When television producer Lee Mendelson heard jazz pianist/composer Vince Guaraldi's hit single "Cast Your Fate to the Wind" on his car radio, he thought he had found the right composer for the ...
While it celebrates the 75th anniversary of “Peanuts” this week, Santa Rosa’s Charles M. Schulz Museum is sharing a new viral dance for Gen Z fans of Snoopy led by the comic strip creator’s ...
Everyone knows the Vince Guaraldi soundtrack A Charlie Brown Christmas (Fantasy Records, 1965). However, Guaraldi composed and performed music for many other Peanuts-related projects, two of which ...
Charles Schulz's Peanuts celebrates 75 years of making us laugh and smile while exploring some of life's simple truths.
When it was first broadcast in December 1965, no one was quite sure what to make of A Charlie Brown Christmas, the first Peanuts tale ever shown on television. Untrained children did the characters’ ...
Charles Schulz' Peanuts comics are as delightful to read now as they were when they began publication in 1950, and this continued success is due in large part to the beloved characters that he ...
Charles Schulz's Peanuts featured Linus Van Pelt quoting Victorian scholar and critic John Ruskin (“The best grace is the consciousness we have earned our dinner.”) and also spawned the animated ...
Not a generation, but a number of generations, grew up under the influence of Charles Schulz and his drawings – those of the Peanuts characters of Snoopy, Charlie Brown, Peppermint Patty, and Lucy.
Hosted on MSN
The Heartwarming Story Behind Peanuts' Linus van Pelt, and Charles Schulz's Inspiration For His Name
Charles Schulz's Peanuts is perhaps the most iconic comic strip in history, being spun off into numerous TV specials, shows and films. Filled with countless iconic characters, Peanuts has found a way ...
Fifty years ago, A Charlie Brown Christmas made its television debut, starting a holiday tradition that’s right up there with chestnuts roasting on an open fire and leaving cookies out for Santa. And ...
When it was first broadcast in December 1965, no one was quite sure what to make of “A Charlie Brown Christmas,” the first “Peanuts” tale ever shown on TV. Untrained children did the characters’ ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results