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ÒHe Caught Lightning in a Bottle and Learned How to Draw with ItÓ

 

IDW and the Library of American Comics announce

 

The Complete Skippy by Percy Crosby

 

 

San Diego, CA (December 7, 2011)—IDW Publishing and the Library of American Comics are proud to announce a new archival hardcover series that will reprint, for the first time, the complete legendary Skippy comic strips by Percy Crosby. THE COMPLETE SKIPPY will be co-edited by Jared Gardner and Dean Mullaney, with an ongoing biography by Gardner, and designed by Lorraine Turner. The premiere volume, containing the daily comics from 1925 through 1927, will be released in summer 2012.

 

ÒPercy Crosby caught lightning in a bottle and learned how to draw with it,Ó wrote Jules Feiffer in a 1978 appreciation. Milton Caniff marveled, ÒBoy, there's nothing faster than watching Skippy run the way Crosby drew him.Ó Debuting in 1923 in Life magazine, Skippy moved to the comics pages in 1925 and soon became a sensation, published in twenty-eight countries and fourteen languages. In 1931, Skippy became the first comic strip to see its film version win an Academy Award. Crosby continued writing and drawing the feature until 1945.

 

Crosby was also heralded as Òthe greatest apostle of motion in the field of artÓ by Edward Alden Jewell, art critic of The New York Times. CrosbyÕs artwork has hung in the Louvre in Paris, the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, and the Tate Gallery in London, among other venues, but it is his work as a cartoonist, as the creator of Skippy—the philosopher man-child— for which he's best known.

 

Today Skippy can be seen as the spiritual ancestor to Peanuts and Calvin and Hobbes, among many other kid strips. Crosby influenced cartoonists from Charles Schulz to Walt Kelly to Garry Trudeau, and perhaps more than any other cartoonist before him, brought philosophy and politics to the American newspaper comic strip. In the end, it would be his outspoken political and philosophical beliefs that would place him increasingly outside the mainstream of 1940s American culture, ultimately leading to his exile from comics and his forced incarceration in a mental institution for the last sixteen years of his life. As a result of his tragic end, CrosbyÕs remarkable contributions to American culture have been largely eclipsed, until now. 

 

The series is produced with the full cooperation of Skippy, Inc. and the Crosby estate. Joan Crosby Tibbetts, CrosbyÕs daughter, who has waged a 50-year campaign to keep her father's legacy alive, said, ÒIÕm delighted that the complete Skippy will be published at long last. For years, Skippy fans and namesakes have written me, wanting to see more of their favorite character, and now I can tell them their wishes are granted.Ó

 

 

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Skippy © 2011 Skippy, Inc. All characters herein and the distinctive likenesses thereof are trademarks of Skippy, Inc. All rights reserved.