Charles M. Schulz

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Schulz, Charles M.

Eigenh. Unterschrift auf Albumblatt.
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Mit Abbildung von Snoopy.


Schulz, Charles M.

The Peanuts gang. Complete set of 13 drawings together with six color cels for sheet metal panels on the Wilbur Avenue Pedestrian Bridge ("Snoopy Bridge") of Tarzana Elementary School.
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The Peanuts gang. Complete set of 13 drawings together signed by Charles M. Schulz with six color cels for sheet metal panels on the Wilbur Avenue Pedestrian Bridge ("Snoopy Bridge") of Tarzana Elementary School. The wonderful set contains drawings of: 1) Lucy van Pelt shouting at Charlie Brown wearing baseball outfit, signed twice by Schulz 2) Lucy van Pelt shouting at Charlie Brown, signed twice by Schulz 3) Schroeder playing the piano while Lucy van Pelt leans against the piano, signed by Schulz 4) Snoopy sticks out his tongue at Lucy, signed by Schulz 5) Sally Brown walking, in profil, signed by Schulz 6)Snoopy sleeps in a flowerpot while Woodstock yells at him, signed by Schulz 7) Shermy, Patty, Violet and Peggy Jean (or Lila) taking a bath, signed by Schulz 8) Charlie Brown in a bucket, signed by Schulz 9) Schroeder and Snoopy face each other, while Snoopy does tricks to beg for Schroeder's ice cream, signed twice by Schulz 10) Snoopy dances and leaps into the air, signed twice by Schulz 11) Snoopy sits on his doghouse while Charlie Brown holds his food bowl up high for him to eat, signed by Schulz 12) Snoopy and Sally together, signed twice by Schulz 13) Linus and his security blanket, signed by Schulz Charlie Brown and all the Peanuts Gang have been a vital part of American life since Charles Schulz introduced the comic strip Peanuts on October 2, 1950. A member of the Tarzana Elementary School's PTA was an acquaintance of the cartoonist and asked him if he might consider donating drawings of his famous characters to decorate the 90-foot overpass of concrete and steel. These sketches were then blown up as alternating life-size panels across the span. The bridge was initially constructed to give the schoolchildren safe passage over periodic flooding at the intersection. The panels have proven to be remarkably resilient to the ravages of time and the weather. Everybody today knows it as the Snoopy Bridge. On the verso of the drawing of Snoopy dancing is an earlier abandoned sketch.