![]() Pooh remarks, "I sure wish Sir Brian would get himself a sweat suit for his early-morning jogging!"-implying that this is a regular occurrence that Pooh is already tired of. In fact, in that first strip, Pooh is awoken early in the morning by a terrible clattering noise and, in the last panel, he looks out the window and observes Sir Brian jogging in his suit of armor. No explanation is given for how Sir Brian ended up in the Hundred Acre Wood and became friends with Winnie the Pooh. ![]() Sir Brian is introduced in the first strip, on June 19 the Dragon appears in the third strip, on June 21. To the established cast of characters, Ferguson and Moore (along with Willie Ito who helped develop the strip) added Sir Brian and his dragon, inspired by characters from Milne's poetry. ![]() The strip features the full cast of Winnie the Pooh's friends: Christopher Robin, Tigger, Rabbit, Eeyore, Owl, Piglet, Kanga, and Roo. This is one of many Disney comic strips that have run in newspapers since 1930.īased on the Disney adaptations of the characters, the strip was written by Don Ferguson and drawn by Richard Moore, although the feature was usually billed as "by Disney." ![]() The strip ran from June 19, 1978, until April 2, 1988. Winnie the Pooh is a 1978-1988 daily comic strip based on the Winnie-the-Pooh characters created by A.A. (reruns) Creators Syndicate (up until April 2010) ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |