Ozy and Millie

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Ozy and Millie

Author(s) D. C. Simpson
Website http://www.ozyandmillie.org/
Current status / schedule Updating every weekday
Launch date January 1997
End Date Sometime prior to end of 2008
Syndicate(s) Keenspot
Publisher(s) Lulu.com
Genre(s) Furry/Comedy

Ozy and Millie is a webcomic, created by D. C. Simpson, which debuted in January 1997.[1] The comic was part of Keenspot from 2001 to 2003, going independent for several years,[2] before returning to Keenspot in November 2006.[3] It follows the adventures of assorted anthropomorphized animals. New strips are released on most weekdays. The comic centers on Ozy and Millie, two young foxes attending North Harbordale Elementary School in Seattle, contending with everyday elementary school issues such as tests and bullies, as well as more surreal situations.[4] On April 24, 2008, D.C. Simpson announced the end of the daily strip by the end of 2008 on the O&M home page.

The strip usually concentrates on character interaction, but occasionally veers into political commentary. Simpson airs his political views more directly in his other comic, I Drew This. Most of the strips have been reprinted in book form. Five collections were released through Plan 9 Publishing, but they have all gone out of print; currently a complete set of the strip's archives is available through Lulu.com.[5] Its animal characters focus on grade-school matters. The strip is listed in the top 200 most read webcomic on The Webcomic List.[6]

Contents

[edit] History

Ozy and Millie originally started as a print comic strip in a Washington college newspaper, the Copper Point Journal, in 1997 using ink and brush as drawing implements.[1] Simpson claims to have been influenced by comics and cartoons such as Bloom County, Calvin and Hobbes, The Simpsons and Pogo.[7] It became an irregular webcomic in early 1998. In June 1998, it became a Monday-Friday daily strip. In the same year, Simpson won a newspaper syndicates' college cartoonist award. When the strip began, Simpson's artistic style was similar to that in Calvin and Hobbes.[8] In 2000, the strip went on hiatus and returned with a new, unique style.[9] The strip also went on hiatus several times. It was once on hiatus for five months, between August 23, 2003 to January 22, 2004.[10] On January 30, 2004, Simpson began a new strip, I Drew This, a political webcomic which contains Simpson's political views, which also appear in Ozy and Millie.[11] In 2002, the strip won the Web Cartoonist's Choice Awards for "Best Anthropomorphic Comic".[12] The strip also won the 2006 and 2007 Ursa Major Awards for "Best Anthropomorphic Comic Strip".[13][14]

[edit] Characters

[edit] Ozy

Ozy is a ten-year-old arctic fox who attends North Harbordale Elementary School in Seattle, together with his friend Millie. He was originally supposed to be a wolf, until a fan showed Simpson a photo of Arctic fox cubs, that Simpson claimed were "absolute ringers" for Ozy. However, Ozy retained his whisker marks.[15] Ozy's full name, Ozymandias Justin Llewellyn, is a reference to the poem Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley:[16]

Ozy is recognised by his large top hat, which he got from his father Llewellyn when he adopted Ozy.[17] The only other clothing he wears is a vest, which makes him the target of some of Millie's practical jokes. He is adept at letting Millie's pranks pass by without effect, but he does suffer bullying at the hands of the school jock, Jeremy, who likes to stuff Ozy into rubbish bins. Ozy also suffers from annual baldness, usually through either a freak accident or because of Millie. Although it is caused by a gypsy curse (later revealed by Llewellyn to be a myth) which has passed on through Ozy's adoptive father's heritage largely unnoticed, it does affect Ozy badly since he is the first Llewellyn with any hair to lose.[18] Ozy is also quiet and serene, usually playing the "straight person". Under Llewellyn's guidance, Ozy also practices Zen; or rather a humorous version of it.[10]

Ozy is told by Llewellyn that his birth mother's name was Shelley and that she disappeared under mysterious circumstances after she invented a new flavor of ice cream that every ice cream-producing company wanted to buy the rights to.

[edit] Millie

Millicent Mehitabel Mudd, better known as Millie, is a ten-year-old red fox girl who is Ozy's best friend. Millie is usually seen wearing a set of blue denim overalls. Unlike Ozy, who is calm, Millie is chaotic and manic, both in the destruction she leaves behind and the ways she devises of avoiding work.[16] She is a rebel and is opposed to any form of authority, which regularly leads to confrontations with both her teacher, Ms. Sorkowitz, and her mother, Ms. Mudd. Her destructive and rebellious habits not only get herself into trouble, but Ozy too.

Although she is normally manic, she also has a strong sense of justice, facing the inexplicable wrongs of life and the world she sees. However, her rebellions are mostly limited to annoying her mother, playing jokes on Ozy and disrupting the peace at school. None of which matters any less to her, as long as she has fun doing it.[19] Millie says aloud what others think, and does what others, for fear of reaction from the people around them, would not dare. She, like Ozy, often tries to answer the most important questions in life, but her method of finding the answers makes her unique.[10]

[edit] Llewellyn

Ozy's adoptive father, known only as Llewellyn, is a red dragon. Llewellyn and other members of his dragon family have been responsible for running has been secret conspiracies. He also lends both Ozy and Millie advice, although his advice tends to be nonsense. He has also tried to run for U.S. president - first under the "People With Nothing Better To Do" Party,[20] then under the "Zen Party".[21] He also runs his house as a separate nation: Greater Llewellynlland.[22] His favourite pastime is playing the "House Rules Parcheesi", a game which seems to have no rules, that is claimed to be similar to Calvinball.[23] Llewellyn currently lives by himself, having only Ozy to raise and care for. He is currently engaged to Millie's mother. Of all the characters in Ozy and Millie, Simpson has claimed that Llewellyn is his favorite.[7]

[edit] Ms. Mudd

Ms. M. Mudd, Millie's mother, is a lawyer, who is as an older, wiser, more temperate version of Millie. She was like Millie in her childhood, and as a result knows how to deal with any trouble caused by her, much to Millie's annoyance. While Ms. Mudd knows how to deal with Millie, she is also the first to lend her support if there is anything amiss. She is currently engaged to Llewellyn.[16]

[edit] Other characters

Other characters in Ozy and Millie include Avery, a raccoon friend who constantly tries to be "cool," even ditching his "uncool" friends such as Ozy. Ironically, his friend Stephan the aardvark is the nerdiest character in the strip. Avery's younger brother, Timulty, constantly undermines his coolness. The two major antagonists are Felicia the sheep, a "popular girl" who teases Millie for being too individualistic, and Jeremy the jock rabbit who bullies Ozy.[16]

Other minor characters include Ms. Sorkowitz, Ozy and Millie's kangaroo teacher and Principal Beau Vine, the bull principal of the school who allows bullying believing that, "Repeated exposure to unprovoked assault squelches unhealthy nonconformist tendencies."[16] Dr. I. Wahnsinnig (German for insane or mad), is a ring-tailed lemur psychiatrist of the school who fights with Vine over school issues. Ozy's dragon cousin Isolde is another character who, like Llewellyn, is in charge of various conspiracies. Another character is Pirate Captain Locke, a child pirate from an alternate dimension on the other side of Llewellyn's couch, in which people age backwards. Locke, currently the same age as Millie's, is also her biological father.[16]

[edit] Reception

Ozy and Millie generally has positive reviews. Critic Fred Patten is one of the main supporters of the strip. In 2001, he wrote that the strip was, "a gently humorous fantasy with a liberal political philosophy."[19] In 2006, Patten still claimed that, "Ozy and Millie is one of the top anthropomorphic cartoon strips on the Internet," although he did also comment negatively about the loss of colour in between changes of printed editions of books.[10] The comic is also popular because of its relatively inoffensive content, with one person writing that it was, "Suitable for readers of all ages, really."[24]

[edit] Collected Editions

Two series of Ozy and Millie books have been formed, the first of which was discontinued and replaced by the second. Simpson wrote that he would, "be condensing the first five books into three that will be larger but cost the same, and making them as comprehensive as I can make them."[5] Material from Ozy and Millie also appears in Attitude 3: The New Subversive Online Cartoonists.[25]

[edit] Discontinued books

Name ISBN
Ozy and Millie ISBN 1-929462-11-5
Ozy and Millie, volume 2: Never Mind Pants ISBN 1-929462-20-4
Oxy and Millie, volume 3: Ink and White Space ISBN 1-929462-43-3
Ozy and Millie, volume 4: Authentic Banana Dye ISBN 1-929462-56-5
Ozy and Millie, volume 5: Om ISBN 1-929462-69-7

[edit] Current books

Name ISBN Notes
Prehistrionics: Ozy and Millie, 1997-2000 ISBN 1-84728-773-5 Contains Cartoons from Ozy and Millie and Never Mind Pants
The Big Book of Ancient, Semi-Coherent Wisdom: Ozy and Millie, 2000-2001 ISBN 978-1-4303-1505-6 Contains Cartoons from Never Mind Pants and Ink and White Space
Zen Again: Ozy and Millie, 2001-2002 ISBN 978-1-4303-1508-7 Contains cartoons from Ink and White Space and Authentic Banana Dye
Perpetual Motion: Ozy and Millie, 2002-2003 ISBN 978-1-4303-2116-3 Contains cartoons from Authentic Banana Dye and Om
Tofu Knights: Ozy and Millie, 2004-2005 ISBN 1-84728-772-7 Contains cartoons from Om and also never-before printed material
Closer to the Void: Ozy and Millie, 2006-2007 ISBN 978-1-4357-0504-3 Contain bonus strip - The ABCs of Ozy and Millie

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Simpson, D. C.. Prehistorics: Ozy and Millie, 1997-2000. Lulu, 5. ISBN 1-84728-773-5. 
  2. ^ Xerexes, Xaviar (2003-02-10). Ozy & Millie Off Keenspot?. Comixtalk. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  3. ^ Crosby, Chris (2006-01-01). Ozy and Millie Rejoins Keenspot. Comixtalk. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  4. ^ Patten, Fred (July/August 2007). Ozy and Millie, by D. C. Simpson. Anthro. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  5. ^ a b Simpson, D. C. (2006-07-03). July 3, 2006. Glasswings.com.au. Retrieved on 2007-02-07.
  6. ^ Ozy and Millie. The Webcomic List. Retrieved on 2008-02-19.
  7. ^ a b Schroeder, Al (October 2004). OzyFest: An Interview with D. C. Simpson.. Comixtalk. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  8. ^ Simpson, D. C.. Prehistorics: Ozy and Millie, 1997-2000. Lulu, 8. ISBN 1-84728-773-5. 
  9. ^ Simpson, D. C.. Prehistorics: Ozy and Millie, 1997-2000. Lulu, 175. ISBN 1-84728-773-5. 
  10. ^ a b c d Patten, Fred (July/August 2006). Tofu Knights: Ozy and Millie, 2004-2005. Anthro. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  11. ^ Simpson, D. C. (2004-01-20). Mars. I Drew This. Retrieved on 2008-02-19.
  12. ^ 2002 Winners and Nominees. Web Cartoonist's Choice Awards. Retrieved on 2008-01-11.
  13. ^ Award Winners 2006. Ursa Major Awards. Retrieved on 2008-01-11.
  14. ^ Award Winners 2007. Ursa Major Awards. Retrieved on 2008-05-20.
  15. ^ Simpson, D. C. (2006-08-30). Arctic Fox Pups (jpg). Ozy and Millie. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Simpson, D. C.. Cast. Ozy and Millie. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  17. ^ Simpson, D. C. (2002-05-21). The Obvious Choice. Ozy and Millie. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  18. ^ Simpson, D. C. (2008-02-07). The Llewellyn hair curse. Ozy and Millie.
  19. ^ a b Patten, Fred (December 2001). Ozy and Millie. Witty World. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  20. ^ Simpson, D. C. (2000-09-04). The "People With Nothing Better To Do" Party. Ozy and Millie. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  21. ^ Simpson, D. C. (2004-02-24). Campigning by not campigning. Ozy and Millie. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  22. ^ Simpson, D. C. (2001-03-21). Greater Llewellynlland. Ozy and Millie. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  23. ^ Simpson, D. C. (1999-01-25). House Rules Parcheesi. Ozy and Millie. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  24. ^ sQuonk (2006-11-12). Ozy and Millie by D. C. Simpson. Disjointed Ramblings. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.
  25. ^ Xerexes, Xaviar (2006-02-07). "Attitude 3" Available for Pre-Sale on Amazon. Comixtalk. Retrieved on 2008-02-07.

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