Mary Worth (comic)

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This article is about the comic strip. For the evil spirit that is sometimes known by this name, see Bloody Mary (person).

Mary Worth is a newspaper comic strip syndicated by King Features and created by writer Allen Saunders and artist Dale Conner in 1940, under the pseudonym "Dale Allen". It was also published briefly in a comic book (Harvey Comics 1949-50) as Love Stories of Mary Worth.


Contents

[edit] Summary of the strip

The title character, a 60-year-old former teacher and widow of a Wall Street tycoon, formerly lived in New York and later moved to the Charterstone Condominium Complex in fictional Santa Royale, California. In this pioneering soap opera-style comic strip, Mary Worth serves as an observer of and advice dispenser for her fellow residents, tackling issues such as drug and alcohol abuse, infidelity, and teen pregnancy. Originally titled Mary Worth's Family, its title was shortened in 1942, at which time artist Ken Ernst succeeded Conner.

Most reference sources [1] state it was a continuation of the Depression-era strip Apple Mary, created by Martha Orr in 1932, centering on an old woman who sold apples on the street and offered humble common sense. King Features denies that Mary Worth was a continuation of the earlier strip,[1] apparently disregarding Saunders' own detailed account in his autobiography (1983-6) of how he was given Apple Mary in 1939 and developed it into a Mary Worth with stories he thought women would enjoy more. The strip then took off, according to Saunders (autobiography ch. 13), as he and Ernst introduced over the years a "parade of dazzling, dreamlined dishes," from ingenues to vixens. Each story (and its cast) was independent, with little continuity to the next, and Mary generally made only brief appearances to react and give her matronly advice. Only in recent decades has the strip centered more on her, along with a regular cast of her closest friends: Professor Ian Cameron and his young wife Toby, advice columnist Wilbur Weston and his college student daughter Dawn, and Dr. Jeff Cory, Mary's perennial beau. Many stories now begin with new people she meets in her volunteer work at the local hospital or at poolside parties at Charterstone, where she is known for her tuna casserole.

Allen Saunders retired in 1979, and Ken Ernst passed away in 1985. Artists and writers who have worked on the strip since then include Saunders' son, John Saunders (1974-2003), Bill Ziegler (1986-1990), and Jim Armstrong (1991). Former DC Comics artist Joe Giella took over drawing duties in 1991, with Karen Moy writing the strip since John Saunders' death in 2003. Under Allen Saunders, the daily strips usually had four panels with multiple exchanges among the characters, keeping a good narrative pace from day to day; but since the 1980s the norm has been just two panels, with less dialog and less detailed artwork.

In Summer 2006, Moy's handling of the strip during a plotline in which Mary was stalked by Aldo Kelrast (an anagram of "stalker"), a Captain Kangaroo lookalike who may have killed his late wife, drew media attention.[2] An intervention staged by Mary and her friends drove Aldo to returning to finding comfort in alcohol, which led to his death in a drunk driving accident where he drove off a cliff. A subsequent plot development was the arrival of Ella Byrd, another elderly dispenser of advice who aroused feelings of jealousy and inadequacy in Mary.

[edit] Cultural references

A recurring skit on The Carol Burnett Show was a satire on the comic, called Mary Worthless. The title character went around helping people, "whether they liked it or not". At the beginning of each installment, Carol Burnett, in character, sat inside a comic panel and introduced herself: "Oh, hello. I'm Mary Worthless, and I'm a do-gooder." The last line usually elicited much laughter from the audience, as they knew her schemes to do more harm than good.

An episode of The Simpsons, "Bart Sells His Soul", features Comic Book Guy displaying "a very rare Mary Worth in which she has advised a friend to commit suicide." In another episode, "Lady Bouvier's Lover", he trades a Mary Worth telephone to Bart Simpson for an Itchy and Scratchy animation cel. In the episode "Guess Who's Coming to Criticize Dinner?", the tour of the Springfield Shopper leads them to the comic department which is headed by the author of Mary Worth. The guide asks "Who reads Mary Worth?" to which the group remains silent, and the guide says "Let's move on."

In the Futurama episode "The Why of Fry," Fry remarks, "There are guys in the background of Mary Worth comics that are more important than me" upon finding out that Leela, his love interest, is about to go on a date with an important mayor's aide.

The Family Guy episode "Family Guy Viewer Mail 1" features Chris making a print of a Mary Worth strip on Peter's belly fat and stretching it out, Silly Putty-style, saying "Look what I can do to Mary Worth's smug sense of self-satisfaction." To which Peter responds, "That's right son, take her down a peg."

In a FoxTrot strip, the characters are discussing how many comic strips that day have jokes based on golf. Jason comments, "I loved Mary Worth's punch line about sand traps."

In a Pearls Before Swine strip, Rat, on steroids, decides he "will kick Mary Worth's &#$*%!"

In response to readers of a newspaper in Shreveport, LA voting to drop Mary Worth,[2] the comic strip The New Adventures Of Queen Victoria spent a week in September 2007 with Victoria planning Mary's funeral.

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Most notable among them is the Allen and John Saunders Collection itself at the Ray and Pat Browne Library for Popular Culture Studies, Bowling Green State University
  2. ^ The Palm Beach Post

[edit] References

  • Strickler, Dave. Syndicated Comic Strips and Artists, 1924-1995: The Complete Index. Cambria, CA: Comics Access, 1995. ISBN 0-9700077-0-1.
  • Saunders, Allen. 1983-86 (in 16 installments). Autobiography: "Playwright for Paper Actors," in Nemo—The Classic Comics Library, no. 4-7, 9, 10, 14, 18-19.

[edit] External links

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