Archie (comic strip)

American comic strip From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Archie is a long-running American comic strip based on the line of the popular Archie Comics featuring the character Archie Andrews. Launched by McClure Newspaper Syndicate on February 4, 1946,[1] it features the misadventures of Archie Andrews and his pals. Archie is currently distributed by the Creators Syndicate.

AuthorBob Montana (1946–1975)
Craig Boldman (?–2011)
Illustrator(s)Dan DeCarlo (1975–c. 2001), Fernando Ruiz (?-2011) & Bob Smith (1998–2011)
Current status/scheduleDaily & Sunday; reruns
Launch dateFebruary 4, 1946 (1946-02-04)
Quick facts Author, Illustrator(s) ...
Archie
March 3, 1957 original Bob Montana artwork.
AuthorBob Montana (1946–1975)
Craig Boldman (?–2011)
Illustrator(s)Dan DeCarlo (1975–c. 2001), Fernando Ruiz (?-2011) & Bob Smith (1998–2011)
Current status/scheduleDaily & Sunday; reruns
Launch dateFebruary 4, 1946 (1946-02-04)
End dateJune 2011 (2011-06); reruns
Syndicate(s)McClure Newspaper Syndicate (1947 – c. 1952)
King Features Syndicate (c. 1952 – c. 1987)
Creators Syndicate (c. 1987 – present)
PublisherArchie Comics
Genre(s)Humor, teens
Close

Publication history

Bob Montana drew the first issue of the Archie comic book (November 1942). In 1946, he began drawing Archie daily and Sunday strips for 700 newspapers. He died of a heart attack on January 4, 1975, while cross-country skiing in Meredith, New Hampshire. Dan DeCarlo then took over the strip.

The Archie comic strip was written by Craig Boldman, pencilled by Fernando Ruiz, lettered by Jon D'Agostino, and inked by Bob Smith until June 2011. After that, Archie's publisher ceased creating new strips and began reprinting older strips by Dan DeCarlo.

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI