Winnie Winkle is an American comic strip published during a 76-year span (1920–1996). Ten film adaptations were also made. Its premise was conceived by Joseph Medill Patterson,[1] but the stories and artwork were by Martin Branner, who wrote the strip for over 40 years. It was one of the first comic strips about working women.[2] The main character was a young woman who had to support her parents and adopted brother, serving as a reflection of the changing role of women in society. It ran in more than 100 newspapers and translations of the strip's Sunday pages were made available in Europe, focusing on her little brother Perry Winkle and his gang.
Due to its originality and longevity, Winnie Winkle became a household name and inspired Roy Lichtenstein.[3] It was reprinted in Dell Comics, and some see it as heralding a more independent role for American women after World War I.[4]
Publication history
The Chicago Tribune Syndicate launched the comic strip on September 20, 1920. By 1939, Winnie Winkle was running in more than 140 newspapers.[5] It was titled Winnie Winkle the Breadwinner until 1943.[6] By 1970, Winnie Winkle still ran in more than 150 newspapers.[7]
Winnie Winkle had a topper strip on the Sunday page, originally called Looie Blooie when it debuted on January 11, 1931, and shortened to Looie on May 6, 1934. This was based on Branner's short-lived 1919 daily strip, Looie the Lawyer. As a topper, Looie ran for three decades, until 1962.[8] From 1935 to 1936, there was also a paper-doll panel in the topper with several different titles: Winnie Winkle Fashion Cut-Outs, Winnie Winkle Style Story and Winnie Winkle Fashion Film Cut-Out.[9]
Winnie Winkle ended July 28, 1996, after 76 years, one of the longest runs in American comic strip history. Tribune Media Services, the syndicate that distributed the comic strip, "felt that the Winnie Winkle character was not recognized as a contemporary role model for the '90s." At the time, the strip was carried by only a handful of newspapers.[10]
Characters and story
The eponymous character Winnie Winkle was a young, unmarried woman who had to support her parents, making it the second popular comic strip about working women (after Somebody's Stenog, which debuted in 1918).[11] It was a reflection of the new role of women in society, as could also be seen in comics such as Tillie the Toiler from 1921. Writing for the Associated Press in 1993, Hugh A. Mulligan noted, "After women got the vote and joined the work force, family-centered comics were joined by working-girl strips like Winnie Winkle, Tillie the Toiler, Dixie Dugan, Somebody's Stenog and Brenda Starr, which was drawn by a woman, Dale Messick. Almost from the beginning, politics and a social conscience hovered over the drawing board."[12][13]
During its first years, the daily Winnie Winkle evolved from simple gags to more complex humorous situations. A new character was introduced in the form of Perry, a little boy from the backstreets, whom the Winkles adopted in 1922. The focus of the Sunday pages then shifted to the adventures of Perry at home, school and on the streets. Although compelled to wear a duffle coat and fancy clothes, he continued to frequent his old neighborhood. The local gang, the Rinkydinks, in contrast, still wore torn and patchy clothing, and were regarded by Winnie as "loafers." One member of the Rinkydinks was the dunce Denny Dimwit, who popularized the catch phrase "Youse is a good boy, Denny."[14]
Other major plot elements were the 1937 marriage of Winnie to engineer Will Wright and the disappearance of Will during World War II, leaving a pregnant Winnie behind. This realistic and unfortunate situation was too risqué for some newspapers: The Baltimore Sun dropped the strip early in 1941 because of the pregnancy of Winnie.[16] The comic strip changed significantly over the years; with Winnie working in the fashion industry after the war, seemingly as a widow until her husband returned after a few decades. She took on various other jobs and endeavors over the years, including a stint in the Peace Corps.[17]
I did Winnie Winkle for 20 years, and when they told me, "You have 90 days to wrap it up," because they were discontinuing it, I felt terrible, but after I finished it, I didn't even miss it. I was depressed because I lost a good job, but I just didn't miss it. Maybe it was the routine of it every week I didn't miss, but I have a lot of good memories of doing that strip.[23]
International spin-offs and translations
In 1923, Winnie's adopted younger brother Perry Winkle and his friends the Rinkydinks became the focus of the Sunday pages. In Europe, only the Sunday pages were translated. In The Netherlands and France, local artists made new comics about Perry when the number of weekly pages by Branner was no longer sufficient.[24]
The Dutch translated the strip as Sjors van de Rebellenclub which became very popular in the Netherlands, where it was the predecessor of the long-running series Sjors en Sjimmie by Frans Piët.[25][26][27]
In France, it was known as Bicot and published by Hachette in 14 albums between 1926 and 1939.[28]
The Sunday page of Winnie Winkle was the first American comic published in a Yugoslavian daily newspaper, Jutarnji list from Zagreb. It first appeared on August 5, 1923, and lasted until April 1941, the beginning of World War II in that country. Perry, the hero, was renamed "Ivica" (Johnny), and Winnie "Suzana." The Rinkydinks were rechristened "Rantanplanci," allegedly after a group of kids from a contemporary Hollywood film series. The title was Pustolovni Ivica ("Adventurous Johnny"). A single Christmas episode taking place in Zagreb was published, the work of unknown local authors. Three albums collected the stories published in the newspaper.
Films
From 1926 to 1928, eleven Winnie Winkle, the Breadwinner, and the Rinky Dinks movies were produced by Weiss Brothers Artclass Pictures, written by Branner and starring Ethelyn Gibson as Winnie, with Billy West as director.[30]
Happy Days (1926)
Working Winnie (1926)
Winnie's Birthday (1926)
Oh! Winnie Behave (1926)
Winnie's Vacation (1927)
Winnie Wakes Up (1927)
Winnie Steps Out (1927)
Winnie Be Good (1927)
Winning Winnie (1927)
Winnie's Winning Ways (1928)
Weary Winnie (1928) (Ethelyn, as Winnie, doesn't appear in this one, Bobby Nelson plays her brother Perry Winkle. The West Brothers produced this one for Weiss Brothers Artclass Pictures)
Syracuse University houses the Martin Branner Cartoons collection of 300 original daily cartoons from Winnie Winkle (1920–1957). There is a complete week from each year represented, with additional random cartoons from each year. (There are no holdings for 1946–47.) The daily cartoons display traces of graphite, blue pencil, Zip-A-Tone, brush, pen and ink on illustration board measuring approximately 7 ¼ x 22 ½ inches.[32] The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History has 28 volumes of Branner's proofs for the strip.[33]
References
^Time (July 3, 1939). "1,848,320 of Them". Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved February 22, 2007. [Joe Patterson] thought up The Gumps (his mother coined the word), Winnie Winkle the Breadwinner, Dick Tracy
^Drowne, Kathleen Morgan; Huber, Patrick (2004). The 1920s. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 280. ISBN978-0-313-32013-2. And Martin Branner's Winnie Winkle… marked the advent of a number of strips featuring modern wage-earning women
^The Seattle Times (April 7, 1996). "New Women Stride In". Retrieved February 23, 2007. By mid-decade, "Betty" and "Winnie Winkle, The Breadwinner" joined these old stand-bys, celebrating the fun and independence of single young women.
^Ian Gordon (1998). "Comic Strips of the 1920s". Archived from the original on July 31, 2002. Retrieved February 23, 2007. Until 1943 it carried the subtitle "The Breadwinner.
^Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 245. ISBN9780472117567.
^Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 414. ISBN9780472117567.
^Ian Gordon (1998). "Comic Strips of the 1920s". Archived from the original on July 31, 2002. Retrieved February 23, 2007. "Winnie Winkle" was the first of a genre of "working girl" comic strips. But Somebody's Stenog, featuring secretary Cam O'Flage and her female officemates, debuted on December 16, 1918: Don Markstein. "Somebody's Stenog". Don Markstein's Toonpedia. Retrieved September 1, 2016.
^Library of Congress (June 25, 1995). "Featuring the Funnies". Library of Congress. Retrieved February 22, 2007. Women entering the workplace inspired such strips as "Winnie Winkle the Breadwinner," "Tillie the Toiler" and "Somebody's Stenog," albeit in subservient roles.
^Time (February 24, 1941). "Racketeers of Childhood". Archived from the original on October 1, 2007. Retrieved February 22, 2007. [...] few newspapers carry innocence in funnies so far as did the Baltimore Sun last week: It dropped Winnie Winkle because she is going to have a baby.
^Kees Kousemaker. "Frans Piët" (in Dutch). Comiclopedia. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
^Béra, Michel; Denni, Michel; Mellot, Philippe (2002). Trésors de la Bande Dessinée 2003–2004 (in French). Paris: Les éditions de l'amateur. pp. 97–98. ISBN2-85917-357-9.
^VAN HOOYDONCK, Pieter, “Willy Vandersteen: de Bruegel van het Beeldverhaal”, Standaard Uitgeverij, Antwerpen, 1994, page 67-68, 87, 88, 89, 95, 113, 116, 118, 125, 130, 175, 177, 183.
^"Winnie Winkle". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on May 27, 2024. Retrieved March 17, 2009.