Madhu Muskan Explained
Madhu Muskan (Sweet Smiles) was an Indian weekly comic magazine published by the Gowarsons Group of Companies from 1972 to 2004. Its circulation was as high as 100,000 during the late 1970s.[1]
Overview
Gowarsons began publishing Madhu Muskan in New Delhi in 1972.[2] [3] The magazine was initially published fortnightly and later became a weekly.[4]
While not strictly a comic book, Madhu Muskan featured illustrated comic stories on 90 percent of its pages, with popular characters of the time. Four to five pages contained magazine-type stories, and the remainder were comics.[5]
The Gowarsons Group also held the Indian rights to Archie, Asterix[6] and several other titles.[1] Madhu Muskan ceased publication in 2004, amid financial difficulties in the Indian comic industry.[7]
Characters
Madhu Muskan characters are primarily humorous. Characters during the 1970s and 1980s include:
- Daddy Ji, the main character, who appeared for almost 25 years[8] and appeared on the cover of each issue. Daddy Ji's creator, Harish M. Sudan, modelled the character on his family and his brother-in-law.[5]
- Babloo, a young detective appearing in every issue and whose uncle is the superintendent of police.[5]
- Popat-Chaupat, a hapless comic duo beset with money problems.[5]
- Sustram-Chustram, another comic duo with many problems. Chustram is overly energetic, and Sustram is extremely lazy.[5]
- Bhootnath Aur Jaadui Tulika, a popular ghost with a magical paintbrush called Tulika.
- Minni, a clever, mischievous and helpful little girl.[5]
- Dakoo Paan Singh, a fun- and danger-loving character who developed super-human strength when he chewed paan quickly whipped up by Supari Lal, his side-kick. His enemies included Madam Motallo, a fat woman who became a bouncing ball and flattened everything she bounced on; Serpa Soongh, a snake charmer; Cheenku, who could knock things down by sneezing; and Jadugar Jhundu, an evil magician. Their author was Murli Sundram.
- Filmi Reporter Kalamdas, a reporter who interviewed Bollywood stars; actual movie stars had comic names.[9]
Comics
After seeing the popularity of their characters in Madhu Muskan, the publishers started releasing comic books. They began with Mudhu Muskan Comics, featuring characters from Madhu Muskan, and Trishul Comics, which also included these characters. Gowarsons Comics also published foreign titles in Hindi, such as Asterix,[6] The Famous Five,[10] Lucky Luke and Khalifa Haroon-Al-Paasha and Iznogoud.[11]
Notes and References
- News: Astérix and the existential crisis. Mint. 29 October 2009. 13 September 2010.
- Book: Raminder Kaur. Saif Eqbal. Adventure Comics and Youth Cultures in India. 11 October 2018. Taylor & Francis. 978-0-429-78431-6. 64.
- News: Krish Raghav. Astérix and the existential crisis. 25 September 2016. Live Mint. 29 October 2009.
- Web site:
- Comic No.67: Madhu Muskan No.212
. Comic World. 25 September 2016. 12 January 2008.
- Web site: Madhu Muskan. Indian-comics.awardspace.com. 29 February 2016.
- Web site: Indian Comicology: Asterix aur Cleopetra. Indiancomicology.blogspot.com . 7 February 2015. 29 February 2016.
- Web site: Indian Comics Poll 6. Virily. 5 February 2018. 8 October 2023.
- News: Desi comic heroes still cast a spell . https://web.archive.org/web/20120405211629/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2008-03-30/india/27758326_1_comic-book-indian-comics-diamond-comics. dead. 5 April 2012. . 30 March 2008 . 13 September 2010.
- Web site: Indian Comicology: Shaktimaan aur Giddh Grah. Indiancomicology.blogspot.com. 21 March 2015. 29 February 2016.
- Web site: Indian Comicology: Sagar Samrat Ka Khazana. Indiancomicology.blogspot.in. 29 April 2015. 29 February 2016.
- Web site: Indian Comicology: Moorkhta Diwas . Indiancomicology.blogspot.com. 14 January 2015. 29 February 2016.