Blondin et Cirage explained

Caption:The title characters on the cover of the fourth album (1947)
Creator:Jijé
Status:Discontinued
Genre:Humor comics, Adventure comics
First:1939
Last:1963
Publisher:Dupuis
Illustrator:Jijé

Blondin et Cirage (Blondin and Cirage, literally Blondy and Shoe polish) is a Belgian humoristic adventure comic strip by Jijé created in 1939 for the Catholic children's magazine Petits Belges.[1] The comic was also published in its Flemish counterpart Zonneland, initially under the name Wietje en Krol, later as Blondie en Blinkie. It stars two boys, Blondin – who is white – and Cirage – who is black.

Concept

Blondin is a white, blond-haired boy who functions as the straight man of the comic. Cirage is a black boy who functions as his comedic sidekick, yet is equally clever; despite Cirage's role of providing comic relief, he is the one who solves the problems the duo encounters, and so can be considered the true hero of the series.[2] They go on several adventures which bring them to the United States, Africa and Mexico.

History

Blondin et Cirage made their debut in the 29th issue of Petits Belges in 1939. They had three adventures during World War II, with Cirage being absent in the last one due to the racial policies of the Nazi occupation. After World War II they reappeared in Spirou where their adventures ran from 1947 until 1963.[3] [4] [5]

Blondin et Cirage is notable for featuring the first black titular character in a Belgian comic strip. While Cirage has a somewhat stereotypical appearance, the character is otherwise far more clever and sympathetic than most portrayals of black people in Western media at that time.[1] [6]

Albums

In popular culture

In 1998 the characters were commemorated as a comic book wall painting designed by Georgios Oreopoulos et Daniel Vandegeerde, part of the Brussels' Comic Book Route. It can be visited in the Rue Capucine/Capucijnstraat in Brussels.[7] [8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jijé.
  2. Web site: Les aventures de Blondin et Cirage. https://web.archive.org/web/20000423003832/http://bdoubliees.com/journalspirou/series1/blondin.htm. dead. 23 April 2000. BD oubliées.
  3. Patrick Gaumer, Dictionnaire mondial de la bande dessinée, Tours, Larousse, janvier 2001.
  4. Thierry Martens, (Tout Jijé : 1938–1940, Belgique, Dupuis, décembre 2001.
  5. Book: Delisle, Philippe. Spirou, Tintin et Cie, une littérature catholique?: années 1930-années 1980. 1 January 2010. KARTHALA Editions. 9782811103057. Google Books.
  6. Book: Delisle, Philippe. Bande dessinée franco-belge et imaginaire colonial: des années 1930 aux années 1980. 1 January 2008. KARTHALA Editions. 9782811100834. Google Books.
  7. Web site: Blondin – Cirage Comic Strip Wall.
  8. Web site: eBru – Mur BD Blondin & Cirage (Jijé) – Bruxelles Pentagone. 1 January 2017. 26 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160926022956/http://www.ebru.be/Other/Strips/bruxelles-1000-mur-bd-blondin-et-cirage.html. dead.