Is peppermint patty gay

Home / celebrities people / Is peppermint patty gay

The website SheKnows notes that she fought in a 1972 storyline to go to school dressed as she pleased --- with Snoopy as her lawyer, naturally --- and played all manner of team sports at a time when it wasn't common for girls to do so. Before him, every comic on the college page was either gag-driven, humor-driven, or an adventure comic. Peppermint Patty and Marcie, lesbians-to-be, are part of the fabric and part of a collective; and Velma is also part of a group of misfit kids that all work together at a common goal.”

Be sure to check out Gambin’s full Diabolique Magazine article for more on queer depictions in cartoons.

is peppermint patty gay

They constantly bounce off each other, offering a unique outsider look at the goings-on of the Peanuts Gang (it's worth noting that they and Franklin go to a different school than the rest of the kids).

RACE FOR YOUR LIFE, CHARLIE BROWN (1977)

 The Peanuts are also children and therefore all the social and personal quirks are accepted with open hearts – Peppermint Patty and Marcie are just as much part of the gang along with the pathetic but loveable Charlie Brown, the artistically inclined Schroder, the bossy Lucy, the sweet imaginative Sally and the forever cool pooch Snoopy.

"If you think about how female cartoon characters were portrayed on the comics page when Peppermint Patty came on the scene, they were usually the foils for their husbands, like 'Blondie' or 'Beetle Bailey,' " says cartoonist Paige Braddock, who serves as chief creative officer at Charles M. Schulz Creative Associates.

That was very groundbreaking and opened the door for other (comics) creators to do more unique female characters." 

Amy Poehler and Nick Offerman: How they 'tricked' NBC with crafting competition 'Making It'

Schulz, who died in 2000 at 77, named Peppermint Patty after the candy bar and his cousin, Patricia Swanson. This is often played for laughs --- there's a great gag in The Peanuts Movie where, when the two brush hands while turning tests in, Patty quips "Chuck!

There's no clear explanation. "I don't think there was any intentional messaging from Schultz about that because he's of a different era and I don't think he would have even thought about that. Charlie Brown, as is his wont, remains oblivious, even when Peppermint Patty drops some pretty obvious hints.

 

GoComics/Charles M.

Schulz.

 

Both Patty's deep bond with Marcie and her unrequited love for ol' Chuck are ingrained tenets of the Peanuts world, so why not take the next logical step and just have both? That's just common sense.

 

 

.

USA.

Directors: Bill Melendez & Phil Roman

Screenplay: Charles M.

Schulz

Featuring: Duncan Watson, Bill Melendez, Stuart Brotman, Gail Davis, Liam Martin, Melanie Kohn, Jimmy Ahrens & Greg Felton

 

RACE FOR YOUR LIFE, CHARLIE BROWN is streaming on Hoopla (Canada/USA) & Tubi (Canada/USA/Mexico/Australia) & for rent/purchase through AppleTV, YouTube and Amazon.

'Peanuts': How Peppermint Patty was 'groundbreaking' for female athletes, a 'comfort' for LGBTQ folks

There's never been a character quite like Peppermint Patty.

But that doesn't mean that people in the gay community don't find comfort in those characters or see themselves reflected back in those characters." 

As for why Marcie calls Peppermint Patty "Sir"? "But certainly his friendship with her informed a lot of the sports stuff that Peppermint Patty was into and her tenacity about doing well in sports."

Peppermint Patty was always the best athlete of the "Peanuts" strip, and once answered a teacher's question by saying the four seasons of the year are "baseball, football, basketball and hockey." Through the character, Schulz sparked an important dialogue about women in sports and gender equality on the field.

In the next onscreen Peanuts project --- be it a traditional take or an All Grown Up-esque take where the gang is in middle school or high school, why not just have Patty be out and proud? Making up for the silent exclusion of the past by making a character already known as a trailblazer into an even bigger one?

She's not shy about anything else; why would she hide her sexuality?

It's pretty easy to imagine Patty organizing an LGBTQ+ club or an all-inclusive school dance --- and knocking out anyone who gets in her way. "So along comes this young female character who's kind of a tomboy and charting her own path. The possibilities write themselves.

We're finally seeing the walls drop around including LGBT+ characters in children's programming, but there's still a long way to go.

Furthermore, she's easily the most outspoken character in the entire strip.