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COLE, JACK - Betsy and Me Sunday #2, neighborhood party 1958

Media Type: Pen and Ink
Art Type: Strip Art
Artists: Jack Cole All

Betsy and Me was a humorous American comic strip about a dysfunctional, post-war American middle-class family, created by Jack Cole (1914–1958). It was written and drawn first by Cole and then, after his death, by Dwight Parks. Distributed by Chicago Sun-Times Syndicate, the strip ran from May 26 to December 27, 1958.
Having mastered comic books and gag cartoons, in 1958, nearly two decades after he unveiled Plastic Man to the world, Jack Cole set his sights on the cartoonist's pot of gold — a syndicated newspaper strip. He hit the bull's-eye with Betsy and Me, a breezy domestic farce focusing on a middle-class urban couple and their smart-aleck genius son. ,br> Cole stripped his style down to its bare essentials, creating a strip that sparkles with economy, wit, and charm. What gave the strip its edge, however, was Cole's innovative storytelling, which utilized ironic tension between protagonist Chet Tibbit's words and actions to reveal him as fatuous and delusional. Betsy and Me was an instant success and newspapers were lining up to buy it.
Then, with only two-and-a-half months' worth of strips completed, Cole purchased a .22 caliber pistol and ended his life. And that's why Betsy & Me, innovative as it was, even while rising steadily in popularity, lasted only 15 weeks.

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