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The Yellow Kid

Cartoon Character

The Yellow Kid was the creation of Richard Felton Outcault and is considered the first American comic strip character to be a popular star. The character first appeared in Truth magazine in 1894. By 1895 Outcault had a steady gig at the New York World newspaper, drawing a strip called "Hogan's Alley." One of the many characters was Mickey Dugan, a bald, big-eared youth in an oversized nightshirt. In color editions, the nightshirt was yellow, and within a few months readers were clamoring for more of The Yellow Kid. Outcault was hired away from the World in 1896 to work at William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal. For a time The Yellow Kid appeared in both newspapers, in Hogan's Alley at the World (drawn by George B. Luks) and in McFadden's Row of Flats (by Outcault) in the Journal. The Yellow Kid was the first comic strip character to have a line of merchandise, including gum, cigarettes and toys. By 1899 the popularity of the Kid waned as Outcault focused on another character (Buster Brown) and new comic strips and characters caught the public eye.

Extra credit: The newspapers that carried The Yellow Kid were sometimes called "yellow papers," and their reputation for sensational reports (of questionable veracity) led to the term "yellow journalism."

Four Good Links

The Yellow Kid

Great summary from Don Markstein's Toonopedia

The Yellow Kid

Brief entry from the Library of Congress archive of American Treasures

The R. F. Outcault Society

Their tribute to The Yellow Kid includes an illustrated history

Richard Felton Outcault

Brief summary of his career, with an early Kid cartoon

Vital Stats

Birth

1894
(age 114)

Birthplace

New York, New York

Death

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Best Known As

Early comic strip star by R.F. Outcault

Something in Common with Yellow Kid