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・ Petelo Kahofuna
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Pete the Tramp
・ Pete Thodos
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・ Pete Titanic
・ Pete Tomaszewski
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・ Pete Townshend discography
・ Pete Townshend Live BAM 1993
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Pete the Tramp : ウィキペディア英語版
Pete the Tramp

''Pete the Tramp'' was an American comic strip by Clarence D. Russell (1895–1963) which was distributed by King Features Syndicate for more than three decades. Howard Eugene Wilson, in the ''Harvard Educational Review'', described the strip's title character as "a hobo with a gentleman's instincts."〔(Wilson, Howard Eugene. ''Harvard Educational Review'', 1937. )〕
Russell studied at the Chicago Art Institute and then began working as a freelance artist. During World War I, he went overseas with the American Expeditionary Force. When he returned to America in 1920, he worked for several New York newspapers while also contributing to ''Judge''.
==Characters and story==
Russell's work for ''Judge'' included cartoons of a homeless man who was given the name Pete the Tramp when he was syndicated to newspapers beginning January 10, 1932.
Comic strip historian Don Markstein offered this description of Pete the Tramp:
During its long run, ''Pete the Tramp'' had several topper strips, as detailed by comic strip historian Allan Holtz:
:C.D. Russell's wonderful ''Pete The Tramp'' went through a trio of topper strips on its Sunday pages. The first, ''Pete's Pup'', was a dog strip, sort of a canine counterpart to the ''Mutt and Jeff'' topper, ''Cicero's Cat''. The next was ''The Topper Twins'', my favorite because the name is an in-joke to the industry term "topper". For some reason, Russell alternatively called this strip ''The Tucker Twins''. The last topper was ''Snorky''... It started in 1935 and is believed to have run as late as 1939. Getting an end date on these later toppers can be a Herculean task, because fewer and fewer papers printed the toppers as the decade of the 1930s wore on. In fact, I have no examples of ''Snorky'' later than 1937 in my collection; the 1939 date is based on the strip's listing in the ''Editor & Publisher'' yearbooks.〔(Holtz, Allan. "Obscurity of the Day: Snorky,'' March 3, 2006. )〕
''The Further Adventures of Pete the Tramp'' (1944) was a live-action stag film which stole Russell's character and put him in an erotic situation.〔(Nyback, Dennis. "Stag Party Films", September 29, 2006. )〕 During World War II, Russell and Otto Soglow drew their characters at kids' bond rallies in Albany, New York and elsewhere. To cheer up soldiers, Russell also did ''Pete the Tramp'' drawings in hospitals during WWII.〔(Stuart, Lyle. ''Mary Louise''. Citadel, 1972, )〕
''Pete the Tramp'' ended December 12, 1963, following Russell's death on October 22 of that year.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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