Schulz Creative Associates to respond to inquiries as to Peanuts artwork or the original art of Charles M. Additional information on appraisals and qualified appraisers is included in Internal Revenue Service Form 8283, which must be filed by persons claiming the donation of a gift-in-kind valued at more than $500.Īn Authentication Committee has been established by Charles M. If you wish to obtain an independent appraisal for your piece, please contact one of the organizations listed at the bottom of this page for information on how to find a certified appraiser near you.Īn appraisal is not necessary for gifts-in-kind valued at less than $5,000 by the donor. Appraisals for materials offered as gifts-in-kind are prohibited because the Internal Revenue Service regards the Museum as an interested party to such contributions. As a buyer of any unauthenticated art, you are responsible for determining for yourself the value the work brings to your life, knowing that it has no assigned monetary value and that you may or may not have an original. Patty was one of the featured characters in the original 1967 off-Broadway production of You're a Good Man (played by Karen Johnson), but by the time the show was revived on Broadway in the late 1990s, Patty's character was replaced by Sally, since Patty had ceased making regular appearances in the strip decades earlier.Museum staff does not authenticate or appraise the artwork of Charles M. It was Patty who first introduced Charlie Brown to Schroeder, claiming he lived next-door to her. She plays outfield on Charlie Brown's baseball team though on an early occasion she was seen as catcher before Schroeder was introduced. Her most recent appearance to this date was in the television special Happiness Is a Warm Blanket in which she was voiced by Ciara Bravo that special was set in the 1960s era of the strip and used characters exclusively from that era. Schulz claimed he drew Patty in the Mastrip in which she wants Snoopy to chase rabbits with her (a role previously usually taken by Frieda), although some fans have stated that the girl in the strip in question does not resemble Patty. Her last appearance was on November 27, 1997. Although the original Patty - or at least unnamed girls who bear a strong resemblance to her - would make cameo appearances throughout the run of Peanuts, she had disappeared as a featured character by the mid-1970s, but she continued making cameo appearances as late as the 90's. In fact like most Peanuts characters, Patty has appeared in numerous Peanuts television specials throughout the years, as well as all four movies, although she becomes a minor character after the 1960s.īy 1966, Schulz had recycled the "Patty" moniker for a new character, “Peppermint” Patty Reichardt. Patty had a major part in the original version of the stage musical You're a Good Man, as well as the early animated Peanuts television specials. Patty's hair color is light brown (sometimes red, or blonde) and she customarily wears a checked dress with a matching bow in her hair, usually coloured orange. Patty is also known for asking " Pig-Pen" why he is constantly so dirty. Eventually, she, along with Violet, became best known for their social snobbery and combined cruelty to Charlie Brown, although Violet was generally the more dominant of the two (thus Patty's role, in her later appearances, was reduced to that of a yes-girl). She was apparently the oldest child in the strip (possibly along with Violet and Shermy), as she attended school when Charlie Brown did not (strip of September 18, 1951). Patty's name was first mentioned on October 26, 1950, 24 days after her first appearance. In her (and the strip's) second appearance, Patty is shown walking down the sidewalk reciting "Little girls are made of sugar and spice and everything nice." She then punches Charlie Brown in the face and, without missing a beat, continues, "That's what little girls are made of!" ![]() The two appeared very early - Patty even appeared in the first strip, along with Charlie Brown and Shermy - but lacking the distinguishing characteristics of characters such as Lucy, Linus, or Sally, she became less prominent as years went by.Īs the only female character in the strip's very earliest days, Patty often acted as a sort of mother-hen, looking out for the younger characters however, she also set the tone for the strong female characters in the Peanuts universe. ![]() Schulz (often confused with Peppermint Patty, a different and later character from the same strip). Patty is a character in the comic strip Peanuts, created by Charles M.
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