Spirou et les héritiers

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Spirou et Fantasio #4
Spirou et les héritiers
Spirou4heritiers.jpg
Cover of the Belgian edition
Date1952
SeriesSpirou et Fantasio
PublisherDupuis
Creative team
WritersFranquin
ArtistsFranquin
Original publication
Published inSpirou magazine
Issues
  1. 693 - #726
Date of publication1951 - 1952
LanguageFrench
ISBN2-8001-0006-0
Chronology
Preceded byLes chapeaux noirs, 1952
Followed byLes voleurs du Marsupilami, 1954

Spirou et les héritiers, written and drawn by Franquin, is the fourth album of the Spirou et Fantasio series, and a great leap in the expansion of the Spirou universe. After serial publication in Spirou magazine, it was released as a complete hardcover album in 1952.

Story[]

In Spirou and the Heirs, Fantasio is told he must compete against his cousin Zantafio to inherit from a long-absent uncle. The deceased has devised three trials for the two men: creating an original and useful invention, achieving a top 6 Grand Prix race position, and finally capturing a mysterious animal, the Marsupilami in the Palombian jungle. The dishonest Zantafio uses extreme tactics to win, and the two cousins are tied after the second task.

The third task proves the hardest, as the creature's prodigious reflexes and abilities make it impossible to capture, until it accidentally drinks a gallon of heating oil. Spirou and Fantasio nurse it and put it in a cage. On their way back, they are ambushed by hostile natives, but Zantafio, who has seen the errors of his ways and decided to drop out of the race, rescues them. Back home, Fantasio is declared the winner but learns that his impoverished uncle devised the race because he had nothing to leave his young relatives. The inheritance is the lessons in life learnt in the course of the competition. Fantasio declares himself satisfied.

Background[]

This album marks the first ever appearance (originally in Spirou issue #720, published January 31, 1952) of the Marsupilami.[1] The character appeared in most subsequent Spiriou et Fantasio stories by Franquin before getting its own series. Franquin told that the ideas leading to its creation stem from the period Franquin lived in Jijé's household with Will and Morris, from a joke concerning a very active tramway conductor with too many duties, in need of a long, agile rat's tail to help with the tasks, and how this core idea allowed the Marsupilami character to grow.[2] Another influence was Eugene the Jeep ("Pilou Pilou" in French) a character from Popeye which Franquin was fond of. He later expressed regret at having bound the Marsupilami species to a South American jungle, considering marsupials are found in Australia.[2]

With Les Heritiérs, Franquin also reveals his passion for automobile sports.

References[]

Footnotes
  1. ^ BDoubliées. "Spirou année 1952" (in French).
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b André Franquin from Cahier de la BD n° 47-48 (1980). "Franquin-Une Vie-1952". (in French)

External links[]


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