O Tico-Tico Explained

Editor:Luis Bartolomeu de Souza e Silva
Editor Title:Founder
Frequency:Weekly
Category:children's magazine
Firstdate:October 11, 1905
Lastdate:1977
Country:Brazil
Language:Portuguese

O Tico-Tico was a weekly Brazilian children's magazine, published between 1905 and 1977. It was the first magazine to publish comics in Brazil. It also featured stories and educational activities. Among its famous readers were Erico Verissimo, Lygia Fagundes Telles, Ruy Barbosa and Carlos Drummond de Andrade.

History and profile

O Tico Tico was founded by journalist Luis Bartolomeu de Souza e Silva, inspired by foreign magazines such as the French La Semaine de Suzette. The date of its first issue was October 11, 1905.[1] Luis Bartolomeu de Souza e Silva also launched a satirical magazine, O Malho.[2] O Tico Tico was published by the O Malho group.[3]

The magazine published comics by Brazilian artists such as Reco-Reco, Bolão e Azeitona, by Luis Sá and Lamparina, by J. Carlos and foreign comics, such as Richard Outcault's Buster Brown,[1] (known as Chiquinho in Brazil; its stories were loosely adapted by Brazilian writers), Popeye, Felix the Cat and Mickey Mouse (then known as Ratinho Curioso — "Curious Mouse").[4]

The magazine declined after the 1930s, with the competition of other comics magazines, such as Suplemento Juvenil and O Gibi. It stopped circulating in 1957, only with special editions being released until 1977, when O Tico-Tico ceased to exist.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: O Tico-Tico completa 100 anos. Waldomiro Vergueiro. October 11, 2005. Omelete. March 16, 2014.
  2. Felipe Botelho Correa. The Readership of Caricatures in the Brazilian Belle Époque: the Case of the Illustrated Magazine Careta (1908-1922). Patrimônio e Memória. January 2012. 8. 1. February 18, 2017.
  3. Web site: Comics: the early editorial market in Brazil (Daniel Serravalle de Sá 2008). Studies in Fiction. February 18, 2017. August 24, 2009.
  4. Web site: Disney comics in Brazil in the ‘30s and ‘40s. Roberto Elísio dos Santos. March 16, 2014.
  5. Web site: Primeira revista em quadrinhos do Brasil é furtada da Biblioteca Nacional. May 31, 2011. March 16, 2014.