Footage from Blondie and Dagwood used in Muppet Babies.
Kermit and Piggy as Blondie and Dagwood.
July 4, 1982 strip.
Blondie is an American comic strip created by Chic Young in 1930 and distributed by King Features Syndicate. The strip runs in more then 2,300 newspapers in 55 countries, and spawned a successful film series, and a radio program. The series has followed the adventures of Blondie from her earliest status as a single flapper girl (Blondie Boopadoop) through her romance with and marriage to Dagwood Bumstead in 1933, in addition to featuring their children, friends, and now her own catering business.
The strip was the inspiration for the Dagwood sandwich, modeled after Dagwood's impossibly tall sandwiches.
References[]
- Kermit the Frog imagines himself as Dagwood and Miss Piggy as Blondie in a dream sequence from the July 4, 1982 Muppets comic strip.
- The Muppet Babies episode "Comic Capers" contains several references to the strip.
- Baby Scooter attempts to draw Blondie on his computer, but he cannot get the mailman Mr. Beasley to look right. Baby Fozzie winds up placing Scooter himself in the program, as the mailman, but then as assorted other comic characters (including Popeye and Little Orphan Annie).
- In the episode's song "Give Us the Funnies," Baby Kermit and Baby Piggy take on the roles of Blondie and Dagwood.
- Still later, when the Babies imagine themselves in Baby Animal's mixed-up comic strip and wander through assorted strips, they encounter Dagwood himself (in redubbed footage from the 1987 special Blondie and Dagwood, produced by Marvel Productions which also animated Muppet Babies). Dagwood runs out of his house, late for work as usual, and crashes into the babies. He says "Sorry, kids!" before he realizes that they aren't his kids.
Connections[]
- Loni Anderson voiced Blondie in Blondie and Dagwood (1987) and Blondie and Dagwood: Second Wedding Workout (1989)
- Gary Belkin developed the 1968-1969 series for television and wrote the episode "My Camp Runneth Over"
- Joe Flynn played Bryan Hathaway in "Dagwood the Wheeler Dealer" (1968)
- Hank Saroyan was story editor on Blondie and Dagwood (1987) and voice director on it and Blondie and Dagwood: Second Wedding Workout (1989)
- Russi Taylor voiced Cora Dithers in Blondie and Dagwood (1987) and Blondie and Dagwood: Second Wedding Workout (1989)
- Rudd Weatherwax trained Daisy the dog for the Blondie theatrical movies
- Frank Welker voiced Dagwood Bumstead in Blondie and Dagwood (1987) and Blondie and Dagwood: Second Wedding Workout (1989)