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Marcie

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Marcie
Marcie

Marcie is a bespectacled fictional character featured in Charles M. Schulz's comic strip Peanuts.

History of the character

Marcie probably first made her appearance on the strip on June 18, 1968, even though she was not mentioned by name until October 11, 1971. Schulz refers to a bespectacled girl who was introduced on the earlier date as Clara, but she bore so much similarity with Marcie that it is believed he later merged the two personalities together.

In the animated special You're In the Super Bowl, Charlie Brown, Marcie's surname is given as "Johnson", but Schulz never gave her a surname in the comic strip; therefore, Johnson is not considered to be her official name.[link]

Originally, Marcie was portrayed as a bit dim-headed. For example, in It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown she makes several unsuccessful attempts at boiling eggs to make Easter eggs and then eats one without removing the shell first, to Peppermint Patty's great consternation. Later, she was portrayed as an overachiever (she once quipped that she had already chosen her college and enrolled her three children in preschool) and academically the brightest of the Peanuts cast. Even so, she is possibly the most believing and naïve of the gang. She apparently is under a great deal of pressure from her parents to excel in school, and in a story in 1990 sought refuge from her demanding parents at Charlie Brown's house and fell asleep on his couch.

James Ahrens first voiced Marcie from 1973 to 1977. Various actors and actresses played Marcie ever since.

Relationships with other characters

She is a close friend of Peppermint Patty (whom she always addresses as "Sir"), and, like Peppermint Patty, has an unrequited crush on Charlie Brown (whom she usually calls "Charles"), whom she once said that she loved and would be willing to marry if he asked her. She and Peppermint Patty also shared a crush on a boy named Pierre in the animated movie Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (and Don't Come Back!). While she is typically unskilled at sports, she often acts as Patty's voice of reason, whom Patty typically ignores at her own risk.

She also "dated" Snoopy when he was in character as a World War I ace fighter pilot, and when he suffered the flu, she nursed him back to health -- right around November 11, 1918, the date of the signing of the armistice that ended the War. In a story in which Snoopy fantasized he was an airline pilot, she served as flight attendant.

Postmodern interpretations

Marcie also bears a strong resemblance to tennis star Billie Jean King, a fact reinforced when Peppermint Patty, in a moment of exasperation, refers to Marcie's "Billie Jean King glasses". Also, the sport of tennis was an occasional theme in 'the Peanuts strip, and King was a close personal friend of Schulz.

Because of Peppermint Patty's obvious tomboyishness, and Marcie's resemblance to Billie Jean King, who was the first athlete to publicly admit to having a homosexual relationship, some contemporary writers have inferred a relationship between Peppermint Patty and Marcie; however, Peppermint Patty and Marcie are never specifically portrayed as lesbians in the comic strip. In fact, Marcie's only explicitly depicted romantic interests were, as noted above, male characters. Several television series that have featured "Peanuts" parodies have portrayed Marcie as a lesbian, including Family Guy, Robot Chicken and Saturday Night Live.

External links

Peanuts
Characters
5 | Charlotte Braun | Charlie Brown | Sally Brown | Eudora | Franklin | Frieda | The Great Pumpkin | Kite-Eating Tree | Lila | Little Red-Haired Girl | Marcie | Miss Othmar | Patty | Peggy Jean | Peppermint Patty | José Peterson | Pig-Pen | Poochie | Roy | Schroeder | Shermy | Joe Shlabotnik | Snoopy | Snoopy's siblings | Thibault | Linus van Pelt | Lucy van Pelt | Rerun van Pelt | Violet | Woodstock
Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (and Don't Come Back!) > A Boy Named Charlie Brown (feature film) | Race For Your Life, Charlie Brown | Snoopy, Come Home
Other Media
A Charlie Brown Christmas (soundtrack album) | The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show | Linus and Lucy | Snoopy Snoopy's Silly Sports Spectacular | This is America, Charlie Brown | You're a Good Man…
People
Vince Guaraldi > Donna Johnson | Bill Melendez | Charles M. Schulz

 


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