Marvin (comic strip)

Marvin, later called Marvin & Family (and Marvin and Staff on Sundays in October 2020), is a daily newspaper comic strip created by cartoonist Tom Armstrong and distributed in the U.S. by Hearst's King Features Syndicate. Debuting in 1982, it revolves around the life and times of a young baby boy named Marvin, along with his parents, Jeff and Jenny Miller, and their dog Bitsy. In 1989, CBS aired a special, "Marvin, Baby of the Year."

Marvin
Author(s)Tom Armstrong
Websitehttp://comicskingdom.com/marvin
Current status/scheduleRunning
Launch dateAugust 1, 1982 (August 1, 1982)
Alternate name(s)Marvin & Bitsy, Marvin & Family, Marvin & Staff
Syndicate(s)(current) King Features Syndicate (1986–present)
(past) News America Syndicate (1984–1986)
Field Newspaper Syndicate (1982–1984)
Genre(s)Humor

Publication history

Cartoonist Tom Armstrong debuted the seven-days-weekly comic strip Marvin on Sunday, August 1, 1982.[1] Originally distributed by North America Syndicate, it later went through Hearst's King Features Syndicate. (There was an earlier strip named Marvin, which was created by Pat Moran and syndicated in 1973.) The strip revolves around the life and times of a young baby boy named Marvin, along with his parents, Jeff and Jenny Miller, and their dog Bitsy.

On March 10, 1989, CBS aired a half-hour Animated special, Marvin, Baby of the Year.[2] It has never been released on home video.

The location is not explicitly defined. In 2012, in honor of the strip's 30th anniversary, it spoofed Back to the Future where baby Marvin meets himself as a full-grown man. The 30-something Marvin tells his baby self what awaits for him.

A few flashback episodes showed Marvin as an unborn fetus, in imitation of Eggbert, a strip by LAF.

Recurring characters

Other major characters include Megan, Marvin's cousin; Janet, who is Megan's mother and Jenny's sister; Ming Ming, Janet's adopted daughter from China; Bea and Roy, Marvin's maternal grandparents; and Doris, Marvin's paternal grandmother.[3] Megan's father has not been seen (the strip indicates Megan's parents are divorced). Minor characters have included Bea and Roy's toy schnauzer named Junior;[4][5] Roy's friend Bernie; and Marvin's friends Jordan, Warren (who is a genius,[6][7] with a 174 IQ[8]), Kyle,[9] Gerald[10] and Will, a child prodigy who spelled "prodigy" at five months.[11][12] Jeff has a macho friend, Ted.[13] Jordan has a girlfriend Shillina.[14] Marvin's goldfish are Finn and Gill.[15] As of 2022 Jordan has a baby sister Lici.[16] Marvin's paternal grandfather has a cat named Clawfull.[17]

Prior to 2013 the strip's name was simply Marvin.

Plot

Continuity

Continuity is similar to that of Garfield in that milestone events affect future storylines but dramatic events occurring in one day's strip may be ignored in the next: in the strip that ran on October 4, 1982, Marvin shaves his head with his father's electric razor, but the next day his hair is back to normal. The strip's characters age irregularly, as is common in comics and other media (see soap opera rapid aging syndrome). Marvin is identified as less than 1 year old in the December 16, 1999 strip, where he states it is his first Christmas, but in later strips he states he is two years old. He learned to walk all at once on July 16, 2003.

In earlier strips, the baby characters did not speak, save for occasional crying, but were capable of understanding each other telepathically, an ability seemingly lost by adulthood. Animals shared this power to communicate without spoken words, communicating both with each other and with the babies.

Early strips often featured puns; in later strips, much of the humor comes from the babies' limited understanding of the world around them. For example, Marvin wonders about an approaching winter by thinking to himself "Why is now the time when people put their clothes on..." then looking out the window at a tree with shedding leaves "...And trees take theirs off".

Suspension of disbelief

Events in Marvin are portrayed as real, no matter how fantastic; there is never a story in which a baby's dramatic experiences are shown in the end to be ordinary happenings when seen by an adult's wiser eyes. These storyline elements include the frequent appearance of Santa Claus around Christmastime along with in-universe parallels of contemporary happenings; for example, one baby made hundreds of millions of dollars operating a website called cryspace around the time that MySpace was most popular among readers of the strip, and his fortune generates plot elements in later strips.

Fourth-wall breaking

A few story arcs involve fourth wall breaking, such as appearances by other King Features Syndicate characters, and even those from other strips such as Garfield. On June 24, 2016, Marvin and his best friend Jordan are shown reading Marvin's personal blog, and followers of that blog share the names of some of the then-active commenters on the Marvin comic's website.

Milestone events

Some events in the history of the strip are reflected permanently in the future strips.

Bea and Roy Arnold[18][19] lost their retirement savings in the 2008 recession and had to move in with Jeff and Jenny; Janet did not have enough room.[18][20] As of 2021 the grandparents are no longer living with the family.[21]

In 2010, the Millers got new neighbors, the Purfects, who are so perfect they make the Millers feel inadequate. Rodney Purfect has a PhD and is a company president, has won the Heisman Trophy and climbed Mount Kilimanjaro. He is six feet five inches tall and very manly. Barbie Purfect is a blonde housewife who attended cooking school in Paris, was a cheerleader, class president and sorority president. Rodney Purfect II is two and a half years old but reads at a third grade level, performed his piano composition for Queen Elizabeth II and was potty trained at 6 months.[22] He also has blond hair.

In 2005, Marvin guest starred in the comic strip Blondie for its 75th anniversary.

In 2019, Jeff's mother was kicked out of her retirement home and moved in with the family.[23]

References

  1. Marvin at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived Archived 2021-05-27 at the Wayback Machine from the original on February 13, 2016.
  2. Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. p. 295. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  3. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. March 29, 2020, King Features Syndicate.
  4. "Marvin". DailyINK. Retrieved December 16, 2011.
  5. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. May 31, 2014, King Features Syndicate.
  6. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. April 26, 2016, King Features Syndicate.
  7. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. April 27, 2016, King Features Syndicate.
  8. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. June 24, 2019, King Features Syndicate.
  9. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. August 9, 2016, King Features Syndicate.
  10. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. August 8, 2021, King Features Syndicate.
  11. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. June 29, 2016, King Features Syndicate.
  12. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. July 1, 2016, King Features Syndicate.
  13. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. May 9, 2014, King Features Syndicate.
  14. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. September 7, 2018, King Features Syndicate.
  15. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. November 25, 2020, King Features Syndicate.
  16. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. September 4, 2022, King Features Syndicate.
  17. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. September 11, 2023, King Features Syndicate.
  18. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. December 8, 2008, King Features Syndicate.
  19. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. March 30, 2010, King Features Syndicate.
  20. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. December 12, 2008, King Features Syndicate.
  21. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. May 21, 2021, King Features Syndicate.
  22. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. August 15, 2010, King Features Syndicate.
  23. Tom Armstrong (w, a). Marvin. September 22, 2019, King Features Syndicate.

Further reading

  • Strickler, Dave. Syndicated Comic Strips and Artists, 1924-1995: The Complete Index. Cambria, California: Comics Access, 1995. ISBN 0-9700077-0-1
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