Fred's Bed

Beano strip
Image not available
Fred's Bed
Current/last artist David Parkins, Tom Paterson, Jimmy Glen, Lew Stringer, David Sutherland, Hunt Emerson, Tom Paterson, Nigel Parkinson, Laura Howell
First appearance Issue 3375
(April 7, 2007)
Last appearance Ongoing
Regular characters Fred, Freda (Fred's Mum), Fred's Bed

Fred's Bed is a comic strip in the British comic The Beano. It originally appeared in the The Topper section of the merged The Beezer and Topper comic in 1991. In the first strip, Fred breaks his old bed and when Fred and his mum go out to buy a new one, she buys the cheapest bed in the shop. He later discovers that when he crawls under his bed, on purpose or by mistake, he enters a different world. Each strip ends up in a new place. The strip was first drawn by David Parkins, who was the regular artist through most of its run, though Tom Paterson drew several strips. In the final strip in the Beezer and the Topper, (in that comic's final issue) the bed exploded, although he did reappear in the Beezer Annual 2003 in a story where he visited the sounds effect factory.

Fred has distinctive blonde hair with what appears to be a hook on top, as does his mother, except she has it longer around the sides. When he was a baby, it merely consisted of the hook. Fred's father has only appeared once, in the recent new strips by Hunt Emerson, and never appeared in the Beezer and Topper strips. Fred has notable bad grammar, for instance he changes words ended in '-ing' to '-in', e.g. 'I'm goin' under me bed for a while.'

However, the strip reappeared in the Beano comic on April 7, 2007 [1]. as reprints of the Beezer and Topper strips. Lew Stringer drew a new strip for the comic's Christmas 2007 issue along with Ken H. Harrison who drew Fred's Bed the game!. In issue 3341, dated 19th July 2008, Fred's strip was replaced by Olaff the Madlander, a reprint of fellow Beezer and Topper strip, Adrian the Barbarian. However, a brand new Fred's Bed story appeared in the 70th birthday Beano[2] in which Fred met Nick Park, creator of Wallace & Gromit, and the two explored the history of the comic (somewhat ironic, since Fred had actually originated in the Beezer and Topper, and not the Beano)[3]. This strip was drawn by David Sutherland. He returned later in 2008 after the Beano received a revamp, and Fred appeared in the Beano Annuals for 2009 and 2010, both times drawn by Ken H. Harrison.

In 2009 all the original stories except the last one had been reprinted, so in Beano issue 3480, dated 25th April 2009, [4] Hunt Emerson took over the strip. Fred was now given control over his bed's destination by way of an alarm clock, whereas in the original the bed took him to a random location. The bed is also now referred to as a time machine, and the artwork style is different. After the revamp,Emerson considerably changed Fred's appearance, giving him longer hair, and he appears to be more intelligent. However, due to Emerson's workload, Tom Paterson and Nigel Parkinson ghosted the strip in the new style in late 2009, before David Sutherland started drawing the strip, from the 2009 Christmas issue[5] on, also in Emerson's style. Sutherland drew the strip for about three months until Tom Paterson took over in April 2010, after which he became the regular artist, though Sutherland and Parkinson have drawn some strips since then.

In 2011, Fred gained an extra page titled "Fred's Foul Facts", along with the "BSK Pull Out" and "Rodger's Dodge Diary". Fred's Foul Facts is a single page about facts relating to the preceding Fred's Bed strips. He was also on the cover of the 2012 Annual. At the moment the main artist is David Sutherland with Nigel Parkinson as his understudy. The strip in Issue 3602 even revealed the name of Fred's mother as being Freda[6]. He has been on the cover of four annuals: 1993 Topper, 1994 Topper, 2003 Beezer and 2012 Beano.

References

  1. ^ Beano issue No. 3375
  2. ^ Beano issue 3343
  3. ^ http://news.sky.com/sky-news/content/StaticFile/jpg/2008/Jul/Week4/15059386.jpg
  4. ^ Beano issue 3480 (dated 25 April 2009)
  5. ^ Beano issue No. 3513
  6. ^ Beano issue 3602 dated 10 september 2011