Diemazz

free dvd player software download
Apis
Achondroplasia
9004097384
Swimming at the 2008 Summer Olympics Women's 400 metre freestyle
T Pelham Dale
Abilene, Texas
auto lpg
t531t
Mathematical Association of America
Image:AnneFrankHuisAmsterdam jpg
Gualtieri (RE)
Faustina
List of video games based on cartoons
Komos
t306t
M (videocassette format)
pound cake
Matthew Bible
Image:BK big kids club png
Jews and Judaism in Africa
Image:Flag of Peru svg
Napoleon Dynamite
BRD Tower Bucharest
telemetry system
wetland definition
Jack Benny
t682t
1972 in baseball
Image:Inverigo Stemma png
Restinclières
Balzac
New Netherland
cmc vellore
1170s
t414t
kadet bomba
Chochmat Adam
Pyloric glands
Image:Meirin 1 jpg
United Commercial Bank
Wolfgang Droege
Fillmore District, San Francisco, California
Max Schmeling
Liu Liyang
Image:Wfm wallace monument jpg
Image:Xbox 360 Wireless Headset at TGS 2006 jpg
Shikahogh State Preserve
nice hotels
t112t
Image:Cox Mural jpg
Template talk:Mac OS X


Sergeant Pat
Molly Day

Radio Patrol was a police comic strip carried in newspapers from 1933 to 1950 in the dailies, with a Sunday strip that ran from 1934 to 1946. It was created by artist Charles Schmidt and writer Eddie Sullivan, who both worked for the Boston American. Eddie Sullivan was a newspaper reporter who specialized in crime reporting. Sgt. Pat was a composite of many of the real-life Boston Police Department officers he knew.

Because of the popularity of Dick Tracy, William Randolph Hearst wanted a strip in his King Features Syndicate to compete. The strip, which started in 1933 in the Boston Record, was originally called Pinkerton, Jr., since the main character was a boy named Pinky. (Dick Tracy also had a boy as a key character at the time.) The new strip was popular with Boston readers and the main character shortly became Sergeant Pat, while Pinky grew older quite rapidly. When the strip was picked up by King Features Syndicate in 1934, it was then retitled as Radio Patrol.

The central characters were Sergeant Pat, his partner Sam and policewoman Molly Day. Later retitled Sgt. Pat of Radio Patrol, the strip is notable for its serious tone, with little evidence of the fantastic or supernatural. The realistic bent even included accurate geography in its depictions of Boston and the New England countryside.

Charles Schmidt (1940)

Whenever artist Charlie Schmidt bought a new car, it was drawn into the strip as Sergeant Pat's new cruiser. One day Schmidt was at his dentist's office. The dentist wanted to know how come he wasn't one of the characters in the popular strip. Schmidt replied, "Because I already have one fat guy in it."

Walter Howey, the editor who assigned Schmidt and Sullivan to create the comic strip, was a personal friend of William Randolph Hearst. Howey's fictionalized character, Jed Leland, was later played by Joseph Cotten in Citizen Kane.

As with other strips of the period, Radio Patrol was adapted into different media, including a 1930s radio show. The 12-chapter Universal Pictures movie serial, Radio Patrol (1937), starring Grant Withers as Pat, was directed by Ford Beebe and Clifford Smith.


References

  • King Features Syndicate Publication, Famous Artists & Writers, 1949.

External links

search:

Site Map: RSS 2.0

Recent Searches: Radio Patrol
Jerash
t306t
t833t
The Jazz Singer
School discipline
Category:European newspaper stubs
Scorpion toxin
De Moivre's formula
Wonder Girls

Related Pages: