Mr. Turner Introduces First Positive Children’s Show

Moorie Turner, Comic Strip Creator of ‘Wee Pals’, was the first black cartoonist in national syndication. As a Blackman,  Turner sketched the first Black Comic Strip called ‘Wee Pals,’ which debuted in newspapers in Chicago in 1965.

 

Moorie Turner | First Black Cartoonist
Photo: Newsfromme.com

🧐As a child, were you into comic strips? Do you remember the Saturday morning cartoon KID POWER, which aired on ABC in 1972? Well, Kid Power was based on Moorie Turner’s comic strip. Rankin/Bass, the creators of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, produced the show for television. 

Moorie Turner | First Black Cartoonist
Morrie Turner courtesy Cartoon Art Museum, San Francisco

According to an article posted by KQED News, “Mr. Turner’s comic strip “Wee Pals,” featuring childhood playmates who were white, black, Asian, Hispanic, and Jewish (joined in later years by a girl in a wheelchair and a deaf girl), was considered subversive in 1965 when a major syndicate first offered it to newspapers.

Only two or three of the hundreds of newspapers in the syndicate picked it up. By early 1968, there were five.

But of the many changes that occurred after the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. that April and the urban uprisings it started, some of the first appeared in the nation’s funny papers (“A Passing: Oakland’s Morrie Turner, Creator of ‘Wee Pals’ Comic Strip,” 2014).”

Thanks to Mr. Turner, Kid Power was the first positive Saturday morning cartoon show that featured a multicultural cast. Mr. Turner, the cartoonist, passed away on January 25, 2014. He was 90 years old.

References:

A Passing: Oakland’s Morrie Turner, Creator of “Wee Pals” Comic Strip. (2014, January 29). KQED. https://www.kqed.org/news/124677/a-passing-oaklands-morrie-turner-creator-of-wee-pals-comic-strip

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