Wee Peem
Wee Peem | |
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Comic strip character(s) from The Beano | |
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Publication information | |
Stars in |
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Creator(s) | James Jewell |
Other contributors |
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First appearance | Issue 1 (30 July 1938) |
Last appearance | Issue 3945 (25 July 2018)[1] |
Appearance timeline | Issues 1 – 89, 714 – 765, 486 – 507 |
Also appeared in | The Beano Annual |
Current status | Discontinued |
Main Character | |
Name | Peem |
Alias(es) | Wee Peem |
Wee Peem was a British comic strip character in The Beano, first written and designed by James Jewell.[2] He starred in two comic strips between 1938 and 1957, and would get up to various forms of mischief in a similar way to later Beano strips such as Dennis the Menace and Minnie the Minx.
Synopsis[]
Peem is a little boy with a large, round head with long limbs, usually dressed in a stripy jumper, shorts, and a strip cap too small for his head. His stories would be about his misbehaviours irritating and angering adults. His name is Scottish slang for "Little James".
Character history[]
Peem debuted in Wee Peem (He's a Proper Scream) in The Beano's first issue[Note 1][4] with Lord Snooty and His Pals, Helpful Henry, Morgyn the Mighty, The Adventures of Tom Thumb, and Big Eggo.[5] The Beano magazine contained two types of children's fiction: comic strips and adventure prose stories; Wee Peem was the former, inspired by the funny pages of American newspapers.[5] When it ended in issue 89,[6] DC Thomson reprinted some of the Wee Peem strips in The People's Journal, along with some new stories by James Malcolm.[2]
Peem returned to The Beano a decade later in issue 486's Wee Peem's Magic Pills,[7] a 21-issue series by Charles Grigg about Peem and his mischief after finding a bottle of tablets (named B-Pills)[8] that fell from Dr Quack's medicine truck.[9] Peem made his first Beano Annual appearance in 1940.[10]
In 1956, the Wee Peem strip got rebooted by Hugh Morren[11] for 51 stories between issues 714 and 765.[12][13] As of 2021, it was the last time Peem had a Beano series, although he would make appearances for the 80th anniversary in both the 2019 Beano Annual[14] and the 80th-anniversary issue.[1]
Legacy[]
A similar character in both appearance and mannerisms appeared in the first Dandy Monster Comic under the name Dipper the Dodger.[15]
References[]
Notes[]
Bibliography[]
- The History of the Beano. Dundee, Scotland: D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd. 2008. ISBN 978-1-902407-73-9.
- Anderson, John, ed. (2018). Beano: 80 Years of Fun. D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd. ISBN 9781845357023.
Citations[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Auchterlounie, Nigel; Parkinson, Nigel (25 July 2018). Walliams, David (ed.). "The Big Birthday Horror!: A Beanotown Adventure". The Beano. No. 3945. D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd.
- ^ Jump up to: a b History of the Beano (2008), p. 305.
- ^ History of The Beano (2008), p. 315.
- ^ Jewel, James (30 July 1938). Moonie, George (ed.). "Wee Peem". The Beano Comic. No. 1.
- ^ Jump up to: a b 80 Years (2018), p. 11.
- ^ Jewell, James (6 April 1940). Moonie, George (ed.). "Wee Peem". The Beano Comic. No. 89. D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd.
- ^ Grigg, Charles (10 November 1951). Moonie, George (ed.). "Wee Peem's Magic Pills". The Beano. No. 486. D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd.
- ^ Gifford, Denis (1987). Encyclopedia of Comic Characters: Over 1200 Characters!. Harlow: Longman. p. 237. ISBN 0582892945.
- ^ History of The Beano (2008), p. 317.
- ^ "Archive: Beano Annual 1940 - The Very First Beano Book | Archive Annuals | Archive on Beano.com". Beano. Archived from the original on 12 October 2021.
- ^ History of the Beano (2008), p. 322.
- ^ Morren, Hugh (24 March 1956). Moonie, George (ed.). "Wee Peem". The Beano. No. 714. D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd.
- ^ Morren, Hugh (16 March 1957). Moonie, George (ed.). "Wee Peem". The Beano. No. 765. D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd.
- ^ Anderson, John, ed. (2018). Annual 2019 Beano. D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd.
- ^ Dandy Monster Comic No. 1. Dundee, Scotland: D.C. Thomson & Co. Ltd. in conjunction with Aurum Press Ltd. 2006. pp. 54, 86, 127. ISBN 1-84513-217-3.
- Beano strips
- 1938 comics debuts
- 1957 comics endings
- Comics characters introduced in 1938
- Comics characters who use magic
- British comics characters
- Child characters in comics
- Fictional tricksters
- Gag-a-day comics
- Fantasy comics
- Fictional British people
- Fictional Scottish people
- British comics stubs