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・ Terry Buck
・ Terry Buckle
・ Terry Budge
・ Terry Buffalo Ware
・ Terry Bullivant
・ Terry Bunting
・ Terry Burke
・ Terry Alvino
・ Terry and Gerry
・ Terry and Julian
・ Terry and June
・ Terry and Lander Halls
・ Terry and Me
・ Terry and the Gunrunners
・ Terry and the Pirates
Terry and the Pirates (comic strip)
・ Terry and the Pirates (radio serial)
・ Terry and the Pirates (serial)
・ Terry and the Pirates (TV series)
・ Terry Anderson
・ Terry Anderson (American football)
・ Terry Anderson (footballer)
・ Terry Anderson (musician)
・ Terry Andrysiak
・ Terry Angus
・ Terry Anthony
・ Terry Antonis
・ Terry Armstrong
・ Terry Atkinson
・ Terry Aulich


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Terry and the Pirates (comic strip) : ウィキペディア英語版
Terry and the Pirates (comic strip)

''Terry and the Pirates'' was an action-adventure comic strip created by cartoonist Milton Caniff. Captain Joseph Patterson, editor for the Chicago Tribune New York News Syndicate, had admired Caniff's work on the children's adventure strip ''Dickie Dare'' and hired him to create the new adventure strip, providing Caniff with the title and locale. The Dragon Lady leads the evil pirates; conflict with the pirates was diminished in priority when World War II started.
The daily strip began October 22, 1934, and the Sunday color pages began December 9, 1934. Initially, the storylines of the daily strips and Sunday pages were different, but on August 26, 1936, they merged into a single storyline. In 1946, Caniff won the first Cartoonist of the Year Award from the National Cartoonists Society for his work on ''Terry and the Pirates''.
The strip was read by 31 million newspaper subscribers between 1934 and 1946.〔()〕
==Characters and story==
The adventure begins with young Terry Lee, "a wide-awake American boy," arriving in contemporary China with his friend, two-fisted journalist Pat Ryan. Seeking a lost gold mine, they meet George Webster "Connie" Confucius, interpreter and local guide. Initially, crudely drawn backgrounds and stereotypical characters surrounded Terry as he matched wits with pirates and various other villains. He developed an ever larger circle of friends and enemies, including Big Stoop, Captain Judas, Cheery Blaze, Chopstick Joe, Cue Ball and Dude Hennick.
Most notable of all was the famed ''femme fatale'', the Dragon Lady, who started as an enemy and later, during the war, became an ally. Caniff included a number of non-American female antagonists, all of whom referred to themselves in the third person. These included the Dragon Lady herself and crooks and spies like Sanjak and Rouge. In a rather bold move for a 1940s comic strip, Sanjak was hinted at being a lesbian cross-dresser with designs on Terry's girlfriend April Kane.〔(Applegate, David. "Coming Out in the Comic Strips" )〕 Caniff purportedly named the character after an island next to the isle of Lesbos.〔Robert C. Harvey (ed.), ''Milton Caniff: Conversations''. University Press of Mississippi, 2002, page 231.〕
Over time, owing to a successful collaboration with cartoonist Noel Sickles, Caniff dramatically improved to produce some of the most memorable strips in the history of the medium. Ray Bailey, Caniff's assistant on ''Terry and the Pirates'', went on to create his own adventure strip, ''Bruce Gentry''.〔

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