A year ago in my first posting about Charles Schulz, I said the first animation of Charlie Brown and company was done in 1963. Incorrect! It was done in 1959, for car maker Ford.
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Day: October 13, 2007
Grand Marshall Sparky
This photo shows Charles Schulz and his daughter Amy in 1974, when Schulz was the Grand Marshal of the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, CA. That was a year after Schulz married his second wife, and five years after Amy began ice skating professionally.

I admire and respect Amy Schulz greatly for her vigorous and articulate rebuttal of what she calls completely inaccurate characterizations of her father and his family, made by David Michaelis in his new biography of Charles Schulz. I will, however, buy and read the book, just as I did Rheta Grimsley Johnson’s book about Schulz, over ten years ago (revised from a 1989 edition).
Schulz In His Studio, 1963
Here are a couple more minutes of Charles Schulz from the never-aired 1963 TV special, “A Boy Named Charlie Brown.” It picks up from where I left off in a post from one year ago. The video is available from the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, CA. The studio shown in this video clip was destroyed in a 1966 fire.
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Note: the comic strip that Schulz draws is obviously only for show, and not an actual installment. It’s just a series of drawings, as if an introduction for a Sunday strip. Also, at that time Schulz was still locked into the 4-panel format, and would not have used two daily panels for a single drawing.
“The Book Is Horrible And Wrong” – Amy Schulz
Good grief! What a month this is turning out to be for Charles Schulz, between the new biography and the American Masters program.

Amy Schulz has appeared on the Early Show and said the family is outraged and feels betrayed by the David Michaelis biography of her father. The link will probably default to the photo, but be sure to click on the tab for video to watch the entire conversation with Amy.
