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The Perishers was a long-running British newspaper comic strip, appearing in the Daily Mirror from about 1959 until its final cancellation in 2006. The strip was mostly written by Maurice Dodd, who also worked as an advertising copywriter. In actual fact, Dodd was neither the strip's creator, nor its original writer -- the strip was jointly created by its original artist Dennis Collins, and the Daily Mirror's entertainments editor, while its first writer, Ben Witham got fired within weeks after the first few strips were regarded as dismally unfunny -- but his name has always been the one most closely associated with the strip. Until 1983 it was drawn by Dennis Collins, in a highly detailed style which subsequent artists could never quite match. As of 2010 the Mirror is reprinting 1960s str

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  • The Perishers
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  • The Perishers was a long-running British newspaper comic strip, appearing in the Daily Mirror from about 1959 until its final cancellation in 2006. The strip was mostly written by Maurice Dodd, who also worked as an advertising copywriter. In actual fact, Dodd was neither the strip's creator, nor its original writer -- the strip was jointly created by its original artist Dennis Collins, and the Daily Mirror's entertainments editor, while its first writer, Ben Witham got fired within weeks after the first few strips were regarded as dismally unfunny -- but his name has always been the one most closely associated with the strip. Until 1983 it was drawn by Dennis Collins, in a highly detailed style which subsequent artists could never quite match. As of 2010 the Mirror is reprinting 1960s str
  • The Perishers, which for most of its lengthy run was created by writer Maurice Dodd and artist Dennis Collins (though its original writer was Ben Witham and towards the end, it was drawn first by Dodd after Collins's retirement in 1983, and then by Bill Mevin from 1992), began in the Daily Mirror on October 19, 1959 and ran until June 10th 2006, when the backlog of strips created by Dodd before his death some weeks previously finally ran out. It principally revolved around a group of four children, Wellington (a philosophical and intellectual orphan who for most of the strip lives alone in a derelict railway station and whose sole income seems to come from making buggies and selling them to his friends), Marlon (an incredibly thick kid in a tracksuit who eats inch thick ketchup sandwiches
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  • The Perishers was a long-running British newspaper comic strip, appearing in the Daily Mirror from about 1959 until its final cancellation in 2006. The strip was mostly written by Maurice Dodd, who also worked as an advertising copywriter. In actual fact, Dodd was neither the strip's creator, nor its original writer -- the strip was jointly created by its original artist Dennis Collins, and the Daily Mirror's entertainments editor, while its first writer, Ben Witham got fired within weeks after the first few strips were regarded as dismally unfunny -- but his name has always been the one most closely associated with the strip. Until 1983 it was drawn by Dennis Collins, in a highly detailed style which subsequent artists could never quite match. As of 2010 the Mirror is reprinting 1960s strips with Collins art and new colouring, somewhat squashed to fit a modern comic page and containing some updates to topical material - e.g., Maisie's references to "That nice Mr. Wilson" are now directed to "That nice Mr. Cameron". The strip features a group of urban schoolchildren and a dog. As such it is sometimes described as a British equivalent of Peanuts, although it has a very different art style and relies on quirkily British humour in the tradition of music hall and Spike Milligan. See also this website and The Other Wiki's Article.
  • The Perishers, which for most of its lengthy run was created by writer Maurice Dodd and artist Dennis Collins (though its original writer was Ben Witham and towards the end, it was drawn first by Dodd after Collins's retirement in 1983, and then by Bill Mevin from 1992), began in the Daily Mirror on October 19, 1959 and ran until June 10th 2006, when the backlog of strips created by Dodd before his death some weeks previously finally ran out. It principally revolved around a group of four children, Wellington (a philosophical and intellectual orphan who for most of the strip lives alone in a derelict railway station and whose sole income seems to come from making buggies and selling them to his friends), Marlon (an incredibly thick kid in a tracksuit who eats inch thick ketchup sandwiches which always squirt over the others when he bites into them, and who keeps inventing things which are either totally useless or have already been invented)), Maisie (a fearsome little girl who is obsessed with Marlon) and Baby Grumpling (Maisie's little brother, an aspiring criminal genius and the creator of the wormburger) as well as Wellington's old English sheepdog, Boot, who believes himself to be an English nobleman from the eighteenth century ensorcelled by a Gypsy wench (he should've bought the damn clothespegs). The strip did, however, have numerous other recurring characters who would often take it over for days at a time, most notably the hirsute and unsanitary kid Aloysius "Dirty" McSquirty, his unseen cousin Worsoff (who lived in a sewer and spoke up to Dirty through drains), the lewd and coarse but very funny Crabs in the Rock Pool (whom Boot visited every year when the kids went to the seaside town of St. Moribunds on holiday, and who had built an entire religion around these annual apparances of "the Eyeballs in the Sky"), Boot's canine associates B.H Calcutta (failed) (a bloodhound who claimed to be a print journalist and whose catchphrase was "any news for the newshound?") and Tatty Oldbitt (a sex mad female Bassett hound) and fascistic would-be world conquering tortoise Adolph Kilroy and his two reluctant associates, a workshy socialist beetle named Fred and his chain smoking caterpillar friend. Others included the kids' school friends Fiscal Yere (a rich kid who handed out chocolate cigars), Plain Jane (Maisie's rival) and Beryl Bogey (Maisie's musclebound henchperson) as well as New Baby (Grumpling's unwilling confidant, never seen except as a pram with a thought balloon above it) and Poor Girl, a quite obviously spoiled rich girl who would routinely try to con Wellington out of his (usually non-existent) Christmas and birthday presents by claiming to be collecting for the poor; namely, herself ("I'm poor, my butler's poor, my maid's poor..."). The kids lived in the town of Croynge (sometimes called Crunge), which was apparently a location in South London based on Croydon and Penge, but resembled an industrial Northern town in the 1950's. File:1st Perishers Strip (19th October 1959).png File:Img131.jpg Much of the humour in the strip, which was extremely well written and often worked on several levels, was based on repetition, with certain scenarios being replayed with variations on an annual basis. Wellington has, in fact, noticed by the strip's later days that each year is very similar to the previous year and that he and his friends never seem to age, though he never points this out to anyone else; this deconstruction of the comic strip medium is also apparent in other cases, such as the kids' yearly walk back from St. Moribunds after being thrown off the train, which always results in them being several weeks late home from school without anyone seeming to notice, a comment on the vagaries of comic strip time. The strip was hugely popular, spawning a TV cartoon series in the 1970's (which starred the late Leonard Rossiter as the voice of Boot) and a record album in 1980, as well as being reprinted in a series of bestselling books. The strip returned to the Daily Mirror as a series of reprints in February 2010. File:Img132.jpg
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