King Aroo
AuthorJack Kent
Current status/scheduleConcluded
Launch dateNovember 13, 1950
End dateJune 19, 1965
Syndicate(s)McClure Newspaper Syndicate
GenreHumor

King Aroo is an American comic strip written and drawn by Jack Kent, which made its debut on November 13, 1950 and ran until June 19, 1965. The strip was distributed through the McClure Syndicate.[1]

Characters and story

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The strip's central character, King Aroo, is the monarch of the mythical Myopia.[2] Supporting characters included Yupyop, Lord High Almost Everything; scientific expert Professor Yorgle; Mr. Pennipost, the kangaroo mailman with an astounding pocket capacity; Mr. Elephant, so forgetful he doesn't recall himself; nosy court poet Dipody Distich, Drexel the dragon and Wanda Witch, a bird who pushes a cart marked with "Spells and Curses, 5¢" signage.

Kent's strip abounded in sophisticated puns and wordplay, alongside surreal comedy.[3] The strip was described in The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics:

King Aroo is celebrated largely among devotees of comics, and appealing to the members of the readership that loved Krazy Kat, Barnaby, Pogo and Little Nemo. The King was the creation of Jack Kent, born in Burlington, Iowa, in 1920. It was probably Kent's lack of formal art training that led to a loose-lined art style, with panels full of characters and activity. It was surely his innate artistic ability that kept those panels from looking cluttered. The strip began in 1950 in national syndication but was discontinued after a few years. It was kept on in limited syndication until 1965 by Stanleigh Arnold's small Golden Gate Features.[4]

Kent and his wife June Kent named their home on the banks of the San Antonio River "King Aroo's Castle."[citation needed]

Collections and reprints

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Jack Kent's King Aroo (November 24, 1960).

The early strips were collected in a 192-page book, King Aroo, published by Doubleday in 1953. The collection had an introduction by Gilbert Seldes.

In April 2010, IDW Publishing and The Library of American Comics released the first volume of an intended complete reprint of King Aroo, with the first volume covering dailies and Sundays from 1950 through 1952. The series is edited and designed by Dean Mullaney with biographical text by Bruce Canwell and an introduction by Sergio Aragones. IDW had difficulty locating certain strips, causing the next volume to be delayed; however, by March 2013 the strips of 1953–54 were also available in book form.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 226. ISBN 9780472117567.
  2. ^ Markstein, Don. "King Aroo". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  3. ^ "Don Markstein's Toonopedia: King Aroo".
  4. ^ The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics
  5. ^ "King Aroo v.2". Archived from the original on 2020-06-15. Retrieved 2020-06-15.
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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Jack Kent (illustrator)

author-illustrator of 40 children's books. He is perhaps best known as the creator of King Aroo, a comic strip often compared to Walt Kelly's Pogo. In addition to his

List of newspaper comic strips G–O

The Kin-der-Kids (1906-1907) by Lyonel Feininger (US) King Aroo (1950–1965) by Jack Kent (US) King of the Royal Mounted (1935–1954) by Zane Grey (US) Kisses

Sir Bagby

filled with anachronisms and puns. (In that, it resembled Jack Kent's King Aroo, distributed by the same syndicate.) The strip ran in a small number of

McClure Newspaper Syndicate

(1918–1924) Home Wanted for Tags by Clare Victor Dwiggins (1910–1919) King Aroo by Jack Kent (1950–1965) — became part of the Bell-McClure Syndicate Mary

Burlington, Iowa

James M. Kelly, NASA Astronaut Jack Kent, Illustrator of the comic strip, King Aroo Aldo Leopold, naturalist and writer A. Starker Leopold, zoologist, and

List of American comics creators

Walt Kelly (Pogo) Jack Kent (King Aroo) Barbara Kesel Karl Kesel Hank Ketcham (Dennis the Menace) Sam Kieth Frank King (Gasoline Alley) Jack Kirby (Captain

George Lichty

other's characters in November 1951, not long after Kent had launched his King Aroo strip. Born George Maurice Lichtenstein (1905-05-16)May 16, 1905 Chicago

1985 in comics

Vartan), dies at age 65. October 18: Jack Kent, American comics artist (King Aroo), dies from leukemia at age 65. October 22: Jean Pouzet, French comic