Dennis the Menace (U.S. comics)

Dennis the Menace
Author(s) Hank Ketcham
Marcus Hamilton
Ron Ferdinand
Scott Ketcham
Launch date March 12, 1951–present
Syndicate(s) DailyINK
Publisher(s) Fantagraphics Books
Genre(s) Gag cartoon

Dennis the Menace is a daily syndicated newspaper comic strip originally created, written, and illustrated by Hank Ketcham. It debuted on March 12, 1951, in 16 newspapers[1] and was originally distributed by Post-Hall Syndicate.[2] It is now written and drawn by Ketcham's former assistants, Marcus Hamilton (weekdays, since 1995), Ron Ferdinand (Sundays, since 1981), and son Scott Ketcham (since 2010), and distributed to at least 1,000 newspapers in 48 countries and in 19 languages by King Features Syndicate.[3] The comic strip usually runs for a single panel on weekdays and a full strip on Sundays.

The comic strip became so successful that it was adapted to other popular media, including several television shows, both live-action and animated; and several feature films, including theatrical and direct-to-video releases.

Coincidentally, a UK comic strip of the same name debuted on the exact same day, even though it was supposed to be released five days later on March 17. The two are not related and change their names subtly in each other's respective home bases to avoid confusion.

Characters and setting

Dennis the Menace takes place in a middle-class suburban neighborhood in Wichita, Kansas.[4] The Mitchells live in a two-story house at 2251 Pine Street.[5] The Wilsons live next door at 2253 Pine Street.[6]

The Mitchell family

The Wilsons

Dennis' friends

History

Inspiration

The inspiration for the comic strip came from Dennis Ketcham, the real life son of Hank Ketcham,[29] who was only four years old when he refused to take a nap and somehow messed up his whole room. Hank tried many possible names for the character, and translated them into rough pencil sketches. But when his studio door flew open and his then-wife Alice, in utter exasperation, exclaimed, "Your son is a menace!",[30] the "Dennis the Menace" name stuck. The character of Henry Mitchell bore a striking resemblance to Ketcham. The Mitchell family of Dennis, Hank/Henry, and Alice were all named after the Ketchams.

Visuals

Ketcham's line work has been highly praised over the years. A review on comicbookbin.com states: "...a growing legion of cartoonists, scholars, aficionados, etc. have come to appreciate the artistry of Dennis's creator, Hank Ketcham. Ketcham's beautiful artwork defines cartooning elegance. The design, the composition, and the line: it's all too, too beautiful."[31] AV Club reviewer Noel Murray wrote: "Ketcham also experimented with his line a little early on, tightening and thickening without losing the looseness and spontaneity that remains the strip's best aspect even now."[32]

In 2005, Dennis appeared as a guest for Blondie and Dagwood's 75th anniversary party in the comic strip Blondie.[33]

Awards

Ketcham received the Reuben Award for the strip in 1953.[34] He also was made honorary mayor of Wichita. He was quoted as saying, "I set the whole thing in Wichita, Kansas, and as a result I got made an honorary mayor of Wichita."[35]

UK Dennis the Menace

Coincidentally, another cartoon strip titled Dennis the Menace was published in the British comic The Beano (dated March 17 – the "off sale" date) in 1951. The comic went on sale several days in advance of the cover date (actually being published up to ten days previously), and therefore predates the debut of Ketcham's version in the UK but Ketcham's version was released earlier than the street date in North America.[36] The UK Dennis is quite different in appearance and character, characterized by his red-and-black striped jersey, his dog Gnasher, and his gang of friends. Like the American character, the UK one remains popular to this day and has made the transition to television cartoons. Ketcham's comic strip was dubbed Just Dennis or The Pickle in the UK to avoid confusion with the native Dennis the Menace.[37] The television version was screened in the UK simply as Dennis but has since been released on DVD and online as Dennis the Menace. The UK comic strip was briefly renamed Dennis and Gnasher but has returned to being called Dennis the Menace and Gnasher.

Ketcham retires

Ron Ferdinand in 2013

Hank Ketcham retired from the comic strip in 1994,[30] turning over production of the strip to his assistants Ron Ferdinand and Marcus Hamilton. They continued it as a "zombie strip" after Ketcham's death in 2001, where the two, and since 2010, Scott Ketcham, continue the strip. [30]

Advertising

Dennis the Menace appeared in A&W Restaurants advertising in the 1960s, then Dairy Queen marketing from 1971 until 2001, when he was dropped because Dairy Queen felt children could no longer relate to him. Dennis also appeared in the Sears Roebuck Wish Book Christmas catalog in the 1970s.

Comic books

Dennis the Menace has been published in comic books and comic digests from the 1950s through the 1980s by a variety of publishers, including Standard/Pines (1953–58), Fawcett Comics (1958–80, during their only return to comics after settling the Captain Marvel lawsuit and selling much of their comics division to Charlton Comics), and Marvel Comics (1981–82). These included both newspaper strip reprints and original Dennis the Menace comic book stories, produced by others besides Ketcham. Al Wiseman, one of Ketcham's assistants in the 1950s and 60s, worked on many of them. Ron Ferdinand, Ketcham's Sunday page artist, drew several of the Dennis stories in the Marvel books, including the cover for issue No. 11.

Giant series

The main comic book series (simply named Dennis the Menace) ran in tandem with the "Giant" series. The Dennis the Menace Giant Vacation Special[38] and Dennis the Menace Christmas Issue[39] were published by Standard in 1955. Those issues inaugurated the Giants series, which was published by Pines for issues 2–6,[40] and continued by Hallden/Fawcett for issues 6–75.[41] The Giant series was later renamed the Dennis the Menace Bonus Magazine Series, which started with issue No. 76 in 1970.[42] CBS and Hallden later retitled the series as The Dennis the Menace Big Bonus Series, which ran through issue #194 in October 1979.

Other series

By October 1979, Fawcett began publishing a separate series of 36 issues entitled Dennis the Menace and Mr. Wilson. By the second issue, the series was re-christened Dennis the Menace and His Friends which now involved Dennis, Mr. Wilson, friends Joey and Margaret, and dog Ruff. Because of this, the Mr. Wilson stories were alternated with the three characters as Ruff, Joey and Margaret who each shared a No. 1 issue with Dennis.

There were also three other series of Dennis the Menace comic books published, beginning in 1961. First was Dennis the Menace and His Dog, Ruff; Dennis the Menace and His Pal, Joey was published in summer 1961; Dennis the Menace and Margaret was published in the winter of 1969.

In 1972, as part of a bonus magazine series, Fawcett published a "Short Stuff Special" where Dennis visited Children's Fairyland in Oakland, California.

Bible Kids series

In 1977, Word Books, Inc. (now HarperCollins) commissioned Hank Ketcham Enterprises, Inc. to produce a series of ten comic books under the title Dennis and the Bible Kids, with the usual cast of characters reading (and sometimes partly acting out) the stories of Joseph, Moses, David, Esther, Jesus, and other Biblical characters. These were sold through Christian bookstores and related outlets. Each issue contained several inspirational renderings by Hank Ketcham himself.

Marvel series

The Dennis the Menace Fun Fest and the Dennis the Menace Big Bonus series were revived for a short-issue run in 1980:

After these revival series, the Hallden and CBS comics run came to an end in 1980. Ketcham had half of the comic book rights purchased by Stan Lee and Marvel Comics, so they were able to produce a new series of Dennis the Menace comic books. The new Marvel series ran from December 1981 to November 1982. The smaller Dennis the Menace comic digests were published continually by Fawcett and Hallden between 1969 and 1980, and they were briefly resurrected in reprints by Marvel in 1982 for a run of three issues.

List of comic books

Main series

Title Starting year Publisher
Dennis the Menace (#1–14)[43] 1953 Standard
Dennis the Menace (#15–31)[44] 1956 Pines
Dennis the Menace (#32–166)[45] 1959 Hallden/Fawcett/CBS
Dennis the Menace (#1–13)[46] 1981 Marvel

Other series

Title Starting year Publisher
The Best of Dennis the Menace (#1–5)[47] 1959 Hallden
Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun digest (#1–50)[48] 1969 Fawcett
Dennis The Menace and the Bible Kids (#1–10)[49] 1977 Word Books

Book compilations

Dennis the Menace has also been published in mass market paperback collections, made up of newspaper strip reprints:

  • Dennis the Menace (1952) Avon (also published in hardcover by Henry Holt & Co.)
  • More Dennis the Menace (1954) Avon (also in hardcover by Holt)
  • Baby Sitter's Guide by Dennis the Menace (1955, 1961) Pocket Books, Fawcett (also in hardcover by Holt)
  • Wanted: Dennis the Menace (1955) Fawcett (also in hardcover by Holt)
  • Dennis the Menace Rides Again (1956, 1971) PB, Fawcett (also in hardcover by Holt)
  • Dennis the Menace vs. Everybody (1957) PB (also in hardcover by Holt)
  • Dennis the Menace: Household Hurricane (1958, 1963) PB, Fawcett (also in hardcover by Holt)
  • The Adventures of the Pickle (1958) Corgi Books
  • In this Corner... Dennis the Menace (1959) Fawcett (also in hardcover by Holt)
  • Dennis the Menace ...Teacher's Threat (1960) Fawcett (also in hardcover by Holt)
  • Dennis the Menace: Voted Most Likely (1960) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace, A.M. *Ambassador of Mischief (1961) Fawcett (also in hardcover by HRW)
  • Dennis the Menace: Happy Half-Pint (1962) Fawcett (also in hardcover by Random House)
  • Dennis the Menace ...Who, Me? (1963) Fawcett (also in hardcover by Random House)
  • Dennis the Menace: Make-Believe Angel (1964) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace ...Here Comes Trouble (1966) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace and Poor Ol' Mr. Wilson (1967) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: All-American Kid (1968) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace and His Pal Joey (1968) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Your Friendly Neighborhood Kid (1969) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Perpetual Motion (1969) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace ...Everybody's Little Helper (1970) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Non-Stop Nuisance (1970) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Surprise Package (1971) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Short 'n' Snappy (1971) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Where the Action Is (1971) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Dennis Power (1972) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Just for Fun (1973) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: The Kid Next Door (1973) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Busybody (1974) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Little Pip-Squeak (1974) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Play It Again, Dennis (1975) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace to the Core (1975) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Little Man in a Big Hurry (1976) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Short Swinger (1976) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace and His Girls (1977) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: "Your Mother's Calling!" (1977) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Ol' Droopy Drawers (1978) Fawcett
  • Someone's in the Kitchen with Dennis the Menace (1978) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Driving Mother Up the Wall (1979) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: I Done It MY Way (1979) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Short in the Saddle (1979) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Ain't Misbehavin' (1980) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Stayin' Alive (1980) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Good Intenshuns (1981) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: One More Time! (1981) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: The Way I Look at It... (1982) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Dog's Best Friend (1982) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Supercharged and Ever Ready (1983) Fawcett
  • Dennis the Menace: Sunrise Express (1983) Fawcett

In 1990, Abbeville Press published Hank Ketcham's fully illustrated autobiography: The Merchant of Dennis (ISBN 9780896599437, hardcover). The book was reprinted by Fantagraphics in 2005 (ISBN 1560977140, trade paperback). Abbeville also published a softcover retrospective of the strip in 1991, Dennis the Menace: His First 40 Years.[50]

Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace

In 2005, comics publisher Fantagraphics began to reprint Ketcham's entire run on Dennis the Menace (excluding Sunday strips) in a projected 25-volume series over 11 years. No new volumes have been issued since 2009 and it is unknown when and if the series will resume.[51] They are published in hardcover editions as well as paperback.

  1. Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace, 1951–1952 (2005) ISBN 1-56097-680-2
  2. Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace, 1953–1954 (2006) ISBN 1-56097-725-6
  3. Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace, 1955–1956 (2006) ISBN 1-56097-770-1
  4. Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace, 1957–1958 (2007) ISBN 978-1-56097-880-0
  5. Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace, 1959–1960 (2008) ISBN 978-1-56097-966-1
  6. Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace, 1961–1962 (2009) ISBN 978-1-60699-311-8

Worldwide success

Film and television

Dennis the Menace has been the subject of a number of adaptations. The first one produced is a CBS sitcom that aired from 1959 to 1963 starring Jay North as Dennis,[52] Herbert Anderson as Henry Mitchell and father to Dennis; Joseph Kearns[53] as George Wilson, and subsequently Gale Gordon as his brother, John Wilson. North also appeared as Dennis on an episode of The Donna Reed Show[54] and in the theatrical film Pepe (both 1960). In 1987, a Dennis the Menace live-action television film was released; it was later re-released on video under the title Dennis the Menace: Dinosaur Hunter.[55] Another live-action Dennis the Menace film, starring Walter Matthau as Mr. Wilson and Mason Gamble as Dennis, was released to theaters in 1993. It was originally titled The Real Dennis the Menace before the final name was approved. This was followed with the direct-to-video Dennis the Menace Strikes Again in 1998, starring Don Rickles as Mr. Wilson. The most recent film adaptation, A Dennis the Menace Christmas was released to DVD on November 6, 2007. The Warner Bros. production starred Robert Wagner as Mr. Wilson, Louise Fletcher as Mrs. Wilson, and Maxwell Perry Cotton, a six-year-old actor, as Dennis.

Animation

Dennis the Menace was adapted into an animated special, Dennis the Menace in Mayday for Mother which aired in 1981 and was produced by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises and Mirisch Films.[56] A daily animated syndicated series was produced by DiC Entertainment in 1986 with Brennan Thicke as the voice of Dennis, also featuring Phil Hartman who voiced George Wilson and Henry Mitchell.[57] DiC also produced the All-New Dennis the Menace for CBS Saturday Mornings in 1993 with Adam Wylie voicing Dennis.[58] An animated movie, Dennis the Menace in Cruise Control, premiered as part of Nickelodeon's Sunday Movie Toons block in 2002 and later released to DVD.[59]

List of film and TV adaptations

Films

Crew/detail Film
Dennis the Menace: Dinosaur Hunter
(1987)
Dennis the Menace
(1993)
Dennis the Menace Strikes Again
(1998)
Dennis the Menace in Cruise Control
(2002)
A Dennis the Menace Christmas
(2007)
Director Doug Rogers Nick Castle Charles T. Kanganis Pat Ventura Ron Oliver
Producer Philip D. Fehrle John Hughes and
Richard Vane
Jeffrey Silver and Bobby Newmyer Executive producers:
Andy Heyward and
Michael Maliani
Steven J. Wolfe
Writers Bruce Kalish & David Garber
and K.C. Dee
John Hughes Tim McCanlies (screenplay);
Tim McCanlies and
Jeff Schechter (story)
Steve Granat and
Cydne Clark
Kathleen Laccinole
Editor Edward Salier Alan Heim Jeffrey Reiner N/A Zack Arnold
Composer Randy Edelman Jerry Goldsmith Graeme Revell Matt McGuire Peter Allen
Cinematography Arledge Armenaki Thomas E. Ackerman Christopher Faloona N/A C. Kim Miles
Production company DIC Enterprises
Coca-Cola Telecommunications
Hughes Entertainment
Warner Bros. Family Entertainment
Outlaw Productions
Warner Bros. Family Entertainment
DIC Enterprises DTM3 Productions
Sneak Preview Entertainment
Valkyrie Films
Warner Premiere
Distribution LBS Communications Warner Bros. Nickelodeon Warner Home Video
Released 11 September 1987 25 June 1993 14 July 1998 27 October 2002 13 November 2007
Duration 118 minutes 94 minutes 75 minutes 72 minutes 83 minutes

TV shows and specials

Merchandising

Playground

In 1952 Hank Ketcham spearheaded the construction of the Dennis the Menace Playground, designed by Arch Garner.[60] It opened in Monterey, California on November 17, 1956.[61] The playground featured a bronze statue of Dennis sculpted by Wah Chang. On the night of October 25, 2006, the 125-lb statue, which was estimated to be worth $30,000, was stolen from the playground.[62] It was not recovered, but in April 2007 it was replaced by a reproduction of another Dennis statue Chang made for the Ketchams.[63]

Video games

Dennis the Menace in other languages

The comic strip has been translated into many foreign languages, which has helped make the strip's characters famous worldwide.

References

  1. "History". Dennisthemenace.com. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  2. Markstein, Donald D. (2010). "Dennis the Menace". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  3. Van Gelder, Lawrence (June 2, 2001). "Hank Ketcham, Father of Dennis the Menace, Dies at 81". The New York Times. Archived from the original on March 30, 2014. Retrieved August 5, 2017.
  4. Dennis the Menace' creator dies at 81; strip to continue'
  5. Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun #2. Christmas Double Feature "I want a..."p. 77.
  6. Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun #2. p. 171.
  7. [Dennis the Menace cartoon march-14-2014/]
  8. [Dennis the Menace comic june-2-2014/]
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 [Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun #8]
  10. [Dennis the Menace comic march-27-2014/]
  11. [Dennis the Menace Comic strip Nov 13, 1987]
  12. [For an hilarious example of Dennis the Menace chaos in a department store, see "Dennis Goes Christmas Shopping" in Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun #2.]
  13. 1 2 Archived May 4, 2014, at the Wayback Machine.
  14. [Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun #2, "Up a tree"]
  15. [Dennis the Menace comic february-28-2014/]
  16. [Dennis the Menace march-16-2014/]
  17. [Dennis the Menace march-18-2014/]
  18. [Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun #2 "Too Many Santas"]
  19. [Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun #2]
  20. "Dennis the Menace" June 20, 2010
  21. "Dennis the Menace" comic April 2, 2012]
  22. [Dennis the Menace february-22-2014/]
  23. [Dennis the Menace comic April 7, 2013]
  24. 1 2 [Dennis the Menace Pocket Full of Fun #2 "How not to Decorate a Tree"]
  25. [Dennis the Menace comic April 1, 2012]
  26. Archived February 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  27. Brian Walker. "Dennis the Menace — Introduction by Brian Walker". Fantagraphics Books. Retrieved February 9, 2010.
  28. "October 26, 2014 Dennis the Menace strip". Retrieved October 28, 2014.
  29. Weinraub, Judith (May 5, 1990). "Dennis's Dear Old Dad". The Washington Post.
  30. 1 2 3 Van Gelder, Lawrence (June 2, 2001). "Hank Ketcham, Father of Dennis the Menace, Dies at 81". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-09-17.
  31. Douresseaux, Leroy (August 20, 2007). "Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis the Menace: 1953–1954 (review)". comicbookbin.com. Retrieved 2008-12-21.
  32. Murray, Noel (September 28, 2005). "Hank Ketcham's Complete Dennis The Menace 1951–1952 (review)". The Onion's avlub.com. Retrieved 2008-12-21.
  33. "Comics and cartoons | Chron.com – Houston Chronicle". Chron.com. September 4, 2005. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
  34. "The Reuben Award 1946 – 1974". The National Cartoonists Society. Retrieved 2007-09-18.
  35. "Biography for Hank Ketcham". Retrieved 2007-09-18.
  36. Schmidt, Alex. "The 5 Most Mind-Blowing Coincidences of All Time". Cracked.com. Retrieved 2015-05-21.
  37. "DENNISTHE-PICKLE-ANNUAL-1963". abebooks.co.uk.
  38. "The Grand Comics Database (GCD)". Comics.org. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
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  49. "The Grand Comics Database (GCD)". Comics.org. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
  50. "The Grand Comics Database (GCD)". Comics.org. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
  51. Estrada, George (August 8, 2005). "Antics of "Dennis the Menace" back in print". The Seattle Times Company. Retrieved 2008-09-18.
  52. Korman, Seymour (September 26, 1959). "DENNIS THE MENACE Goes on TV". Chicago Daily Tribune. Retrieved 2008-09-18.
  53. "JOSEPH KEARNS, 55, TV ACTOR, IS DEAD; Played Mr. Wilson of 'Dennis the Menace' on C.B.S.". The Seattle Times Company. February 18, 1962. Retrieved 2008-09-18.
  54. "Full cast and crew for The Donna Reed Show Donna Decorates (1960)". imdb. Retrieved 2008-12-08.
  55. Kohn, Martin F. (1996). Videohound's Family Video Guide. Visible Ink Press. p. 1960. ISBN 0787609846.
  56. "Dennis the Menace in Mayday for Mother (1981)". imdb. Retrieved 2015-11-21.
  57. "Dennis the Menace (1986)". imdb. Retrieved 2015-11-21.
  58. "All-New Dennis the Menace (1993)". imdb. Retrieved 2015-11-21.
  59. "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0337974/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1". imdb. Retrieved 2015-11-21. External link in |title= (help)
  60. "Archibald garner: a brief biographical sketch". words-and-art.com. Retrieved 2008-12-18.
  61. "Dennis the Menace Playground Flyer" (PDF). Monterey.org – City of Monterey. Retrieved 2008-12-18.
  62. "Statue of Dennis the Menace Stolen". The Washington Post. Associated Press. October 28, 2006. Retrieved 2007-09-18.
  63. Maria Daly (April 5, 2007). "Dennis the Menace Returns to Monterey, California". The Epoch Times. Retrieved 2008-12-08.
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