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Opus No. 3: 'Bloom County's' beloved penguin is back with a new comic
Deseret Morning News ^ | 11/21/2003 | Carma Wadley

Posted on 11/23/2003 3:50:17 PM PST by Keith in Iowa

Opus is coming back.

After an eight-year hiatus from newspaper comics, Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Berkeley Breathed will bring his big-beaked, bigger-hearted penguin, Opus, back to life in a Sunday-only comic strip. Beginning Sunday, "Opus" will appear exclusively in the Deseret Morning News, on the back page of the Travel Section.

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"This could be the best thing for American cartooning in many years," says Alan Shearer, editorial director of the Washington Post Writers Group, which is syndicating the strip. "We all recall the miserable year 1995, when Gary Larsen stopped 'The Far Side,' Berkeley ended 'Outland" and Bill Watterson stopped 'Calvin and Hobbes.' These are three of the greatest cartoonists of their generation. Berkeley is one of only two strip cartoonists to win the Pulitzer."

("The Far Side" has returned for a limited engagement on Deseret Morning News comics pages with repeats of past cartoons.)

Opus and friends — such as Steve Dallas, Bill the Cat and others — first arrived on the scene in 1980 in "Bloom County." The strip was drawn by Breathed, a then 22-year-old photojournalism graduate of the University of Texas, who, although he had no formal training in art, had launched his career in 1977 with a strip done for the University of Texas Daily Texan.

Breathed kicked off "Bloom County" with this philosophy: "As I see it, the world is getting more dangerous. But of course it's getting funnier proportionately, hence a mixed blessing. Clearly this decade is in need of some serious analysis on the comic pages."

Throughout its tenure, "Bloom County" made fun of politics, society and life as it took on everything from feminist issues, to the Strategic Defense Initiative, cosmetic testing on animals, celebrity flubs and foibles, Hari Krishnas and anxiety closets. Along the way, a few dandelion breaks and cloud fests were thrown in for whimsy's sake. And who can forget the sight of Opus in his flowered shower cap?

Breathed ended "Bloom County" in 1989. At the time, the strip was running in some 1,300 newspapers. He continued on with a Sunday-only strip, called "Outland," which included many of the same characters. "Outland" ended in 1995.

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"He felt he had taken it about as far as it could go," says Shearer. "And he wanted to do some animated feature-length films and other things."

Breathed wrote a children's book titled "A Wish for Wings That Work," which starred Opus the penguin, in a Christmas story. It was turned into an animated TV special in 1991. Breathed has since written a number of other children's books, including "Goodnight Opus," "Red Ranger Came Calling," "Edwurd Fudwupper Fibbed Big" and the upcoming "Flawed Dogs."

Opus was not the main character in Breathed's earlier strips, but this time it's all about him, says Shearer. "Opus was always my personal favorite," he says. "I see him as Candide. He has a naive side and a big heart, and he is constantly discovering the wonder of it all. He wants to belong. He's trying to find his place. And he tells us about ourselves. We've all been in situations where we feel we don't belong."

Breathed, who now lives in Santa Barbara with his wife and two children, has tended toward the reclusive artist stereotype, eschewing the spotlight and granting few interviews. "It was out of a desire not to bore anybody," he said in a rare discussion with an online magazine called Onion. "I happen to think nearly everybody — especially those one might find in the odd issue of People magazine, including me — is frightfully boring. Especially me."

In an earlier news story, a friend described how Breathed toiled at his craft. "The way Breathed works is to sit slumped over the drawing board wearing boots and blue jeans with his shirt off. The stereo and TV are going at the same time, and little scraps of paper are taped up all over the side of his table with bits of dialogue and sketches of characters on them. . . . He doesn't talk much or move much, just the pen moving on the paper 'scratch,' 'scratch.' He exudes the same creative energy as a piece of melba toast."

In recent years, Breathed has been a critic of the trend to continually shrink the size of comic strips on newspaper comics pages. "Pity the poor modern comic page," he told Onion. "Frames the size of thumbnails. It started as the first mass-market entertainment medium in a world that didn't yet know television, film or even radio. . . . Now it's just a page of inky blur that only a 10-year-old's eyes could focus upon."

Hence, the half-page format that "Opus" will use. These are not only comic strips, says Shearer, but also works of art. "Berkeley has become an accomplished artist with watercolor. He'll use the space to tell a story, with varied block sizes. So many strips are just talking heads. He wants to do more. He wants to create excitement, movement. It's always been that way, and now even more so."

While Breathed became known for his "liberal, schmiberal" views, at the core of the strip is an underlying belief in traditional values — home, motherhood and herring pie. And when Onion magazine asked him what he wanted to be when he grew up, his answer was simple: "Dad. The rest is frosting."


TOPICS: Humor; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: comic; opus
Interesting...

I do miss Gary Larson's Far Side - and wish my local paper had Mallard Fillmore

1 posted on 11/23/2003 3:50:17 PM PST by Keith in Iowa
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To: Keith in Iowa
I own Five Years of Babylon and never tire of it. Someone kept my Billy and The Boinger's Bootleg which I loaned to them for a week--exactly 14 years ago!
2 posted on 11/24/2003 12:55:02 AM PST by sully777 (Ahead warp zillion to the planet Kotex!)
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To: Keith in Iowa

HELP! Do you know what the cat's name is/was?


3 posted on 11/24/2003 9:41:36 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: sciencediet
You mean "Bill the Cat"?
4 posted on 11/24/2003 10:01:36 AM PST by balrog666 (Humor is a universal language.)
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To: balrog666
Bless you! Yes, Bill the Cat!

Man, would I love to see him resurrected!

5 posted on 11/24/2003 12:12:24 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: sciencediet

Bill the Cat Lives!

6 posted on 11/24/2003 12:31:28 PM PST by balrog666 (Humor is a universal language.)
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To: balrog666

Bill, we need you!


7 posted on 11/24/2003 1:18:39 PM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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To: sciencediet
Bill the Cat and Opus ran for President and Vice President. One Bloom County strip had the candidates
showing up on a voter's doorstep and the voter, an
elderly woman, said, "My, don't you look cute--here you go!," and handed them some candy. "Whose idea was it to
put Election Day so close to Halloween?!?," blurts
out Opus.

This year's Dem candidates certainly could pass for
scary monsters (hey, doesn't John Kerry look like Lurch
from the Addams Family? :) )
8 posted on 11/27/2003 12:43:29 AM PST by raccoonradio
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To: raccoonradio
Boy, those were the days! Bill the Cat and Opus for President. Best Democratic slate I've heard in ages!

Agreed, John Kerry not only looks like Lurch, I think he's scarier.

9 posted on 11/27/2003 6:54:48 AM PST by Lady Jag (Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
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