Otani had created clever works, like a wall painted with Snoopy's eye lines or the bird tracks of his sidekick, Woodstock, for Snoopy Town shops. His work, the Schulzes decided, could give the museum that certain something else to appear alongside the preserved comic strips.

Soon, Jeannie Schulz said, the project "had a life of its own."

C. David Robinson was among the architects who submitted designs. He said brainstorming produced visions of Snoopy-shaped buildings and giant doghouses. In the end, however, "cutesy" ideas were scrapped for a more modest design, a sort of over-scaled house suiting Charles Schulz's low-key personality.

"[The building] is more serious, because I think his work was serious," Robinson said. "Over time, I think people will look at it and ask why it's so universal, how it could cut through so many different cultures yet everybody still gets it."

Jeannie Schulz said Robinson and Oliver & Co. were chosen because of their previous experience with museums. As they worked, her husband kept abreast of developments, but largely stayed focused on his comic strip. He was diagnosed with colon cancer just three months before his death.

Robinson designed a building small enough to suit the residential area around it with flexible space inside since it wasn't certain just what would go into the museum.

Using "thought-bubble" shaped skylights and bright, "Woodstock" yellow as an accent to an otherwise black-and-white, stone-and-wood structure suggests the whimsy of "Peanuts" without distracting from Schulz's small-scale original art. Square-shaped panels of various sizes are a reminder of the blank panels Schulz confronted every day for 50 years.

The steel and masonry-block structure features a 100-seat auditorium, a re-creation of the cartoonist's studio, research center, museum store and classroom space.

Otani had two compelling contributions a 17-by-22-ft. tile mural composed of 3,588 comic strip images to form a larger picture of Lucy holding a football for Charlie Brown and a 7,000-lb. wood sculpture detailing the evolution of Snoopy. Both installations were completed before contractors could finish the room around them, said Oliver & Co. Project Manager Tom Angelo.

Some of the building's most challenging work is also its most beautiful, he said glass railings, cherry veneer panels and cherry wood doors, marble and granite counter tops, African slate tile on the first floor with a Vermont marble border and oak flooring on the second level.

"It looks as if it could be a home," Jeannie Schulz said, "a very elegant home."

What the museum is not, is showy. There are no giant computer displays, nothing loud. Like her husband, Jeannie Schulz said, the museum is, in many respects, "normal."

"He was a normal man who happened to have a gift and he devoted himself to it," she said. "People don't like to think about hard work, but he was really an anecdote to what we've become. He worked hard at his gift because it was the only thing he wanted to do."

Angelo said the building's design speaks up or quiets down when appropriate

"The general areas are warm and rich, like the corridors, the great hall and the restrooms, but once you step into the gallery spaces, all the focus is on the artwork."

There, structure provided challenges. Angelo said building code revisions during the design process prompted changes, and the final landscaping plan morphed, under Jeannie Schulz's guidance, from a baseball field to a 51-by-57-ft. labyrinth, designed by Lea Goode-Harris and shaped like Snoopy's head.

The overall design preserved existing trees, important to the Schulzes. The building also includes an efficient energy management system and ground bubblers, in addition to spray sprinklers, for times of drought.

Angelo said subcontractors called him, asking to be included in the project because of what Schulz meant to them and the town he loved.

"It meant something special to everyone who was there," Angelo said. "I didn't know Mr. Schulz, but everybody I worked with - from the subcontractors to the material providers who knew him - said he was such a great man and did so much for the community without asking for anything in return. It's so rare not to hear a bad thing about someone. And working with Jeannie was a joy. I've never enjoyed working on something more than this."

Said Robinson "The thing for me is that Jeannie likes it so much and her family likes it so much and feels it's an appropriate tribute to Sparky."

Indeed, Jeannie Schulz said, the building has grown on her, day by day.

"I find myself liking it more and more," she said. "I've been really amazed that people have gone out of their way to come up and say, 'Oh, this is beautiful.' But a museum is not supposed to be the thing, and it's not. It forms a very homey background that people feel comfortable in, and that's what we wanted ... for people to come and get a sense of Sparky and his work."

As much as anything, Jeannie Schulz said, she enjoys looking out of the building's large windows, watching visitors navigate the labyrinth.

"My heart just soars," she said.


Good grief, Stan Lee!

Spider-Man co-creator provides authenticity of disputed 'Peanuts' painting

November 26, 2002

Wizardworld.com

Someone may be in the doghouse over a disputed 1965 painting of beloved Peanuts characters, Charlie Brown and Snoopy.

But Spider-Man co-creator, Stan Lee, said that despite a sudden web of controversy (including an article in the New York Times) he can prove the unique painting's pedigree.

The controversy involves "the only known oil painting by the late cartoonist, Charles Schulz. It is a unique piece of 1960s Americana," according to John Petty, Director of Heritage Comics Auctions, Dallas, Texas.

The 20 by 30-inch "pop art" painting could easily be valued at $100,000 or more today, even though Stan Lee paid only $250 for it back in 1965.

It was offered by Heritage last month as part of a record setting $5 million auction of comic books, comic art and memorabilia (including the $1.68 million Nicolas Cage comic book collection). But the painting was not sold after the auctioneer received a last-minute allegation by the Charles Schulz estate that he did not paint it.

The painting's owner and consignor, Stan Lee, however, says he has proof Schulz created it himself for a 1965 USO (United Service Organizations) fund-raising event hosted by actress Joan Crawford, for which 32 comic strip artists created and donated unique works.

Lee fell in love with and purchased the painting at that USO event in New York City 37 years ago, and kept it in his personal collection since then.

The oil painting depicts a smiling Charlie Brown standing to the left of Snoopy's doghouse while Snoopy is prone on his back on the roof.

"Rendered in oils on Masonite, this painting is a terrific example of iconic 60s pop art. Schulz actually cut slats of wood and attached them with nails to the painting to create Snoopy's doghouse. Snoopy's ear is made of real felt," said Petty.

Lee is adamant "I know the painting is authentic as I personally attended the USO auction, and personally bid on it. Every piece was offered as an original work by a known comic strip artist. I can't believe that the USO or Charles Schulz would have been party to a hoax," he emphasized.

The Newspaper Comics Council sponsored the event, which took place at the World House Gallery in New York City, May 18-24, 1965. It attracted support and/or donations from cartoonist Charles Addams, New York Mayor Robert Wagner, producer David Merrick, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Field, Mr. And Mrs. Ed Sullivan, Mr. and Mrs. John Hay Whitney, and many others.

Lee recalled that Schulz placed a fake can of "dog food" alongside the painting to add to the "pop art" sense of realism to its display at the auction.

"I also have a Polaroid photo of the painting I showed to Sparky (Schulz's nickname) at a cartoonist's function in 1988. He autographed the back of the photo to me, writing, 'To Stan with friendship. Charles Schulz.' Seems to me if the painting wasn't authentic he'd have said something about it, or, at least, not autographed the back of its photo!" Lee said.

Heritage Chairman, James L. Halperin, says he has acquired additional documentation from the 1965 USO fund-raiser, including two contemporaneously printed magazine articles and a photograph of auction host, Joan Crawford, standing next to the painting.

The day before the painting was to be sold, Heritage Auctions received an e-mail from Edna Poehner, Administrative Assistant to Charles M. Schulz Creative Associates in Santa Rosa, California, claiming the artwork was not created by Schulz.

"According to Mr. Schulz's secretary at that time, Mr. Schulz's wife, Jean, and various people who worked with Mr. Schulz and know his art, this was definitely not done by him. He would have had to have painted it out behind the garage, packed and mailed it off himself, as she never saw or heard of any signs of such a project. He has never spoken of any kind of oil painting, in fact he often said that he wished he knew how to use oils," she wrote.

Despite the allegation by the Schulz estate, Heritage officials say they have no doubt about the authenticity because of its provenance. They politely point out that his widow may have no memory of it because the painting was created a full ten years before she married Schulz.

"Maybe Charles Schulz did not consider himself a good oil painter," Halperin added, "but on that point I must disagree with him. For what it is (i.e. a pop art painting), this is a very compelling piece, with an almost Van Gogh-like air to it. And we strongly believe the painting to be genuine."

So does cartoonist, Mort Walker, creator of the comic strips, Beetle Bailey and Hi & Lois, who also attended and submitted artwork for the 1965 fund-raising auction. Walker recently was contacted by Lee, and responded immediately.

"In talking to several other cartoonists, the unanimous feeling is that the Schulz painting owned by Stan Lee is authentic. I knew 'Sparky' for 50 years and know he would never allow anyone else to do his artwork or sign it. He was very adamant about that," Walker stated in a letter to Halperin.

Heritage Comics Auctions officials, now satisfied with proof of the famous pedigree, plan to place the painting in a public sale next year.

"Out of respect for the administrators of the Charles Schulz Estate, we felt we had to make the Estate's reservations known to any prospective buyers, but honestly, we never really doubted the piece's provenance or pedigree," commented Heritage auction director Petty.

"Our consignor, Stan Lee, is universally regarded as the most important comic book writer of the 20th century. He is the creator or co-creator of Spider-Man, X-Men, the Incredible Hulk, Thor, Daredevil, Fantastic Four, and hundreds of other world-famous popular culture characters."

Heritage is the world's largest collectibles auctioneer with auction sales of more than $70 million in 2001, and expected auction sales of about $90 million for 2002.


Snoopy Ice Show grows up, elegantly

December 15, 2002

By Diane Peterson
The Santa Rosa Press Democrat

This year's holiday ice show glides along smoothly, with fast pacing to keep the kids from getting bored, plus elegant choreography for adults who appreciate the sheer beauty of skating.

While there's more Snoopy than ever, there are no skits aimed specifically at the youngsters, which is probably just as well. Those sweet, treacly bonbons always seemed a bit over the top anyway.

Instead, Jill Schulz and ice show director Karen Kresge frame the show with Christmas vignettes featuring the cranky, quirky and refreshingly honest characters of the late Charles M. Schulz's "Peanuts" comic strips.

Linus, Lucy, Sally and Charlie Brown are performed by local actors J. Eric Cook, Mollie Boice, Hollie Martin and Richard La Rosa. Cook is particularly persuasive as the over-analytical Linus, and Martin brings the guileless Sally to life.

Even more persuasive are Vince Guaraldi's gently swaying tunes from "A Charlie Brown Christmas," accompanying the vignettes. Between skating acts, the vignettes punctuate the show with Schulz's quiet, understated humor.

The show's skating highlights include the athletic artistry of Eric Millot, four-time French national champion, and the lyrical skating of Tony Paul and Terry Pagano, World Professional Pair silver medalists.

The quirky "Flying Ice" sequence before intermission — "Swan Lake" meets the Black Light Theater of Prague — offered the most bang for the buck Thursday night. This modern skit showcases the wild, wacky costumes of Jennifer Langeberg, spinning eye candy from Aydar Rakhmatullin of Cirque de Soleil and aerial acrobatics.

The only snag occurred at the end of the sequence, when a three-ring circus act dissolved into darkness, an unsettling musical soundtrack suddenly brightened and the lights came up on an empty stage. The fractured ending seemed to dash the audience's expectations as surely as a fragile Christmas ornament that slips from its perch at the top of the tree.

For those needing an injection of holiday spirit to get the season jump-started, however, the show offers plenty of chestnuts roasting over an open fire, including the opening "Winter Pond" sequence with regal purple costumes, white muffs, carols and candles.

A pas de deux between ensemble skaters Steven Smith and Sara Robertson, accompanied by Joni Mitchell's "It's Coming on Christmas," hit a lyrical high note in the first half with its yearning refrain for a "river I could skate away on."

"Snoopy's Hit Parade," featuring a musical countdown through the decades from Elvis, The Fifth Dimension and The BeeGees to Michael Jackson and 'N Sync, was an obvious crowd-pleaser, especially when Millot executed a backflip into the 21st century.

Paul and Pagano ratcheted up the acrobatics with a writhing, spinning, upside-down Gypsy tango as hot as their pink-and-black costumes.

The entire cast then teamed up for the "Flying Ice" sequence — a serious and funny foray into the surreal that includes six acrobatic tumblers bouncing off trampolines lined up alongside the ice.

After intermission, Judy Sladky as Snoopy got the show back into focus with a tribute to classic Hollywood, from "Casablanca" to the Marx Brothers.

Highlights of this glamorous skit included a lyrical "Singing in the Rain" sequence and Snoopy's red-caped conclusion as "The Big Bow Wow." The kids were howling like hounds after this one.

The crowd flipped again for Millot when he went Western in chaps and cowboy hat during his solo to the country tune, "I'm Giving You All My Love for Christmas."

Returning to the reason for the season, the production landed back on its feet with an elegant "Silent Night" dance number, followed by Linus' breathless and beautiful recitation of the Christmas story.

The "Christmas Waltz" finale wrapped it all up in a shiny red-and-gold package, complete with nostalgic costumes, towering Christmas trees and Rockettes-style chorus line.

At the very end, a sprinkling of snow transforms Snoopy's Home Ice into Rockefeller Center — just for one brief and magical moment.

*****

The Event "It's Christmas, Snoopy!" the annual holiday ice show produced by the family of Charles Schulz
Dates and times 3 and 7 p.m. most weekdays; noon, 4 and 8 p.m. most weekends through Dec. 24. There are no shows on Dec. 18, and a noon show only Dec. 24.
Where Snoopy's Home Ice, 1665 W. Steele Lane, Santa Rosa
Tickets $10-$48
Phone (707) 546-3385


MetLife Pays Peanuts For Ad Spokescharacters

December 12, 2002

BrandWeek.com

NEW YORK — MetLife, Inc. said Wednesday that it has signed a new 10-year contract with United Media for the use of its Snoopy and Peanuts characters in advertising and promotional venues both domestically and overseas.

Financial terms were not disclosed. MetLife has featured Snoopy and the Peanuts characters since 1985, including its ongoing "Have you met life today?" campaign, via WPP Group's Y&R Advertising, New York, which launched in April 2001.

"Snoopy is our corporate ambassador and has been an important part of our advertising campaign for 17 years," Lisa Weber, MetLife svp and chief administrative officer, said in a statement. "We are very pleased to continue our ongoing relationship with United Media. This winning combination has been successful in helping us to differentiate our brand identity in the marketplace."


Charlie Brown, old or new, still charms

December 7, 2002

By Scott Sandell
The Los Angeles Times

When ABC broadcast "A Charlie Brown Christmas" for the first time last year, after it had been on CBS since 1965, the network presented a digitally remastered version and added an informative behind-the-scenes feature. The hourlong package was a ratings winner, and the mini-documentary earned an Emmy nomination.

On Sunday at 8 p.m. and repeating Friday at 9 p.m., ABC is looking to match that success by following the holiday classic not with a "making of" segment, but with "Charlie Brown's Christmas Tales," a collection of new animated vignettes based on the comic strips of the late Charles M. Schulz.

Although the five shorts, each focusing on a specific "Peanuts" character, are faster-paced and more slickly animated than the original, they are just as charming. There's no overarching story line here, but the same message of peace and joy amid life's little anxieties resonates throughout.

In the first vignette, Snoopy faces rejection from Lucy as her ice-skating partner — and from the cat next door.

The next four segments feature Linus, Sally, Lucy and Charlie Brown each struggling over letters to Santa or the objects of their affection, among other escapades.

The humor is classic Schulz, and the punch lines come quickly, as opposed to the more languid timing of the original Christmas special. Perhaps that's a concession to viewers brought up on quick-cut videos, but it also makes sense, given that the source material is from comic strips. More important, it's a refreshing change-up from director Larry Leichliter.

Although Schulz died in 2000, two key players behind the 1965 show were involved with this special executive producer Lee Mendelson and producer Bill Melendez.

With efforts like these, it's a welcome thing that Christmastime is here on TV.


Oh, good grief!

December 7, 2002

By Ron Wolfe
The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

"Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Linus, Lucy ... how can I ever forget them..."

With those plain words, cartoonist Charles Schulz ended his "Peanuts" comic strip in its 50th year, February 2000. He died just before his last Sunday page appeared in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and about 2,600 other newspapers worldwide.

Schulz, 78, had decided no one else should take over drawing "Peanuts." His round-headed cartoon kid, Charlie Brown, has been gone from this newspaper's comics pages ever since. Gone, too, are Snoopy, Linus, Lucy ... but who could ever forget?

The nearest thing to seeing them all like new again is Speak Softly and Carry a Beagle The Art of Charles Schulz, an exhibit through Feb. 2 at the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art. The characters may be as familiar as Charlie Brown's zigzag shirt, but the exhibit is a fresh chance to see them like Schulz did. Ink lines on paper, they were little people who came alive only because he drew them, gave them hopes and hurts, and brushed away the eraser crumbs.

Speak Softly and Carry a Beagle is a nationally touring exhibit from the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, Calif., and the Minnesota Museum of American Art in St. Paul. It displays more than 40 original "Peanuts" strips like paintings, the size Schulz drew them, much larger than they looked on newsprint. His daily strips were about 2 feet long — Sunday pages, the size of Linus' security blanket. The show traces how Schulz re- fined "Peanuts" over the years, changing almost everything but the title. The syndicate called it "Peanuts," a name he never liked.

He wanted to call it "Li'l Folks," but "Peanuts" stuck.

SIMPLIFIED STYLE His earliest strips have a soft, cute style that gave way to the 1960s' more distinctive snap, when Charlie Brown's squiggle line of a mouth came to represent all there is to say about defeat. Schulz practically invented the simplified look of today's cartoons.

Even the last years found him trying new ways to make "Peanuts" better. "I'm still searching for that wonderful pen line," he said. Evidence is, he found it. He worked with a dip pen, something younger and less patient cartoonists often toss aside for quick-drying, disposable felt tips.

Schulz drew with a crusty pen that left wet ink — easy to smear — as he performed the daily miracle of a smooth line around Charlie Brown's head. Round is one of the hardest pen lines to control. He did it like driving a sports car, while he admitted only to being a "fairly good" artist.

"The only thing I'm proud of is that I think I've done the best with what I have," he said, as quoted in the exhibit. "I haven't wasted my ability."

When the pen slipped, he touched up his mistakes with white paint. His original "Peanuts ' drawings reveal the careful dot of white-out here, a brush stroke there, that made all the difference to Schulz's readers. They never saw a sloppy-looking" Peanuts "strip. No wonder if Schulz couldn't imagine another artist continuing" Peanuts. "Right to the end, he did everything himself.

LETTER-PERFECT Other comic-strip artists routinely delegate jobs such as lettering to their assistants. Not Schulz. He could no more let someone else letter for him, he said, than Arnold Palmer would call in somebody else to do his putting. Schulz worked on the same drawing board he'd used for years — one made of real wood, sanded now and then to keep the surface clean. A picture shows it apparently sanded to a dip in the middle. The caption doesn't say, but he probably did the sanding himself, too. Once a teacher for a correspondence art school, he stressed the all-importance of good drawing. Woodstock, for example — Schulz distilled Snoopy's bird pal from drawings of real birds. The little character might look like a scattering of random lines. But Woodstock was no good, Schulz said, until he learned to arrange those few lines just right. Charlie Brown came out of Schulz's own childhood, when he thought he looked so bland and easily forgotten," my appearance was a perfect disguise. "As for Snoopy, he said," Charlie Brown never really understands his dog. "

(In Snoopy's honor, the" Peanuts" show is attached to one called Memphis Barkitecture, a gallery of fanciful doghouses by some of the city's best-known architects through Jan. 12. An Oriental-looking mutt palace is titled "Dog House of the August Moon. ") Schulz worked out ideas for his strip in scribbles on yellow legal pads. The exhibit shows a couple he crumpled in the process of making his thoughts clear on paper. His care paid off." Peanuts "debuted in seven newspapers. It led to a Broadway musical, four animated movies, TV's A Charlie Brown Christmas that first aired in 1965, and Little Rock theologian Robert L. Short's 1964 best seller, The Gospel According to Peanuts.

BITTERSWEET TOUCH Short found parables in Charlie Brown's plight as a loser in everything from baseball to love. Others — including Schulz — pointed out the comic strip's sad musings about childhood and hopeless desires. Maurice Horn, in his book, 100 Years of Newspaper Comics, describes" bittersweet echoes" that "give 'Peanuts' a dimension that is unprecedented in the literature of the comics."

Readers, though, mostly found smiles.

As "Peanuts" neared the end, there was speculation Schulz would close out with a strip that showed Charlie Brown — ever the loser — finally winning. At long last, good ol' Charlie Brown would kick the football, or fly his kite high over the kite-eating tree, or wonder of wonders, even kiss the little red-haired girl.

Or maybe Snoopy would sell his story about the dark and stormy night, or Lucy would turn sweet, or the Great Pumpkin would arrive on Halloween just the way Linus always believed he would.

But none of that happened. Schulz went with a quiet goodbye, as if he still believed he was so easily overlooked, nobody would notice he'd gone.

Good grief.


Cyrus Chestnut brings 'A Charlie Brown Christmas' to Eisenhower Auditorium

December 6, 2002

By Tyler Michael
The Centre Daily Times (Central Pennsylvania)

You're a good man, Cyrus Chestnut!

That fact already has been established in State College with the jazz pianist's previous appearances at Penn State, including a concert last March with his trio before a capacity house at Schwab Auditorium.

He returns Wednesday with another group of stellar musicians to pay homage to his and, it seems, everyone's favorite little buddy, Charles Schulz's beloved "Peanuts" character Charlie Brown.

They will perform "A Charlie Brown Christmas" in concert in Eisenhower Auditorium. Chestnut says he will present music from and inspired by the 1960s' "Peanuts" television special of the same name, along with traditional Christmas favorites like "Christmas Time Is Here," "The Christmas Song" and "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas."

Chestnut says it was the music of "A Charlie Brown Christmas," as rendered by the Vince Guaraldi Trio on that classic television special, that was one of his introductions to jazz as a boy growing up in Baltimore.

It's music that is simple, yet complex, he says.

"It so fits the cartoon so well. It's humorous, it's lyrical," Chestnut said. "I love Vince's compositions, his approach. It is a simple and very warm approach to playing, very musical."

Chestnut promises his Eisenhower audience "a good, warm evening with the music of Vince Guaraldi."

"There will be a lot of the music we have come to know through the years in our hearts," he said.

Chestnut says he thinks there is a little bit of Charlie Brown in everyone.

"Charlie Brown is for all ages. He's a great example of determination and, like Charlie, everybody wants to be accepted for who they are," he said.

If the crowd wants to close their eyes and see Charlie Brown in the televisions of their minds, that's fine with Chestnut.

"Whatever they want to do, I hope they enjoy themselves," he said. "If they see Snoopy, Charlie Brown or Woodstock, it's fine by me. My intent is to leave them feeling better than when they arrived."

*****

"A Charlie Brown Christmas" with Cyrus Chestnut and Friends
Home base New York City
Band line-up Cyrus Chestnut, piano; Neil Smith, drums; Michael Hawkins, acoustic bass; Mark Whitfield, guitar; Vanessa Rubin, vocals; and Brad Leali, saxophone
CDs "Soul Food," 2001; "Blessed Quietness A Collection of Hymns, Spirituals and Carols," 1996; "Earth Stories," 1996; "The Dark Before Dawn," 1995; "Revelation," 1994
Influences Fats Waller, Jelly Roll Morton, Miles Davis and others


Still special

Big 3 holiday shows have staying power

December 4, 2002

By Chuck Barney
The Contra Costa Times (Northern California)

C'MON, ADMIT IT. You still get a little lump in your throat whenever Linus delivers his that's-what-Christmas-is-all-about speech in "A Charlie Brown Christmas." And you still experience a bounce in your heart when the little hoofed wonder rescues those downtrodden Misfit Toys in "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer." And you know you still can't help but crack up when that fuzzy green grouch takes a treacherous sleigh ride with his panicky pooch, Max, in "Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas."

Yes, we've seen these shows at least a million times (or so it seems), but Charlie Brown, Rudolph and the Grinch are oldies-but-goodies that continue to cast a powerful yuletide spell. They are the Big 3 of television's holiday specials, towering over the forest like the classic evergreens they are.

Every year at this time, TV programmers flood the airwaves with holiday-themed offerings (see the accompanying list) whether we're in the mood or not. Most of these shows are given the casual once-over and then are quickly discarded like wads of crumpled gift wrap.

But the Big 3 endure, refusing to show their age and defying the shelf-life laws of pop culture. Each debuted in the 1960s and each continues to rank among TV's longest-running and best-loved specials, regardless of the season. "Rudolph" turns 38 this month, while "Charlie Brown" is 37 and "The Grinch" a spry 36.

And talk about drawing power. According to a recent story in USA Today, a Thursday-night airing of "Charlie Brown" on ABC last year attracted 72 percent more viewers than the network had been getting in the time period. "The Grinch" last year set a Friday-night ratings record for the WB. As for "Rudolph," he continued to light the way toward solid ratings for CBS.

So what is it about these old-time shows that make them must-see TV gems even though they have been available on home video for years?

What is it that helps them to outshine newer, supposedly more hip, contemporary offerings?

Obviously, for many people, they capture the sentiment of the holiday. Both the "Grinch" and "Charlie Brown" speak to the "real meaning" of Christmas and deliver subtle but powerful messages about the evils of greed and commercialism. "Rudolph," meanwhile, is a celebration of nonconformity and plays upon our timeless affection for the underdog.

All three open with some kind of conflict but culminate with a redemptive sense of love and community. "Charlie Brown" initially has our bald-headed hero experiencing holiday anxiety and being ridiculed for choosing a scrawny tree. By the end of the story, though, said tree comes to life in glorious decor and Charles Schulz's Peanuts gang is united in song.

The "Grinch," of course, starts out with a crabby killjoy determined to pull the plug on Whoville's Christmas celebration. But a half-hour later, the Grinch's heart has grown several sizes, and he's happily joining the Whos for a roast-beast feast. "Rudolph" opens with the self-conscious title character a victim of discrimination. It ends with everyone in Santa's North Pole village rallying around the proud buck as he saves Christmas.

All three are one-of-a-kind specials with a creative brilliance that has never quite been duplicated. All three are brimming with vivid characters, evocative scenes and highly memorable music. And, rather remarkably, all three get their points across without wallowing in an excess of sap.

In my home, "Charlie Brown," the "Grinch" and "Rudolph" are as much a part of the annual holiday ritual as hanging stockings on the mantel and decorating the tree. My wife and I grew up watching these shows with our families, and now we share them with our two boys as if they were cherished heirlooms. In an age of outlandish, blow-your-mind video-game imagery, it's a kick to see your kids experience — and love — something we enjoyed at their age.

Of course, some of the Big 3's longevity can be attributed to timing. They and older shows like them ("Frosty the Snowman," et al.) premiered in an era when only three networks existed and when TV viewing was largely a communal habit. When "Rudolph" was first shown on NBC in 1964, it drew half of all TV viewers tuning in at that time — an incredible number that is unheard of today.

Is it any wonder, then, that recently released "Rudolph" collectibles can be found all over store shelves and eBay this shopping season?

Obviously, the shows of yesteryear generated more initial attention and had greater opportunity to build loyalty than today's specials, which have to struggle mightily to be discovered amid television's overcrowded universe. "Olive, the Other Reindeer," for example, is a whimsical animated treat that debuted to great reviews a few years ago, but it has a long way to go before it can be considered for the holiday hall of fame.

The Big 3, on the other hand, were destined for TV immortality from the start. They seemed magical when we first saw them, and they continue to delight with each viewing.

TV'S BIG 3

• WHAT "Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas"
• FIRST AIRED Dec. 18, 1966, (CBS)
• THIS MONTH Tonight, Thursday and Dec. 16 at 8 p.m., Cartoon Network; also Dec. 13 at 8 p.m., WB

• WHAT "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer"
• FIRST AIRED Dec. 6, 1964, (NBC)
• THIS MONTH Dec. 13 at 8 p.m., CBS

• WHAT "A Charlie Brown Christmas"
• FIRST AIRED Dec. 9, 1965, (CBS)
• THIS MONTH Dec. 8 at 8 p.m., ABC


Rosemount business has nine Peanuts gang statues on display

November 29, 2002

By Jeff Mores
The Rosemount (Minnesota) Town Pages

Statues of characters from Charles Schulz's world-famous Peanuts comic strip have become quite the craze in the Twin Cities in recent years. That is no secret. But did you know nine of those statues are now under one roof right here in Rosemount.

Since Schulz's death on Feb. 13, 2000, the city of St. Paul has held three parades of statues, each one featuring more than 100 themed, five-foot statues of one of the Minnesota-native comic artist's characters. Local artists were commissioned to design a different theme for each statues and thousands people from Minnesota and beyond have traveled to see them on display around downtown St. Paul.

Snoopy was the statue selected the summer following Schulz's death and parades featuring Charlie Brown and Lucy have since taken place. Following their display period, the majority of the painted character statues have been auctioned off at Mall of America. The effort has raised more than $2 million for art institutions, charities and other organizations Schulz supported.

Many of the more than 300 Snoopy, Charlie Brown and Lucy statues are now sprinkled around the country. What many people probably do not realize is that nine of them are on display inside the headquarters of one Rosemount business.

Alan Webb, owner of the Webb Company in the Rosemount Business Park, has been an active participant in the past two Peanuts statue auctions at Mall of America. He outbid everyone for four of the Charlie Brown statues last year and, in October, was back at it, purchasing five of the 56 Lucy statues brought to auction.

"I just think they're cool," Webb said of the growing collection of Peanuts characters in his building. I'm into figures and statues, and I think the Charlie Browns and Lucys keep things upbeat around here. They're a lot of fun to have around."

Webb's business produces a national catalog featuring promotional products, including everything from pens and mugs to tools and various desk accessories. The Rosemount facility houses office staff, production and packaging areas and spans 120,000 square feet. And the five-foot tall Peanuts character statues are sprinkled throughout every corner of the facility.

Getting them in the door

"I think it's kind of nice having them around," Webb Company president Randy Locke said. "The only difficult thing has been getting them in here."

How to go about getting nine giant statues into an office building is not something that springs to mind in the bidding room.

"We found out pretty quick the concrete bases on these statues are wider than a standard door frame," Locke said. "And the bases alone probably weigh 500 pounds each. The only way to get them in was to take off each base, turn it sideways to get it in and then re-secure each statue to its base."

A couple of the recently acquired Lucy statues have not found homes at Webb Company yet, but the majority of the statues are in place.

Room to room

Those who work at or do business with the Webb Company are greeted by "Ms. Lucy Liberty," which is situated behind the receptionist desk. Ms. Lucy Liberty holds a torch high with her right hand, is painted into a red and white dress and a blue crown.

"Lucy in the Sky with Jewelry," which attracted quite a bit of attention on the statue parade in St. Paul earlier this year, stands guard in the Webb Company's office area. Artist Claudia Nachtsheim, who patterned the statue after the famous Beatles hit "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds," gave Lucy a diamond tiara, draped her in jewelry and decorated the base with clouds.

Among the other statues on display are "It's a Big World Charlie Brown," "The Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown," and "L'Artist Charlie Brown."

There is already talk about commissioning a fourth Peanuts character statue to local artists. If so, Webb will likely add to his collection.

"The money from the auctions goes to good causes and organizations," Webb said. "I really like these kinds of things."


Zamboni, Thanks to Snoopy, Is Top Dog Among Ice Resurfacers

November 28, 2002

By Allan Kreda
Bloomberg.com

Thorburn, Nova Scotia, Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Frank Zamboni's only goal was to make smooth ice. Thanks to Snoopy, the beagle in the Peanuts comic strip, the family name is a marketing phenomenon akin to Kleenex, Coke and Xerox.

More than 50 years after Frank Zamboni built and drove the first ice-resurfacing vehicle across his family's Southern California rink, the 7,500th machine was delivered yesterday to a arena in Thorburn, Nova Scotia.

Even though it has its competitors, such as the Olympia brand, most rink rats refer to the machine that appears between periods of a hockey game as a Zamboni. The machine is such a fan favorite that closely held Frank J. Zamboni & Co. sells items including keychains, Christmas ornaments and board games under a licensing agreement with the National Hockey League.

"The product and company are synonymous," said Steve Rosner, co-founder of 16W Marketing, a firm in East Rutherford, New Jersey. "It's the same as hearing Hershey and thinking chocolate."

According to Jack Durkin, who has driven the Zamboni at New York's Madison Square Garden for 14 years, cleaning the ice is a three-step process. First, water from the machine's 180-gallon tank is applied to the ice, which is scraped by a rotating blade. A mat made of towel material then drags behind to smooth the ice, giving it a shiny finish.

Some fans enjoy the break between periods more than the game itself because they get to watch the Zamboni. Durkin said he regularly gives rides to youngsters fascinated with the machine, which travels at a top speed of nine miles per hour.

"That's the most fun part of my job," he said.

Comic-strip boost

Charles Schulz, the creator of Peanuts and an avid hockey fan, was so enamored with the Zamboni that he made it a recurring element in his comic strip, which remains widely syndicated in newspapers two years after his death.

Zamboni's son, Richard, who runs the Paramount, California- based company, said the machine's appearance in the strip more than 40 times fueled its popularity.

"It meant more than any one thing we ever did," he said.

The 7,500th Zamboni will be a welcome sight in Thorburn, where the ice rink is the central gathering place for the village's 1,500 residents. It replaces a 30-year-old Massey Ferguson tractor rigged to mimic the real thing.

"We've been having problems with the tractor, so the Zamboni is here in the nick of time," said Randy Palmer, who spearheaded Thorburn's effort to get a new ice cleaner.

Split the cost

The NHL Players' Association, through its Goals & Dreams fund, donated $30,000 toward the purchase of the milestone Zamboni, which costs about $60,000. The village collected donations from local businesses and held fundraisers to come up with the rest.

Even though the town had a choice of which brand of ice resurfacer to buy, the decision was an easy one.

"There wasn't any question we'd buy a Zamboni," Palmer said.

Frank Zamboni's grandson, also named Frank, runs the company's factory in Brantford, Ontario — where NHL career leading scorer Wayne Gretzky grew up.

Name recognition

Zamboni was in Thorburn to christen the new machine and was joined by Hockey Hall of Famer Mike Gartner, who directs the Goals & Dreams fund.

Andy Schlupp, president of Elmira, Ontario-based Olympia, said he isn't jealous of his competitor's name recognition. After all, the ice at New York's Rockefeller Center is made smooth by one of his company's machines.

"It doesn't bother me at all," Schlupp said. "Everyone buys tissues and calls them Kleenex."

The vast majority of the NHL's 30 teams use a Zamboni, which has been the ice resurfacer at every Winter Olympics since 1960 in Squaw Valley, California.

And to think Frank Zamboni merely built his machine for one rink in Paramount, which is halfway between Los Angeles and Anaheim. The fuss still overwhelms his 70-year-old son.

"My dad never would have envisioned it," Richard Zamboni said.


Good grief! Schulz trust sues cartoonist

Family wants original 'Peanuts' strips that were lent to 'Beetle Bailey' creator

November 23, 2002

By Carol Benfell
The Santa Rosa Press Democrat

Charlie Brown is duking it out with Beetle Bailey in a legal battle for more than three dozen original comic strips drawn by the late Charles Schulz.

The Charles M. Schulz Trust, which controls the rights to the "Peanuts" strips, has sued cartoonist Mort Walker, creator of the "Beetle Bailey" strip, to regain the cartoon panels that Schulz lent Walker for his International Museum of Cartoon Art.

The outcome may determine whether 44 "Peanuts" cartoon strips, not seen in Santa Rosa for decades, will find a home at the newly opened Schulz museum.

"I think the Schulz museum is the proper home for them, and I think we are legally entitled to them," said Ed Anderson, attorney for Jean Schulz, Charles Schulz's widow and the trustee of the Schulz trust.

It all started in 1978, shortly after Walker opened his International Museum of Cartoon Art in Greenwich, Conn.

Schulz was a friend of Walker's and lent him 19 original Peanuts cartoon strips to display in the museum. He also donated $1 million to the museum, according to the lawsuit.

Through the years, Schulz lent an additional 25 strips to the museum and donated several others to be auctioned off in museum fund-raisers, the lawsuit states.

In a letter accompanying the strips, Schulz stipulated that the strips could not be sold and that Walker must return them when he no longer needed them.

Schulz died in 2000, at about the time the International Museum of Cartoon Art, relocated to Boca Raton, Fla., closed its doors.

Anderson said he understood the International Museum was having financial problems, and was negotiating with others to sell or transfer the "Peanuts" strips.

Jean Schulz asked Walker to return the strips, since they were lent specifically to his museum and he was no longer using them.

But Walker said he was still using the strips because he planned to reopen his museum in another location.

"It's our belief it is necessary to have 'Peanuts' in there," said Ken Seeger, Walker's attorney. "It's not an International Museum of Cartoon Art if you don't have the most important cartoons in it."

The standoff continued for about a year, Anderson said. He said he reluctantly filed suit Oct. 31 in order to get the issue moving. The lawsuit asks for an order barring Walker from selling the strips and demanding he return them to the Schulz trust.

Jean Schulz was out of the country and unavailable for comment Friday. But both Anderson and Seeger said they expect the matter to be resolved calmly and quickly, without a trial.

Walker said he will recommend the strips be returned when he meets with the museum board Dec. 11, Seeger said.

Anderson said he was pleased to hear it.

"It's the right thing to do and I'm pleased to hear Walker supports it," he said.

The Schulz museum opened this past summer next to the ice skating rink Charles Schulz built in Santa Rosa.


Cartoon case no laughing matter

Schulz's estate wants Peanuts panels from Beetle Bailey creator

November 23, 2002

By Jim Herron Zamora
The San Francisco Chronicle

Good grief! It's a federal case, Charlie Brown!

Snoopy and Charlie Brown took on Beetle Bailey and his troops in federal court this week. But true to character, Beetle Bailey's side is less than enthusiastic about the battle.

The trust that controls Charles Schulz's Peanuts cartoon characters is suing Mort Walker, the creator of Beetle Bailey, in U.S. District Court in Oakland over 19 panels of Peanuts comics Schulz loaned Walker years ago. The panels were exhibited at Florida's International Museum of Cartoon Art. The museum closed its doors in July.

After the museum experienced financial problems last year, Schulz's estate "demanded that Walker and the museum return the loaned works of art immediately," the suit said.

According to the lawsuit, The estate wants to assert ownership of the Peanuts strips and may exhibit them at the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, where Schulz made his home.

Schulz trustee Ed Anderson said once they are returned, if they are returned, the strips would remain public.

The squabble stems from an apparently amicable agreement between the two cartoonists nearly a quarter of a century ago.

In 1978, Schulz wrote Walker a letter. In the letter, which was part of the lawsuit, Schulz said he was lending the 19 panels to Walker, who started Beetle Bailey a month before Peanuts began in 1950, the lawsuit says. Walker, founder and board member of the museum, exhibited the panels until the museum closed in Boca Raton, Fla.

The two men were good friends until Schulz died in 2000 at his home in Santa Rosa. The 1978 letter from Schulz to Walker said "If the time comes that you don't need them, please return them to me."

Aside from the 19 panels, Schulz donated more than $1 million of limited edition artwork to be auctioned off to help support the museum.

The lawsuit, which was filed in Sonoma County Superior Court last month and then transferred to federal court in Oakland, also contends that some works of art are missing.

"He told me I could use them as long as I needed them — but he didn't want me to sell them," said Mort Walker, from his home in Connecticut. "Well, I would never sell them. But I still need them. We still plan to exhibit them." Walker said he plans to reopen the museum in New York.

"We have the greatest collection of original cartoon art in the world — 200,000 pieces — and the world's classiest cartoonist — Charles Schulz — absolutely should be represented in the collection," added Walker, 79.

Attorneys for the Schulz estate did not return phone calls.

"We should really be able to work this out," said Kenneth Seeger, the attorney for Walker and the museum.

"The cartoon museum is not going to sell it, not going to hurt it and still plans to exhibit it."

Both sides hope to come up with a quick resolution.


Children to make world's longest paper chain Dec. 1

November 21, 2002

The Keokuk (Iowa) Daily Gate

The award-winning "It's a Charlie Brown Christmas" will be held Sunday, Dec. 1, from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Keokuk Art Center in the Keosippi Mall. Registration is open to children ages 6-11.

Each child will create their own Christmas stocking and a variety of holiday decorations to take home. Stories, refreshments and a visit by Snoopy will add to the fun.

New this year, children will participate in the creation of "the world's longest paper chain" by adding their personalized link to the community chain. The paper chain will be on display at the Keokuk Art Center and, as it grows, in the Keosippi Mall.

"We've added to our volunteer base this year, which gives us the flexibility to stage appropriate craft projects by age groups," said chairperson Barb Smidt. "The event will be well supervised giving parents two hours of free time to shop Keokuk."

"It's a Charlie Brown Christmas" is sponsored by First Community Bank, Main Street Keokuk, Inc. and Keokuk Art Center. There is a $5 materials fee and pre-registration is required. Space is limited to 100 children.

Registration forms were distributed through Keokuk schools. Registration forms are available at, and should be returned to, First Community Bank, Main Street Keokuk and the Keokuk Art Center. The event is open to all area children.


Riffs on Rover's roof

'Barkitects' have a romp with canine dream homes

November 14, 2002

By Cindy Wolff
Gomemphis.com

There's probably not a more recognized doghouse in the world than the little, red one occupied by a certain cartoon beagle for more than 50 years.

But Snoopy's doghouse will be merely a backdrop to some original doghouses designed by 20 local architects.

Their designs will be part of a new exhibition opening Saturday at Memphis Brooks Museum of Art that celebrates the work of Peanuts cartoonist Charles Schulz.

"Speak Softly and Carry a Beagle The Art of Charles Schulz" will feature 40 original Peanuts cartoon panels, tools from Schulz's studio, and memorabilia from the 50 years of Peanuts.

The exhibition will open with a family day from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. Families can tour the exhibition for free during the event.

The Memphis Shelby County Humane Society will have dogs available for adoption and offer educational material to help children learn about pets.

MetLife Auto and Home and Lipscomb & Pitts Insurance will offer fingerprinting for children's safety. Caricature artist James Caldwell will teach children how to make their own comic strips. Also, during family day, there will be scavenger hunts, games and music by the Music Academy Children's Chorus of Rhodes College.

In conjunction with the American Institute of Architects, Brooks asked local architects to create functional but funky doghouses that would be featured as part of the exhibition. The Barkitecture houses will be there until Jan. 12. The Schulz exhibition closes Feb. 2.

The doghouses will be sold at auction at the 2002 Holidays Barkitecture Bash at 7 p.m. on Nov. 23 at Brooks, in Overton Park. Proceeds will go to the museum.

Many of the architects said they looked to their own pets for inspiration in their first-ever approach to "barkitecture."

"We approached it as if Snoopy was Salvador Doggy having a dream," said architect Dianne Dixon, a partner at Clark-Dixon Associates in Midtown.

The design features bright colors and whimsical features such as an exploding cat and a fire hydrant.

But will dogs like it?

"We don't know, but our office cat loves to get in it," said Dixon.

A little farther east, on Minden, eight architects and staffers from Askew Nixon Ferguson worked on a rustic duck blind with a corrugated tin roof, a ramp into the elevated house and fake double-barrel shotguns sticking out of the side.

"We thought it would be something the hunting breeds would enjoy," said interior designer Liz Kath, who coordinated the project for the firm. "A bunch of us brainstormed and this is what we came up with."

Architects at Hnedak Bobo Group created a doghouse that paid homage to a Southern vernacular home called a dog trot. The classical form created a passageway that took advantage of south winds to cool a home, said architect Shawn Hobbs.

"We wanted to create a house that gives someone a piece of history in their backyard," said Hobbs. "We detailed it so the house would shed water. It has a front porch and other features of that style of house."

Jeff Blackledge, a partner at Barkimania . . . uh . . . Archmania said he wanted to create a simple doghouse — four walls and a roof — yet he wanted to transform the house so that it would have motion.

The house looks as if it's being pushed by the wind or as if it's standing against a strong wind, depending on which way you look at the house.

"It's a modern abstract of a house form," said Blackledge. "I used red because it's a dynamic color (Snoopy would agree) and I added some subtle things to make it look like it's floating."

Architect Jerry Martin, with Johnson-McAdams, didn't venture too far from his home for the inspiration for his house.

He asked his 9-year-old daughter, Leslie, to help him come up with a design.

"We felt like we needed a client, so we pretended to interview our terrier-mix Daisy about what she wanted in a house," Martin said.

Daisy wanted something that spoke of her canine origins and her Southern heritage. And since dogs like to circle around before they lie down, Martin decided the house would be a circular dog trot.

Also, since Daisy likes to collect things, they decided to construct the house from "found things" in the neighborhood.

They used discarded fence boards, rope, PVC pipe and a brightly colored umbrella for the roof.

Architect Brantley Ellzey, with Evergreen Studio, went as far as to create a canine architect called Ludwig Mies van der Rover, who served as director of Bow-Haus School of design, a major center of 20th Century modernist dogma.

Ellzey created a doghouse from Corian, a countertop surface. The doghouse is lighted from the inside and the Corian is carved with Rover's dictum "Lassie's More."

Admission to the Barkitecture Bash and auction on Nov. 23 is $60 for members and $75 for nonmembers. For reservations, call 544-6219.

The Schulz exhibition comes with the regular Brooks admission price, which is free for members, $6 for most adults, $5 for seniors and $2 for students with identification.


Charlie Brown floats down Broadway as he makes first-ever appearance at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Will he finally kick the elusive football for a field goal ... or just an extra point?

November 11, 2002

PRNewswire

Football is in the air during Thanksgiving time. This annual holiday, always saved for high-profile gridiron battles, will also mark the debut of the new Charlie Brown balloon slated to head down the great white way on Thanksgiving morning. Charlie Brown, of Peanuts fame, accompanied by his football, will finally have his moment in the spotlight as he thrills over two and one-half million parade goers and fifty million television spectators during the 76th Annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. Whether he is losing his 10,000th game of checkers to Lucy, standing vigil at his mailbox every Valentine's Day, or blinking with surprise when his baseball team fails to show up during a game — Charlie Brown will show his endless courage as he attempts to kick that ball!

On Thanksgiving morning, Charlie Brown will be dressed in his signature zigzag shirt as he takes flight over New York's skies measuring 53.3 ft. long, 29.4 ft wide and a whopping 50.9 ft. tall! Filled with over 13,330 cubic ft. of helium, he is sure to attempt to kick that elusive football — well — maybe.

"The Schulz family is very proud of Charlie Brown. He may not ever kick that football, but at least on Thanksgiving morning he'll have the love and adoration from fans that Snoopy has been lucky to have experienced for the past 35 years," said Jeannie Schulz, wife of famed cartoonist Charles M. Schulz. "It is a very great honor to be a part of the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, and we are happy that today the honor goes to our favorite round-headed kid."


Thanksgiving helium rehearsal

November 10, 2002

By John Brennan
NorthJersey.com

EAST RUTHERFORD — After all these years, Charlie Brown finally is getting some respect — much to the delight of the hundreds of fans who came to the Meadowlands on Saturday to watch the sneak preview of Charlie's Thanksgiving Day balloon.

Giant helium-filled versions of Kermit the Frog, Mr. Monopoly, and Little Bill of Nickelodeon fame joined the Peanuts star's balloon in a test run — OK, walk — around Parking Lot 18 at Giants Stadium.

All four balloons will make their debuts in the 76th annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in Manhattan on Nov. 28, although an earlier version of Kermit floated over midtown streets each Turkey Day from 1977-90.

Charlie, however, has never been invited.

"People can't believe it, because Peanuts is closely identified in people's minds with the Macy's parade," said Robin Hall, the parade's executive director. "That's because five different versions of Snoopy have appeared a total of dozens of times, and we've had (Snoopy's feathered sidekick) Woodstock. But never Charlie, until this year."

Organizers have made up for the snub by slotting him as the first of the 14 character balloons in the parade. A 51-foot-high Charlie will be featured in pre-kicking form, with a giant football balloon floating just in front of him.

Best of all, there is no Lucy balloon to pull the ball away as an eager Charlie kicks.

Little Bill, meanwhile, is making his own history. The Bill Cosby-created 5-year-old is the first African-American character to be a part of the parade, which also will include 25 floats, 12 marching bands, 500 clowns, and 1,000 cheerleaders.

Saturday's "Balloonfest" was a chance for hundreds of Macy's volunteers to hone their rope-holding skills and review the parade day Golden Rules Never look up at your balloon, and never take your eyes off your pilot.

"Pilots" don't actually hold the rope, but walk backwards for the entire parade route of more than two miles. Each pilot must oversee about 70 rope handlers and flight managers and ensure that a gust of wind doesn't leave Kermit, for example, tangled up in Blue from Blue's Clues, Clifford The Big Red Dog, or even a skyscraper, as happened to the Cat in the Hat in 1997. Keith Goldberg of Marlboro, the Kermit pilot, says the job is no walk in the park.

"There is a lot of pressure, but I love it," said Goldberg, preparing to "fly" for a third consecutive year.

"My first time, I got to pilot Barney. Last year I got Cassie the Dinosaur, and this time it's Kermit. It's a prestige job," Goldberg added proudly, "because Kermit comes up just ahead of the biggest star, Santa Claus."

Of course, everyone has a personal favorite.

Five-year-old Nathaniel Ocot of Clifton excitedly pointed at Kermit from the parking lot sidewalk as the bright green frog filled with 11,000 cubic feet of helium seemed to wave to him. But Nathaniel's favorite, he said, was "Mr. Monopoly, because we have the game at home."

Ryan Mullin, 4, of North Arlington, exclaimed to his mom, Renee, "Look at how big his feet are!" as the 48-foot-high Little Bill balloon paraded past him. Ryan said that Kermit, however, was his favorite because "he's so funny."

Each balloon made a 20-minute march around the parking lot before being deflated in just a few minutes, then unglamorously stuffed into its own 7-foot-by-3-foot laundry cart.

On Nov. 28, all four balloons will rise again — this time before a live crowd expected to exceed a million, with millions more watching on television nationwide.

Charlie undoubtedly can hardly wait.


Forest Lake's Charlie Brown has 'girlfriends'

October 30, 2002

By Jessica Foster
The Forest Lake Times (Minnesota)

Charlie Brown never got any sweet sentiments on conversation hearts and forever yearned for the little red haired girl.

But ol' Charlie, his luck has turned around.

Girl Scout Troop 1252 of Forest Lake Elementary has taken on the task of taking care of the Blockhead.

Each week, one of the girls will visit city hall and wipe off the grimy fingerprints, the dust and dirt that collects on the lovable guy.

Amanda Engquist, a 1992 graduate of Forest Lake High School, who painted Charlie Welcomes the World as part of the Charlie Brown Around Town promotion in 2001, greeted the kids when they came to city hall last week.

The Forest Lake Park Board purchased Charlie Welcomes the World from the St. Paul Convention and Visitors Bureau for $4000.

Engquist's Charlie says welcome in Korean, Spanish, Norwegian, Swedish, Japanese, English, French, Finnish, German and Italian.

She told them about how she painted Charlie and showed the stages of painting.

The kids were curious, did she paint a Snoopy or a Lucy?

"I'm kind of loyal to Charlie Brown," she said. "I think he's my one and only."


Remembering Sparky

Charles Schulz Museum takes visitors into many-faceted world of 'Peanuts' creator

October 29, 2002

By Brian McCoy
The Stockton (California) Record

Two lives are enshrined in the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center in Santa Rosa.

There is Schulz, of course, the pioneering "Peanuts" creator who introduced angst to America's comics pages. Over the course of a half-century, the strip altered the lexicon of American humor while its characters' cultural reach extended through film and television into advertising and even the space race. Schulz also led the way in merchandising, earning millions annually from plush Snoopys and Charlie Brown key chains.

Behind that public man, however, lies the private, retiring Minnesotan known to friends as Sparky. His world was smaller but no less fulfilling, centered around family, an enduring love of hockey and sitting down at a drafting table each morning to create the four panels of art and insight that was "Peanuts."

"To him, the strip was everything," said Schulz Museum director Ruth Gardner Begell. "Who he was came out in the strip. It was direct; there was no translation in between."

Open since August, the museum just off Highway 101 explores and amplifies the connection between Schulz and his millions of readers. While not overlooking the facts of his life, its galleries are dedicated to the proposition of Schulz as artist, albeit one whose creativity was consumed with the morning coffee.

"It doesn't register as art," Begell acknowledged. "But when you see the large original (strips) ... you understand that you're looking at great art. His art came from his soul."

And its impact has been staggering. Consider that, at its peak, "Peanuts" was read daily by 355 million people in 75 countries and 21 languages. Even today, more than two years after colon cancer claimed Schulz at 77, the strip appears in 2,400 newspapers around the world.

It's intriguing that history's most read cartoonist reached that world from a fairly unassuming one he created for himself in Santa Rosa. The Schulz Museum is situated in the heart of that world, on a plot of land Schulz passed every day as he walked from his studio to the Redwood Empire Ice Arena's Warm Puppy coffee shop. Schulz built the rink in 1969 and took two meals per day there. The Schulz "campus," as Begell called it, also includes Snoopy's Gallery and Gift Shop.

Designed by C. David Robinson Architects of San Francisco, the $8 million Schulz Museum is a building of light — all windows, clean lines and high ceilings. That's particularly true of its showcase Great Hall, home to two distinctive "Peanuts" tributes.

Created by Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani, they celebrate the most beloved characters in "Peanuts." On the west wall is a 17-by-22-foot depiction of Charlie Brown's eternal quest to kick the football Lucy holds beneath her fingers. The dimensions are impressive enough until you realize the image is comprised of 3,588 2-by-8-inch "Peanuts" strips transferred to ceramic tiles.

Mounted high on the south wall is "Morphing Snoopy," a 31/2-ton wooden sculpture chronicling the beagle's evolution from Schulz's first drawings — Snoopy was inspired by the cartoonist's childhood dog, Spike — to his final state.

The rest of the Schulz Museum's ground floor is occupied by video presentations and galleries spotlighting the cartoonist's work. The main gallery features a permanent exhibit of 100 original strips — out of the more than 7,000 in the archives — and makes the case for Schulz's artistry. In these large-format strips, visitors better understand the demands Schulz faced each day. His art had to be economical and yet communicative; his words, spare but insightful.

There's little debate over how effective — to say nothing of inspirational — Schulz was in his efforts. Any doubts are dispelled by the second gallery, which is dedicated to other cartoonists' reaction to, first, Schulz's announcement that ill health required he stop drawing "Peanuts" on Feb. 12, 2000, and then his death on the eve of that final Sunday strip. It's difficult to read these outpourings of admiration and appreciation with a dry eye.

The galleries celebrate Schulz, the artist and icon. The second-floor exhibits provide the background on how he got there.

Charles Monroe Schulz was the only child of a hard-working Minneapolis barber, Carl, and his wife, Dena. An uncle nicknamed him Sparky after the horse in "Barney Google," and Schulz developed an interest in comics early on. He was 15 when his first published drawing, a sketch of Spike, appeared in "Ripley's Believe It Or Not."

It's easy to understand Schulz's interest in comics. As David Michaelis notes in an excerpt from his Schulz biography featured on the museum's Web site, Sparky was a timid child uncertain of his status in the world. He was highly intelligent and skipped some grades, but even that proved a mixed blessing.

"By the time he reached junior high school, he was the youngest, smallest boy in the class," Michaelis writes. "He felt lost, unsure of himself. With no one to turn to, he made loneliness, insecurity and a stoic acceptance of life's defeats his earliest personal themes."

Even years later, when Schulz was read and admired by millions the world over, he would say, "My whole life has been one of rejection."

Like many in his generation, World War II was the defining experience of Schulz's life. Drafted at age 20, Schulz was in basic training when his mother died of cancer. Once in Europe, he led a squad through Germany, France and Austria.

Schulz returned to Minnesota after the war and began drawing a strip, "Li'l Folks," for the St. Paul newspaper. United Features Syndicate picked it up three years later but insisted Schulz change the name to "Peanuts," a title he never liked.

The Schulz Museum's exhibits trace the strip's evolution as a cultural force, with displays touching on everything from the books translated into dozens of languages to the films, television specials and Broadway plays. Included are industry awards, Time magazine covers,and material covering Snoopy and Charlie Brown's involvement in NASA's Apollo program.

In the adjacent gallery, the Schulz Museum has re-created the studio that made all that possible. This was Sparky's domain, and it is appropriately simple — a battered drafting table, scarred panel walls, family mementos, books on World War II and a bust of Beethoven.

"People are very touched by the museum and how real Charles Schulz was," Begell said. "They felt he was very accessible to them, and we've tried to continue that."


Best-selling authors give writing tips to Snoopy and aspiring human novelists

October 22, 2002

By Waka Tsunoda
The Ontario Record

Charles M. Schulz may be gone, but Snoopy is alive and well, and still striving to write the great American novel. But this time, the beloved beagle of the late cartoonist's Peanuts comic strip has help. A lot of help.

Barnaby Conrad, a novelist and co-founder of an annual conference of aspiring writers where Schulz used to speak regularly, has asked scores of accomplished authors to give Snoopy some helpful tips from their own experiences. Among the responses are tips from such popular authors as Sidney Sheldon, Sue Grafton, Elmore Leonard, Fannie Flagg, Danielle Steel, Elizabeth George and Clive Cussler.

The result is a delightful book, Snoopy's Guide to the Writing Life (Writer's Digest Books), with a foreword by Monte Schulz, the cartoonist's son, who reminisces about how his father loved literature and had great respect for writers.

The book consists of Peanuts panels showing Snoopy in various aspects of the writing life, and the successful writers' reaction to them in essays.

When Snoopy observes, "Good writing is hard work," Danielle Steel, who seems to turn out enormously popular fiction with such ease, heartily concurs "I'm glad that Snoopy so early in his career has learned that very important truth - good writing (and even bad writing) - is hard work. Very hard work. This business is fraught with uncertainty. Anyone who tells you how to write best-sellers is a sham and a liar." She confesses that she often types so long, she sees double.

To the beagle struggling to come up with a good title for his new novel, Ed McBain, the crime writer known for his 87th Precinct series, says encouragingly "You're on the right track, Snoops. I never start a novel until I'm satisfied with the title. Generally, I'll know what the theme's going to be, and I'll know what kind of characters I'll need to keep the plot engine going, but I won't start a book until I have the title firmly in mind." He then reveals how he goes about constructing a novel.

Seeing Snoopy having trouble with the first sentence, action-adventure novelist Clive Cussler suggests "Snoopy, try this when you sit down to the typewriter Just say to yourself, 'What if?' It all begins with 'What if?' What if they let pigs out in a mosque? What if they decide to change the name of Mexico to Shwartz? What if they start referring to whites as European Americans? Then comes, Why would they do that? I have to figure out why. So if I have my beginning I can begin the story." One author who declined to offer help is John Updike, the author of Rabbit, Run and the other Rabbit novels. He is quoted by editor Conrad in the book's introduction as saying "As Snoopy would tell you, a writer hates to return a check, but I have never been good at giving advice to other writers. If I knew something that would make a crucial difference, I would keep it to myself, since the field is so overcrowded."

Perhaps Updike perceives Snoopy as formidable competition. According to Schulz's 1971 volume, Snoopy and It Was a Dark and Stormy Night, the canine author already published his first novel to great acclaim, drawing two million people at one of his book signing parties. The novel, a two-page magnum opus called, what else, It Was a Dark and Stormy Night, is included in the 1971 volume in its entirety. Dedicated to Woodstock, it has a colourful jacket designed by Lucy.

But Snoopy isn't one to sit on his laurels. The self-proclaimed "world famous author" keeps pounding on his manual typewriter atop his dog house, aspiring to become a Tolstoy, even a Shakespeare. And who knows? With all these veteran authors falling over each other trying to help him, he may even make it. And so may some of his human counterparts.


'Peanuts' Museum 'Good grief!' Beloved cartoon gang on exhibit

October 17, 2002

The Associated Press

"Peanuts" fans can now learn more about the artist and his legacy at the recently opened Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center in Schulz's hometown of Santa Rosa, Calif., 55 miles north of San Francisco.

Schulz, who died in February 2000, was intimately involved in the museum's planning. Visitors to the 27,000-square-foot facility, near Schulz's former studio, can see a wood carving depicting Snoopy's different personas over the years, find their way out of a Snoopy labyrinth in the gardens and view permanent and rotating exhibitions of memorabilia and original comic strips in two galleries.

The museum includes a tribute to one of Schulz's most indelible images a 3,588-tile mural of Charlie Brown poised to kick a football that Lucy is poised to yank away. Each tile in the larger cartoon also contains an individual cartoon strip.

It was designed by the Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani, who has made a career out of re-creating Schulz images on a large scale.

The upstairs gallery houses a wall from the cartoonist's former home in Colorado. When he lived there with his young family, he painted with 1950s renditions of the "Peanuts" gang. It includes images of Snoopy when he still bounded around on all fours and Charlie Brown jumping over a candlestick.

The drawings were uncovered by Polly and Stanley Travnicek on an 8-foot-by12-foot wall after they bought the home more than 20 years ago. After checking with Schulz about the kind of paint he used, Polly Travnicek spent two months carefully removing the layers covering the artwork.

If you go The museum is off U.S. Route 101, Steele Lane Exit. Information 707-579-4452 www.schulzmuseum.org. Open weekdays noon-530 p.m.; weekends 10 a.m.-530 p.m.; closed Tuesdays. Admission, $8.


Bidders love Lucy

The latest set of Peanuts statues brings in about $232,000 for future art in St. Paul

October 14, 2002

By Amy Sherman
The St. Paul Pioneer Press

The "Truffle Heaven" Lucy statue will spread her wings in a Waconia park in memory of a baby girl Lucy who died in 1999.

Paul and Vici Scheuble bought the Lucy statue Sunday at an auction at the Mall of America in memory of their daughter who died when she was 2 days old. The couple plans to place the statue, which resembles an angel with white wings, in a park in their town.

"She is our little angel," said Paul Scheuble, as his wife dabbed her eyes.

The "Looking for Lucy" auction of about 56 statues netted about $232,000, with most selling for between $2,000 and $4,500.

The highest bid, $19,000, went for "Olympic Charmer" signed by Olympic champion Peggy Fleming. Edina resident Tom Collins, owner of Champions on Ice, said the green dress on the statue is the same color as the one Fleming wore when she won the Olympics.

"Looking for Lucy" is the third year of St. Paul's tribute to Charles M. Schulz. Past summers honored Charlie Brown and Snoopy. The creator of the Peanuts cartoon, who died in 2000 of cancer, was born in Minneapolis, raised in St. Paul and spent most of his life in California.

The proceeds will go toward scholarships for artists and cartoonists and to create permanent bronze sculptures of the Peanuts gang, due to be completed in the spring, in Landmark Plaza in downtown St. Paul. Schulz's daughter, Amy Johnson, who bought two statues, spoke to the crowd of about 250 people.

"Thank you so much for appreciating and loving dad's work," she said.

The Lucy auction raised less money than previous Peanuts statue auctions, which raised more than a combined $1.2 million.

Sue Gonsior, director of communications for Capital City Partnership, attributed the lower revenues to the downturn in the economy. However the number of people visiting the statues scattered around St. Paul have increased. Nearly one million people came to St. Paul to see the Lucy statues, compared to about 700,000 for Charlie Brown and 450,000 for Snoopy.

There has been talk of launching a fourth summer featuring Woodstock, but no decision has been made.

Sotheby's auctioneer C. Hugh Hildesley jokingly told the crowd that he would be 125 years old by the time the last Peanuts character is auctioned off.

While the Peanuts statues have been a big hit with children, the auction drew a much older crowd.

Some bidders were quite serious — consulting with cohorts over their cell phones, meticulously tracking the prices and exchanging grins and glances with competitors. The crowd clapped as the auctioneer banged his dog-bone gavel on the podium announcing the winners.

Some buyers said they wanted a Lucy to accompany Charlie Brown statues they had purchased, while a couple of women said they only have eyes for bossy Lucy.

"Lucy resonates more with me," said Anne Hamre, who bought the Rootbeer Meister Lucy for her Minneapolis home. "She has more personality, chutzpah."

WHAT THE LUCYS SOLD FOR

Follow Your Dreams Lucy $4,000
Lucy Ross $6,500
Lucy Loves Chocolate $4,000
Camp Lucy $3,750
Little Darlin' Lucy $4,250
Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds $4,500
Juicy Lucy $6,000
Lines of Lucy $6,500 (two sold, each for same price)
St. Clair Lucy $4,000
Macalester Lucy $4,750
Class of '06 $4,500
Some Enchanted Lucy $4,500
Fashionable Lucy $3,750
Bathing Beauty Lucy $4,000
Rootbeer Meister Lucy $3,750
Home Is Where The Heart Is $3,500
Looking On The Bright Side of Lucy $3,250
Take a Taxi Lucy $2,750
Queen Lucy of Mardi Gras $4,250
Lucy of The Lakes Goes Global $3,500
Career Explorer Lucy $3,250
And Let It Begin With Me $6,000
Truffle Heaven $4,250
Unfinished Lucy $3,000
Advice 5 cents $6,000
Glamorama Lucy $4,500
Mona Lucy $6,000
Look Both Ways Lucy $5,500
Pig's Eye Lucy $2,500
Lucy On Holiday $2,750
Lucy In The Sky With Jewelry $3,250
Tell Me Your Dream Job $3,000
West Side Flats Lucy $3,500
Lucy In The News $3,250
World Traveler Lucy $4,000
Land O'Lucy $3,000
Gutsy Lucy $2,500
Four-Star Lucy $3,000
Ms. Lucy Liberty $4,500
Skip To My Lucy $3,000
Lucy Lives! $3,000
Mississippi Queen $3,250
Lucy's Blueprint For Freedom $2,500
Reaching Out To Communities $2,750
Find Your Heart in Saint Paul $2,000
Dear Lucy $2,250
Leasing Agent Lucy $2,000
Olympic Charmer $19,000
Successfully Saving Lucy $2,250
Hero In Training $2,000
Lucy In St. Paul's Sky With Diamonds $3,000
Queen Of The Snows $2,250
Dreambuilder Lucy $3,750
Are You Talking to Me, No. 2? $7,500
Classic Lucy $5,500


Snoopy to help out in fire prevention

October 3, 2002

By Tracy Scudder
The Kent County (Rhode Island) Daily Times

WARWICK — MetLife Home & Auto announced the publication of a free coloring and activity book to help spread the message of fire education and reduce the threat of fire.

West Warwick Battalion Fire Chief Denis LaRocque said next week is fire prevention week and the West Warwick Fire Department will be going to the schools to teach the children about fire prevention.

LaRocque said a lot of companies have programs out there to help teach children about fire prevention.

MetLife's book is "Learn About Fire Safety with the Peanuts Gang."

"Our Fire Safety coloring book gives parents a valuable tool to help teach this important subject," said MetLife Auto & Home Representative Steve Botwick.

"According to the National Fire Protection Association, over 1.5 million homes suffer fires every year.Many are the result of kitchen mishaps or simple carelessness," said Botwick." This coloring and activity book can teach kids important lessons that could help save lives and property — and it does so using the Peanuts characters, which have proven popularity with everyone, especially kids."

The 12-page coloring and activity book helps children learn important emergency information, the steps to fire safety, and how to develop an escape route in the event of a fire.The book is full of brain-teasers, puzzles, word searches, mazes and more, all featuring Snoopy.

The book can be ordered by calling Steven M. Botwick at 827-6269 or by dropping by the agency at 700 Quaker Lane in Warwick.


Fans fill Rice Park for Lucy's Lawn Party

September 29, 2002

By David Hanners
The St. Paul Pioneer Press

In her native Slovenia, Marja Korosec knew the party's guest of honor as "Lucia." But somehow, Lucy is one of those characters whose appeal knows no borders.

"We read 'Peanuts.' I have a son and daughter, and they both grew up reading it," said Korosec on Saturday as she wheeled her 4-month-old granddaughter, Zala, through "Lucy's Lawn Party" in St. Paul's Rice Park.

The event celebrated the cartoon strip character created by the late Charles M. Schulz, who grew up in St. Paul. It was the last downtown gathering of many of the 109 different Lucys. Beginning Tuesday, they'll be moved to the Mall of America, where 56 will be auctioned on Oct. 13.

Korosec's son now lives in the Twin Cities, and she said her grandson, Galen, 2, has to see the Lucys whenever the family comes downtown.

Since the first Snoopy statues hit the streets in 2000 — followed by Charlie Brown in 2001 and Lucy this year — tracking down the statues and getting your picture taken beside them has become a favorite pastime.

And if you're Lucyspotting, it helps to have a bunch of them all in one place. Rice Park, nestled between the St. Paul Hotel and the Ordway Center for the Performing Arts, was filled with Lucy fans and the generally curious during the party Saturday afternoon. There was music (including a pianist playing much of the "Peanuts" music by composer Vince Guaraldi), face-painting and various activities for kids.

There were even faux-Lucys; foam Lucy "hair" was handed out. For a comic-strip character who once declared, "I don't care if I have any friends or not, just so I'm popular," it looked like Lucy had both friends and popularity Saturday.

Carol Hunter, of Scottsdale, Ariz., was trying to strike just the right pose in front of Lucy's psychiatrist booth (the doctor was "in") so her son, Jeff Owens, of Hopkins, could snap a photo of her.

"I can tell my therapist I'm done with her. Lucy solved my problems for 5 cents," Hunter said.

With all that's going on in the world, having an event to honor a cartoon character posing with outstretched arms is a welcome break.

"It's nice to come to something like this and have fun, " she said. "It's better than CNN right now."

When the statues first came out, Breen Beell of Minneapolis said he wasn't that big on them. But his 2-year-old daughter, Trinity, convinced him Lucy was OK.

He said he's seen a lot of people in downtown St. Paul looking at the statues, and bringing folks downtown can't be bad for business.

Trinity was getting restless. "Do you love Lucy?" her mother asked her.

"Yeah," the girl replied. Then she saw something that looked fun. "I wanna go do dat. Wanna go do dat," she said.

And off they went.


Peanuts fan blankets Sparky's Santa Rosa

Schulz museum a tribute to a good man and Charlie Brown

September 29, 2002

By Spud Hilton
The San Francisco Chronicle

Santa Rosa — As a boy, I wanted to be Charles M. Schulz.

I filled a dozen notebooks with drawings of the round-headed kid and his doghouse-piloting pet and wondered why adults would waste time reading books when the only writing of real value was in the panels of Peanuts.

Calvin & Hobbes may be to blame, or maybe girls, but at some point I woke up and Charlie Brown, Linus, Lucy and the gang no longer spoke to me. Everyone has a different tale about drifting away from Peanuts.

But last month's opening of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center in Santa Rosa suddenly makes it the right time for fans to open the door again - to get in touch with their inner Charlie Brown. And Santa Rosa is the perfect town for it.

It's the Wine Country's largest community, but, like the leading man of Peanuts, Santa Rosa is more bland than its colorful, quirky neighbors, and it doesn't get much respect. But its simple, "regular guy" quality might be why "Sparky" Schulz — a quiet man who could afford to live anywhere in the world — called it home for most of his 50-year career. There are plenty of subtle charms here for devotees of wine, art, music and gardens.

September is too early to shop for a great pumpkin or a scraggly Christmas tree, and 5 cents worth of therapy wouldn't get you in the door. Instead, my wife, Ann, and I began our quest to reconnect with Charlie Brown with some kite-flying (preferably near hungry trees).

We shopped for a simple Peanuts-style, diamond-shaped kite at Coddingtown Mall, one of Schulz's regular hangouts, just blocks from his studio. The cartoonist, who friends say desperately wanted to be thought of as a regular guy, used to stroll the mall to pass time and watch children play.

It turns out Snoopy's Gallery and Gift Shop near the museum, which carries every piece of Pea-nuts-related merchandise imaginable, doesn't sell kites. We found one ($10, nylon and fiberglass instead of paper and wood) in a toy shop in the mall and named it Sparky. I wondered, since Schulz based a lot of Charlie Brown on himself, if he ever flew kites.

Eventually, we scrapped the kite flying (no wind) and drove across town to the Luther Burbank Home and Gardens, hoping that Burbank, a master botanist of the early 20th century, might have a kite-eating tree somewhere on the property.

"Uh, we have trees, but they don't usually do that," a volunteer told us. So we just enjoyed the vast gardens, with its hundreds of trees and shrubs and row after row of roses in improbable colors.

Like Schulz, Burbank achieved great financial and professional success during his years in Santa Rosa. He developed more than 800 new varieties of plants, many with the goal of increasing the world's food supply. He once hosted a little get-together at his home with friends Henry Ford and Thomas Edison.

The gardens are as educational as they are beautiful, with name cards on most plants and several history displays, and the center lawn and large stone fountain are serenity-inducing.

On the other side of Highway 101, we found the statue of Charlie Brown and Snoopy in Railroad Square, the city's revitalized historic district. The bigger-than-life brass monument, with both characters smiling broadly and Snoopy clutching a tiny rose, is a reminder that Santa Rosa is Schulz's town, like Chicago to Studs Terkel or San Francisco to Herb Caen.

On a Peanuts quest, there is only one place to eat the Warm Puppy Cafe. The lunch-counter coffee shop is part of the Redwood Empire Ice Arena, a skating center with an Alpine theme that Schulz built in 1969. He ate there almost every day - English muffin with grape jelly for breakfast, tuna-salad sandwich for lunch.

We ordered sandwiches, watched the skaters and fancied that some might be the children of the children who inspired Schulz in the 1970s. I closed my eyes and saw Sally, Sherman and Violet making figure-eights on the ice.

Deciding that it was a necessary step on our path to oneness with Charlie Brown, we strapped on skates and made a few shaky laps before being forced off the ice by the Zamboni resurfacing machine (maybe the very rig Schulz based his drawings on in the strip).

The only thing missing was Snoopy himself and some soft melodies by Vince Guaraldi, the jazz pianist who wrote and performed songs for the Peanuts animated TV shows. Instead, the speakers blared 'N Sync and Eminem.

West of the rink is the new museum, an $8 million modern structure with gleaming white and yellow walls and dark slate tiles. It looks awfully serious for a man who made a living, in Schulz's words, "just drawing funny pictures." I wondered if any presidential libraries are as impressive — but then, not even FDR had the following Schulz did At its peak, Peanuts readership was 350 million, almost 100 million more than the population of the United States at the time — and Schulz was earning $30 million to $40 million per year.

We started on the second floor, which focuses on Schulz's life and the history of the pop icons he created. The centerpiece is a re-creation of Schulz's studio, a humble, uncluttered office with a desk, art supplies, an eclectic library, a board full of family photos, trophies and a statue of Abraham Lincoln.

Something from my childhood ached to sit behind the desk, just for a moment.

Past the studio is an exhibit hall with time lines, posters and glass cases full of mementos. The displays helped fill in the blanks about the shy man, including medals and a sketch book from World War II, when he led a machine- gun squad in France, Austria and Germany. "The Army taught me all I needed to know about loneliness," he said.

In one glass case, there's a collection of Snoopys in space suits from several eras. Such was Schulz' cultural impact that in 1969, Apollo 10 astronauts named their command module "Charlie Brown" and their lunar module "Snoopy," and carried dolls of the two characters into space. I spotted the Astronaut Snoopy my folks gave me in first grade, which I gave to Laura Dinola — my Little Red-Haired Girl — because I thought she loved me. She didn't. The painful memory quickly subsided, however, in rooms festooned with Schulz's smiling, laughing characters.

"By fusing adult ideas with a world of small children," wrote David Michaelis, who is preparing a biography of the cartoonist, "Schulz reminded us that although childhood wounds remain fresh, we have the power as adults to heal ourselves with humor."

The most impressive individual pieces in the 27,384-square-foot museum are not by Schulz, but by Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani, whose two Peanuts- inspired works dominate the Great Hall. The first, a 3 1/2-ton, layered-wood sculpture, portrays the evolution of Snoopy from his origin (as Spike, Schulz's childhood pet) through the exuberant beagle's modern look.

The second piece is a 22-foot-high mural — made of 3,588 Peanuts comic strips printed on 2-by-8-inch ceramic tiles — that creates the larger image of Lucy holding a football for Charlie Brown. I walked away thinking, "This time, please let him kick it."

The first floor is divided among the main gallery, a 100-seat theater, a gallery with comic-strip tributes to Schulz by other cartoonists and a space for rotating exhibits, as well as a video nook with beanbag chairs.

Rows of glass cases, each with eight of Schulz's original strips, take up most of the main gallery; the rest is a sitting area with couches and a coffee table. The simple, uncluttered display lets the comic strips speak for themselves.

Most touching are three binders on the coffee table, filled with letters of condolence to Schulz's wife, Jeannie, from cartoonists, dignitaries and fans. Schulz died on Feb. 12, hours before the last original Sunday Peanuts appeared in papers worldwide. The common theme of the letters is simple Sparky had a major impact on my life.

I left the museum feeling a little melancholy ("Snap out of it," Lucy would say) but with a tiny piece of recaptured childhood. On the way out of town, we pulled into the drive-through lane at Burger King and ordered a couple of shakes.

"Mwahhh mwah whhagh waaa-waahrrn?" blurted at us from the speaker.

I repeated the order.

"Mwrragh nuwhaa whrr mwaahh mwoorg?"

Finally, I recognized the familiar voice of Peanuts speaking to me from my youth.

"Miss Othmar?"

IF YOU GO

GETTING THERE Santa Rosa is 60 miles north of the Golden Gate Bridge on Highway 101. In town, take the Steele Lane exit, turning left onto Steele Lane.

Stay to the right on West Steele Lane (don't veer left onto Guerneville Road).

The museum and ice arena are at the intersection of West Steele and Hardies lanes.

WHAT TO DO Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, 2301 Hardies Lane, Santa Rosa 95403; phone, (707) 579-4452; Web, www.charlesmschulzmuseum. org. Weekdays, noon-530 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m.-530 p.m.; closed Tuesdays. Adults $8, seniors and youth $5. Redwood Empire Ice Arena, 1667 W. Steele Lane, Santa Rosa 95403; (707) 546-7147; www.snoopy.com. (The Warm Puppy Cafe is part of the arena and serves lunch-counter fare.) Snoopy's Gallery & Gift Shop, 1665 W. Steele Lane, Santa Rosa 95403; (800) 959-3385 or (707) 546-3385; www.snoopy.com. Railroad Depot Park in Railroad Square, on Wilson Street between Fourth and Fifth streets; (707) 578-8478; www.railroadsquare.net. Also the site of the Santa Rosa Convention & Visitors Bureau; (707) 577-8674. Luther Burbank Home & Gardens, Santa Rosa Avenue at Sonoma Avenue; (707) 524- 5445; www.lutherburbank.org. Gardens open 8 a.m.-7 p.m. April through October, and 8 a.m.-5 p.m. November through March. Call for home and gift shop information.

WHERE TO STAY Los Robles Lodge, 1985 Cleveland Ave., Santa Rosa 95401; (800) 255-6330 or (707) 545-6330. Older, two-story complex with pool, about four blocks from the museum and arena, next to Coddingtown Mall. About $108- $153, including tax, on a Saturday night. In Railroad Square, Hotel La Rose, 308 Wilson St., Santa Rosa 95401; (800) 527-6738 or (707) 579-3200; www. hotellarose.com. Upscale, 1907 four-story, granite-block building with antique decor. Singles start at $179 per night, doubles $214, plus tax.


Popular 'Peanuts' promotion likely to roll on in St. Paul

September 22, 2002

By Curt Brown
The Minneapolis Star Tribune

The widow of hometown cartoonist Charles Schulz realizes that, someday, enough will be enough. Those 5-foot-tall polyurethane "Peanuts" statues lining St. Paul streets during the past three summers will lose their appeal.

"I have a limited attention span, so I know that somewhere along the line it's going to get old and people will burn out on it," Jeannie Schulz said from Santa Rosa, Calif. "But not yet."

As organizers of the ongoing public arts tribute debate whether Woodstock, Linus or Schroeder will bat cleanup next summer, they paint the phenomenally popular promotion with rosy numbers

*** Nearly 85 percent of sponsoring businesses have pledged to fork out $3,600 each for another round.
*** Close to 70 percent of callers to a Lucy hot line said they want more statues, preferably of Woodstock, in '03.
*** Sidewalk traffic at three downtown locations was up 39 percent during July weekends and 10 percent on weekdays, compared with spring days before the Peanuts display was installed.
*** Money raised at the Lucy auction Oct. 13 will push proceeds from the campaign well past $2 million, paying for four permanent bronze sculptures in a new downtown park, several endowed artist scholarships, and possibly park improvements and literacy programs.

"We don't want to go one year too long, but it fills the streets with people, pays for itself, the community likes it more than dislikes it, so we'd be crazy not to do it again," said Lee Koch, vice president of the Capital City Partnership, the corporate consortium coordinating the display.

Randi and Hart Johnson, the brother-sister tandem behind Tivoli Too, the St. Paul design studio that has produced more than 300 of the sculptures, are ready for a couple more years.

"To all the naysayers, I say Why wouldn't we? It's driving tourism and traffic is up downtown," Hart Johnson said. "It's become a new summer tradition for families from around the state and country to go to St. Paul to see these statues."

Organizers plan to wait until after the auction to officially decide if the show will go on. But they're already worried that a supposedly tiny bird such as Woodstock, enlarged to the standard statue size of 5 feet and 400 pounds, would look more like Big Bird from Sesame Street.

"We might have to put him in a tree or a nest," Randi Johnson said.

By contrast, Linus' security blanket would give local artists ample options for imagination.

"People relate to his sincerity and innocence," Koch said. "And Schroeder and his piano are getting some votes, too."

Artists cash in

You can count Kristi Nelson, James West and Brett Amberson among those voting for more "Peanuts" sculptures. They are three of the fledgling artists benefiting from grants financed by the auction proceeds.

"If it's Woodstock, I'd love to design a bird," said Nelson, 42, a Minneapolis legal assistant who lives with her yellow cockatiel near Lake Calhoun and started drawing "out of the blue" seven years ago.

She is wrapping up her fifth and final year at the College of Visual Arts in St. Paul and is about to graduate with a fine arts degree. She received a $1,000 grant last year even though painting cigar-smoking women, not moon-faced kids, is her niche.

The annual auctions have created a $100,000 endowment fund, split by the College of Visual Arts and the Art Instruction Schools, an 88-year-old Minneapolis correspondence school that once featured Schulz as a student and teacher.

During the past two years, the Minneapolis school allowed hundreds of enrollees to submit one drawing in a contest that granted a full $2,200 scholarship to the winner and $1,100 partial scholarships to two runners-up.

West, 32, a comic book and science fiction illustrator from Lovington, N.M., was this year's winner. Amberson, a Kansas City home builder, sketched his second-place cartoon when he was laid up with a broken leg.

"This is a dream I want to do," he said. "Like Charles Schulz showed us, if you really work hard, you might get someplace."

Bronzes in progress

Most of the money raised at the auctions, $960,000, is earmarked for the design, building and installation of four bronze sculptural vignettes, according to John Couchman, vice president of grants for the St. Paul Foundation, which manages the Schulz Fund.

The first of those permanent works, with Snoopy sprawled on Charlie Brown's lap, will rest against a tree in Landmark Plaza, a $4.2 million park under construction between Landmark Center and Lawson Commons in downtown St. Paul. That work is being cast at a bronze foundry in Howard Lake, Minn., and should be on display next summer.

When the first phase of the park is completed next spring, Sally and Linus will lean against one of the park's walls and Lucy will flirt with Schroeder over his piano in another corner of the plaza. Marcie, the lesser-known bookworm, is scheduled to appear during the following phase of the park's construction.

Couchman said another $170,000 has been set aside for permanent maintenance of the bronzes, with 5 percent each year going to the city Parks Department for upkeep.

"We don't want them to become sad stepchildren," Jeannie Schulz said. With the bronzes paid for and the artist endowments established, she said it's time to broaden the program's contributions to the community. Creating a public park improvement fund and financing literacy programs are among the options the Schulz family and local organizers are considering.

So bring on Woodstock, Linus and Schroeder.

"They look cute, they're harmless, they pay for themselves," Schulz said. "They spread goodwill in the community and let artists express their imaginations."


'Peanuts' fans want show to go on

September 20, 2002

By Karl J. Karlson
The St. Paul Pioneer Press

Two-thirds of those who took the time to offer their views about St. Paul's "Peanuts" statues want the event to continue next year.

The other third say they have had enough of the character statues, which are meant as a tribute to "Peanuts" creator Charles Schulz, who grew up in St. Paul.

The responses 101 positive and 44 negative fit with other evidence that people like the tributes and believe them to be positive events for the city, according to Lee Koch of Capital City Partnership, who oversees the event.

She said the group commissioned a study that found increases in pedestrian traffic downtown of 10 percent on weekdays and 39 percent on weekends during the summer celebrations.

"And if you just look at the last Sundays with all the Lucys downtown, the streets are full of people," she said.

Koch also noted that the first two summers one featuring Snoopy; the other, Charlie Brown raised about $2 million, mostly from the auction of statues.

That money paid for the events, a donation to the American Red Cross' Sept. 11 fund, several scholarships and four bronze sculptures of Schulz characters. It also endowed a fund to take care of the statues and to hold an annual event involving the permanent statues.

"Three of the statues will go in Landmark Plaza. We're not sure where the fourth will go, maybe in (the adjacent) Hamm Plaza when it is redone," Koch said. "We might do a 'Great Pumpkin Rising,' or a 'Charlie Brown Christmas' in the park."

This year, 56 of the 109 statues will be auctioned.

"The money may go to help the parks where Schulz played while growing up or a literacy program through the library," Koch said.

Literacy is a favorite topic of Schulz's widow, Jean, who created a foundation for its promotion. On a recent visit, she said she favors continuing the tribute, but Koch said the Capital City Partnership and the Schulz family are still discussing what to do next year.

Mayor Randy Kelly offered his support in an interview.

"It's hard to argue with success," he said. "This has reinforced that St. Paul is a safe, family-oriented place to come and have clean, free fun. It has given us national and international exposure and, besides, it pays for itself."

The numbers, too, point to another event next summer, but that is not a sure thing, Koch said.

"This is a great program and we want it to end on a high, successful not on a down note. If one summer it loses its appeal, then that's what people would remember," she said.

A decision is expected sometime after the Oct. 13 auction.

LUCY ON ICE

"Olympic Charmer," the last statue of "Looking for Lucy," will be unveiled at 7 p.m. today at the Charles M. Schulz Ice Arena, 800 S. Snelling Ave. Skater Peggy Fleming designed the statue and will be on hand to sign it.

Fleming and Schulz were close friends, meeting after she won a 1968 Olympic gold medal when she accepted his invitation to skate at the community arena he built in Santa Rosa, Calif.

The statue will be on display at the St. Paul arena in Highland Park until Monday, when it will be moved to Rice Park in downtown with the rest of the statues. After Sept. 30, it will be moved with 55 other Lucy statues to the Mall of America for an Oct. 13 auction.

For more information and a schedule of events, call the "Looking for Lucy" hot line at (651) 291-5608 or go to www.ilovestpaul.com.

OPINIONS

Here's a sampling of messages left on the "Looking for Lucy" hot line (651) 291-5608 by callers in recent days expressing their views on whether there should be another summer of "Peanuts" statues.

FOR

*** What would I do with my out-of-town grandchildren if this were to end?
*** There is nothing more exciting that watching children getting their photos taken with the statues.
*** In our crazy world , who wouldn't want to see the happiness this brings families?

AGAINST

*** St. Paul is becoming like a Disney World. This is a pathetic joke.
*** It was fun the first year, fair the second, but this third year was way too much. Try something new please.


Peggy Fleming to unveil 'Olympic Charmer Lucy'

September 19, 2002

The Minneapolis Star Tribune

Two of Charles Schulz's favorite women — Peggy Fleming and Lucy — will come together Friday at the St. Paul ice arena renamed in the cartoonist's memory.

Fleming, the 1968 Olympic gold medal figure skater, will unveil a Lucy sculpture she designed with her 12-year-old son. "Olympic Charmer Lucy" is the final celebrity creation for this summer's Peanuts public arts program.

The ceremony will be at 7 p.m. at the Highland/Schulz Arena near Snelling Av. and Ford Pkwy., where the statue will be displayed until Monday. It will then be on display at Rice Park until Sept. 30, at which time it will be displayed at the Mall of America until the Lucy auction on Oct. 13.

Schulz, an avid skater, invited Fleming to the opening of the ice arena near his home in California after she won her medal.


Everybody loves a parade, and you might as well

September 17, 2002

By Laura Billings
The St. Paul Pioneer Press

It has become clear after three summers of Peanuts on Parade that my feelings about polyurethane public sculpture do not represent the majority view.

And yet, even I was unprepared for the statistic I read in this weekend's paper, revealing that among the businesses that have shelled out between $3,000 and $7,000 to sponsor a statue around town, some 97 percent want to do it again next summer.

Being against the Peanuts on Parade these days is something like being against Mom and Apple Pie. People start to question your character and sense of patriotism. They tell you that the freedom to populate our street corners with plastic dogs covered in glitter and gewgaws is what made this country great. They tell you that if you don't like it, you ought to move to Minneapolis where snobs like you belong, and where they have so far limited their pop cultural sculptural homages to one very unbecoming bronze of Mary Richards.

In the past three years, I've made several attempts to slow the Peanuts onslaught. I tried appealing to St. Paul's sense of cultural elitism, and pointed out that other cities had long since abandoned the fiberglass sculpture as a passing fad. I tried to get into the hearts and minds of the Peanuts paraders by volunteering at the Snoopy Dog House and handing out maps to hordes of picture takers. I tried to point out the crass consumerism that has taken over this public art project, and resulted in such sponsor-driven sculptures as "Let's Hang Dry Wall Lucy."

None of this has made a dent. No one wants my input.

But the Capital City Partnership behind this statue thing still wants your input about which Peanuts character should decorate our streets in 2003. They want the public to register their comments by calling (651) 291-5608.

While Woodstock is the odds-on favorite, might I humbly suggest that there are dozens of other Peanuts characters you might also want to consider, simply in the spirit of creativity?

What about Larry? This minister's son is one of the strip's most obscure characters, but he has a strong St. Paul connection He often confuses the Bible with the lines of F. Scott Fitzgerald. ("Gatsby had a mansion in Jericho.") Plus, St. Paul seems to be home to a disproportionate number of people named Larry.

Or how about Pig Pen? There's the obvious allusion artists could make to the former settlement of Pig's Eye, or to the bootlegger Pig's Eye Parrant.

And if we continue to cut city services and raise fees to keep taxes low, the general state of deterioration could be interpreted as an artistic riff on the Pig Pen theme, rather than a depressing trend in city government.

Linus, with his sweetly pacifistic musings and his soft security blanket certainly captures the left-leaning, post-9/11 zeitgeist. ("I love mankind … it's people I can't stand.'') But those who favor a more hawkish approach could nominate Thibault — the only Peanuts character with a ducktail hairdo — who bullied Charlie Brown and stole his glove.

For those who objected to what they found to be sexist representations of Lucy — one controversial statue in front of the business school was dressed as a blushing bride — why not nominate neo-feminist characters like Peppermint Patty, Royanne the pitcher, or the bespectacled Marcie? None of these girls would stand for the White House plan to reassess Title IX, and there's no way they'd dress up as show girls.

And I've only just scratched the surface on potential Peanuts.

There's Franklin, Rerun, Poochie, Shermy, Violet, Schroeder, Sally, Frieda (the girl with the Naturally Curly Hair), Faron, Andy, Olaf, Ethan, Peggy Jean, Roy, Jose Peterson, Spike, Clara, Shirley, Sophie, Loretta, Lila, Floyd and Cormac, to name just two dozen more.

In fact, it's the sheer numbers of Peanuts characters left to honor that has finally forced me to let go of my lonely tirade against them.

With 63 more characters still up for grabs, Peanuts on Parade could hold out a lot longer than Social Security.


Letters to Charles Schulz open door for cartoonist

Todd Stiles travels to California to visit museum dedicated to mentor

September 15, 2002

By Amy Hillenburg
The Hoosier Times

MARTINSVILLE — The late "Peanuts" cartoonist Charles Schulz ("Sparky," to his fans) would be pleased to know that he's still influencing budding artists even after his death. Todd Stiles, a cartoonist and nine-year Kroger employee in Martinsville, exchanged letters with Schulz after reading a book about him in 1984.

"There were some similarities in our backgrounds -- we both took correspondence courses in cartoon art, and Schulz did comic strips for years before he achieved international fame. When he wrote back to me, he wished me luck," Stiles said.

Later on, Stiles heard Schulz was retiring due to ill health and sent him a card and comic strip to cheer him up. The young man knew about physical problems -- he'd had a kidney transplant in 1996 and understood the emotional roller coaster that went with recovery. He continued to do cartoons as a hobby for individuals and his church, Eastview Christian.

Schulz died quietly in February 2000 of the same cancer that took his mother when she was only 48. His last comic strip had just been published.

Stiles didn't know it yet, but his connection to the famous cartoonist would suddenly bear fruit. He received a letter from Schulz's widow, Jean, asking to display his comic strip in the new Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, Calif. He was also invited by the Northern California chapter of the National Cartoonist Society to attend the grand opening on Aug. 16, 2002.

Stiles was overwhelmed and shocked by the invitation. "I'm just a small-town boy -- I've never belonged to any cartoon society. I questioned whether I was really entitled to be part of the museum's opening," he said.

Jean Schulz convinced him otherwise, and shared her husband's appreciation of the card and comic strip Stiles had sent. Both came at a time when Schulz was undergoing chemotherapy.

Although Stiles had never flown on an airplane, he agreed to travel with his father, Gary, to California.

"The comic strip business is such a hard field to break into, but the door was opened to me. I think the Lord means for me to go through it," Stiles said. His mother, Phyllis, wished them well even though she worried about the long journey.

After a six-hour flight to San Francisco, Stiles and his father stayed in the Fountain Grove Inn at Santa Rosa, a suburb of the city. The two found California crowded and expensive, but they loved the weather and beautiful scenery. There were no earth tremors while they were there, but Stiles said he noticed the prices of produce because of his job as assistant produce manager at Kroger. "They charge for watermelon by the pound!" he said, still not believing that one of them cost $7.

Important meetings

The Charles M. Schulz Museum, designed by C. David Robinson Architects, fascinated both father and son. Even more amazing, Stiles' name tag instantly registered with Jean Schulz, who said, "Oh, Todd, You made it!" The two shook hands, and she ushered the young artist through museum security, the media and attendants who were stationed at each area.

He said the facility encompasses 27,384 square feet and contains classroom space, an auditorium, showcase galleries, a recreation of the office where Schulz worked and an ice-skating rink. Stiles noted that there was a tribute room full of letters and cards from famous cartoonists to their beloved Sparky. He also described the giant inlaid tile and carved wood panels illustrating various "Peanuts" characters.

"The ice-skating rink was put in because Schulz was born in Minnesota and loved to ice skate. He attended the senior hockey games every year and enjoyed playing golf. He was very sports minded," Stiles said. "There was a restaurant next to skating rink called 'The Warm Puppy,' which had an empty table forever reserved for Sparky. People said he came into a little cafι alone every morning and ate an English muffin with jelly. He would think of ideas, read his mail and then go to work at his office -- just like a regular guy."

Stiles talked with several cartoonists, but meeting and chatting with Greg Evans, creator of the comic strip "Luann," was the highlight of his day. He was also introduced to a representative of a media syndicate in New York. Stiles got her e-mail address, and she invited him to send in 18 of his own comic strips to be considered.

"I met an editorial cartoonist who said his company gets thousands of them every year, but only a couple are accepted. I'm going to keep trying, though. I already have an idea for my comic strips and I've even created a couple of characters," he said. "It's going to be a Who Framed Roger Rabbit format about an out-of-work cartoonist who needs employment."

For Todd Stiles, the wheels were already turning. His room is filled with framed comic strip stories, and he's a stickler about keeping his cartoons unique.

"I'm trying to find a different angle to things that have already been done. If you want your work to be noticed, it has to stand out or be original in some way. I think baby boomers will recognize the subject of what I'm going to do, and they'll identify with it. When I'm finished, I'll send the comic strips to New York on single sheets."

"I'm proud of my son," Gary Stiles said quietly. "He wasn't afraid to approach people, and he knew just what to say." Todd said that was because he "put the whole trip in God's hands."


Pull the Plug: Woodstock might perch in St. Paul

Charles Schulz's widow, for one, favors a fourth summer celebration.

September 14, 2002

By Karl J. Karlson
The St. Paul Pioneer Press

No final decision has been made, but all signs this week point to a fourth summer of "Peanuts" statues next year. This time, it might be a flock of that oddly shaped yellow bird, Woodstock, landing in St. Paul.

"I don't see why it can't happen again it is so much fun,'' said Jean Schulz, widow of "Peanuts" creator Charles M. "Sparky'' Schulz.

For the past three summers, his hometown has paid tribute to the late cartoonist and his work with hundreds of artist-decorated statues of his characters. The first year featured Snoopy, then Charlie Brown and, this year, Lucy.

Each year, as crowds continue to flock to see the statues, the questions get raised Will the celebration continue? Is it too much?

"It's a happy thing. You can't get too much of a happy thing,'' Schulz said Friday when she unveiled the latest "celebrity" Lucy statue a scowling Lucy, "Are You Talking to Me? No. 2." (The title is a reference by noted artist Tom Everhart to one of his earlier paintings.)

The statues, she said, create a positive force in the city, noting the behavior of St. Paul drivers. Many, she said, would stop and "smile at us as we cross the street to take pictures of the statues instead of being angry, in a hurry to get someplace. They knew what we were doing.''

Lee Koch, vice president of Capital City Partnership, who has been coordinating the summer tribute, said Jean Schulz's remarks about next year "are very welcome. We are working with them (the Schulz family), seeking permission to go ahead again next year.''

All past statue sponsors who each paid between $3,000 and $7,000 for their statues were contacted, and 97 percent want the project to continue, she said.

When sponsors were asked which "Peanuts" character should be next, the top choice was Woodstock, followed by Linus (Lucy's brother) and then Schroeder (Lucy's aloof piano-playing heartthrob).

However, Koch said, no decisions have been made.

Schulz noted that the city's permanent tribute to her late husband will be unveiled next spring in the form of bronze "Peanuts" sculptures placed in Landmark Plaza, a new city park under construction next to Rice Park in downtown.

"I can't speak for all of St. Paul and what people here want," she said of a possible fourth year of statues. "The permanent tribute might seem enough,'' she said, but added that the statues have "created a lot of good will.''

Schulz spent the week in St. Paul, combining business and statue visits, apparently scouting out the one she would like to buy at the Oct. 13 auction at which 56 will be sold to raise funds for the Landmark Plaza sculptures and other Schulz honors. She said she is particularly fond of "Mona Lucy," "Mississippi Belle" and "No Place Like Home'' Lucy. She bought a "tennis Snoopy" and a Charlie Brown "construction" statue from the earlier events. Both statues now are on display near the new Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, Calif., where the family lived after the cartoonist left St. Paul in 1952.

"I'm looking," she said, "for one that will look good in the ice arena,'' which is part of the complex Schulz built there.

Brad Toll, a vice president of the St. Paul Convention and Visitors Bureau, said his group avidly favors a fourth year.

"Anything that brings a million people to St. Paul is worth repeating,'' Toll said, citing a bureau estimate of how many people took the time to go "Looking for Lucy'' this year.

LUCY HAPPENINGS

"The last Lucy The last Lucy of the summer will be unveiled at 730 p.m. Friday at the Charles M. Schulz-Highland Ice Arena, 800 S. Snelling Ave. One of the extra "celebrity" statues, it was designed by Olympic skater Peggy Fleming, who will attend the unveiling.

"Lucy auction Fifty-six of this summer's 109 Lucy statues will be sold Oct. 13 at the Mall of America in an auction conducted by Sotheby's.

To bid, one must have a numbered paddle, which cost $100. Paddles can be obtained through the Capital City Partnership's Web site (www.ilovestpaul.com) or by calling the "Looking for Lucy'' hot line.

All the Lucy statues are now in downtown in advance of a Sept. 28 Lucy Lawn Party in Rice Park.

ON 'PEANUTS'?

Should there be a fourth summer of "Peanuts" statues in St. Paul? And if so, which character would you like to see? Sponsors so far favor Woodstock, right. The Capital City Partnership is seeking input. To register your comments, call (651) 291-5608, the "Looking for Lucy'' information hot line.


You're a Good Man, Charles Schulz

Honoring the famous comic strip artist, Santa Rosa's new Charles M. Schulz Museum opened its doors in August.

September 2002

By Kelli Anderson
AAA Via Magazine

Charles M. Schulz once summed up his comic strip thus "All the loves in the strip are unrequited; all the baseball games are lost; all the test scores are D minuses; the Great Pumpkin never comes; and the football is always pulled away."

Although much of life in his comic strip Peanuts is met with a disappointed sigh, the new museum built to preserve the memory and legacy of its creator won't be. The Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center, which opened in Santa Rosa, Calif., in August, is a deft reflection of a man who wore his enormous personality lightly. On the one hand, Schulz received unparalleled recognition He was the most widely syndicated cartoonist of all time — at its peak Peanuts was read by 355 million people in 2,600 papers in 75 countries and 21 languages daily — and he was the only American comic strip artist ever to have a retrospective at the Louvre in Paris. Yet Schulz was also a humble homebody who never outgrew his childhood nickname, "Sparky," and took two meals a day at the Warm Puppy coffee shop in the Redwood Empire Ice Arena (now across the street from the museum), which he built in 1969.

Schulz passed away from colon cancer at age 77 on February 12, 2000.

Trying to reconcile the opposing aspects of Schulz's life in one building was no mean feat for architect C. David Robinson. "We wanted to build a place he'd be comfortable in, yet that would somehow be emblematic of the impact he has had on the world," Robinson says.

Because the popularity of Schulz's characters made him a very rich man (he reportedly earned more than $30 million a year), his heirs could afford to create a first-class space. They installed slate floors, gridded cherry ceilings, and a copper roof, all meant to create a warm feeling rather than a cold, antiseptic one. Just as its designers hoped, the 27,000-square-foot museum has the feel of an oversize house. It features a Great Hall, 6,000 square feet of gallery space, education and research rooms, and outdoor areas in front and back.

But what to put in it? Rather than promote all the licensed products Schulz's characters spawned — "That stuff wasn't Sparky," says his widow, Jeannie Schulz — this museum was built to feature his art, which isn't like the art found in any other museum. "How can you make something that is black-and-white and uniform look new and fresh to people, so they'll come back in five years?" Jeannie says. "That was our challenge."

As a stroll through the main gallery downstairs reveals, comics aren't all that uniform. Among the museum's fascinating permanent exhibits is a changing display of nearly 100 original Peanuts strips (of the roughly 7,000 in the archive) showing the development of Schulz's line and characters, and another exhibit examining the comic strip world that Peanuts invaded half a century ago. Visitors under a certain age may be shocked to realize how groundbreaking the strip was when it debuted in 1950. Schulz, the only child of a St. Paul, Minn., barber, peopled his strip with small children who experience the same kind of slights he endured in youth, yet who somehow remain philosophical and optimistic about life.

Among Schulz's more famous disappointments were that his high school yearbook rejected the drawings he submitted and the red-haired girl he fell in love with turned down his offer of marriage. Set against a funnies page full of visually detailed slapstick strips and serial dramas like Prince Valiant and Little Orphan Annie, Schulz's spare line, slight humor, and themes of alienation, loss, and rejection were revolutionary. Doonesbury creator Garry Trudeau once called Peanuts "the first Beat strip" because it "vibrated with '50s alienation."

Not everyone embraced it. Among the treasures in the museum's research center and library (accessible by appointment only) is the collection of letters United Feature Syndicate received calling for an end to the "boring" and "stupid" new strip. The center houses a number of other gems, including a collection of Peanuts books from 26 different countries (as well as a few in braille and Latin) and 103 of Schulz's original Li'l Folks panels. He drew these for The Saturday Evening Post and St. Paul's Pioneer Press for three years before United Feature picked up the strip in 1950 and changed its name to Peanuts, a title Schulz never liked. Visitors can also learn about the world of licensing, which changed forever in 1961 when Connie Boucher, a San Francisco housewife, approached Schulz about creating and marketing a Peanuts calendar.

Two motifs recur throughout the building circles, intended to evoke the strip's caption bubbles (or perhaps Charlie Brown's impossibly round head), and squares, representative of the four strip panels Schulz had to fill every day. To get a sense of what four squares a day for 50 years looks like, you need only step into the Great Hall. There, you'll find two large commissioned works by Japanese artist Yoshiteru Otani, who designed the Snoopy Town theme park in Osaka as well as several Snoopy Town shops around Japan. On the west wall is Otani's 17-by-22-foot image of the eternally optimistic Charlie Brown running toward Lucy as she holds the football. Only upon closer examination is the real genius of the work apparent It is made up of 3,588 two-by-eight-inch ceramic tiles, each one printed with a different Peanuts strip. It's an astonishing display, especially when you realize that it represents only about one-fifth of Schulz's career output.

Upstairs, in the recreation of his wood-paneled office are more manifestations of his professional longevity, including the crow-quill pen and the drawing board he used every day. Nearby is one of the museum's most unusual acquisitions a wall from the Colorado Springs house where Schulz and his family lived briefly in 1951. When his daughter Meredith was 2, Schulz filled one of the walls in her room with painted images of storybook characters and early versions of some of the Peanuts principals including Charlie Brown and Snoopy on all fours. After the Schulzes moved out, the new owners repainted the wall. In 1979, Polly and Stanley Travnicek bought the house and, after hearing about the wall from a neighbor, painstakingly stripped away the paint covering the artwork. When they learned of Schulz's cancer diagnosis years later, the Travniceks, both cancer survivors, donated the wall to the museum. Getting it to Santa Rosa proved no easy task, requiring the services of a mural conservationist, an architectural conservationist, an art shipping manager, several movers, and a climate-controlled truck. But it's one homey touch Schulz would have appreciated.

Another is a video nook tucked between the first floor's Great Hall and main gallery. Furnished with beanbag chairs, it makes a perfect space for viewing the animated Peanuts features and TV specials that run continuously on a big-screen television.

As befits the man who introduced the expressions "security blanket" and "Happiness is a warm puppy" into the lexicon, Schulz's museum is an informal, relaxed place that both reveals whimsy and inspires awe. But Jeannie Schulz says the true test of whether it is a reflection of his spirit will come on some bitterly cold, rainy day, when people are lining up outside half an hour before the museum opens. "Sparky would have said, 'Let them in now—there's no reason for them to be standing in the rain,' " Jeannie says. "That's just the kind of person he was."


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All PEANUTS characters pictured are copyrighted © by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. They are used here with permission. They may not be reproduced by any means in any form.