
Lucy Van Pelt
Lucille "Lucy" Van Pelt is a fictional character in the syndicated comic strip Peanuts, written and drawn by Charles Schulz. She is the older sister of Linus and Rerun. Lucy is characterized as a "fussbudget", crabby,[1][2] bossy and opinionated girl who bullies most other characters in the strip, particularly Linus and Charlie Brown.[3]
Lucy Van Pelt
March 3, 1952
December 13, 1999 (comic strip)
Various voice actresses
See below
Female
Linus Van Pelt and Rerun Van Pelt (younger brothers)
Unnamed blanket-hating grandmother
Unnamed parents
Marion (aunt)
Felix Van Pelt (paternal grandfather)
History[edit]
The third new character in Peanuts after Violet and Schroeder, Lucy made her debut on March 3, 1952.[9] Originally based on Schulz's adopted daughter Meredith,[10] Lucy was a goggle-eyed toddler who continually annoyed her parents and the older kids. Her future irascibility was hinted at in a 1953 strip when she tells Charlie Brown that she'd just been expelled from nursery school.[11] Over the next two years, she aged up so that by 1954, she appeared to be about the same age as Charlie Brown. (The early strips with toddler-age Lucy were not reprinted until after Charles Schulz's death.) Within a few months of her introduction, Schulz altered Lucy's eyes to have the same appearance as that of the other characters, except for small extra lines around them which were also later sported by her two siblings.
Lucy has short, black hair and wears a blue dress with blue socks and saddle shoes until the late 1970s when Schulz began showing the strip's female characters in pants and shirts in order to keep their outfits more contemporary. By the late 1980s, she had switched to this look permanently.
Lucy was named after Louanne Van Pelt, a former neighbor of Charles Schulz in Colorado Springs and, according to David Michaelis of Time Magazine, was modeled after Schulz's first wife, Joyce.[12]
In a 1967 interview with Psychology Today, Schulz said that his favorite characters were Snoopy, Linus and Charlie Brown. "Lucy is not a favorite, because I don't especially like her, that's all. But she works, and a central comic-strip character is not only one who fills his role very well, but who will provide ideas by the very nature of his personality." Also in the article, Schulz added that Lucy was mean, because supposedly weak people dominating strong people is funny: "There is nothing funny about a little boy being mean to a little girl. That is simply not funny! But there is something funny about a little girl being able to be mean to a little boy."
He continues: "You have to give (Lucy) credit though; she has a way of cutting right down to the truth. This is one of her good points. She can cut through a lot of the sham and she can really feel what's wrong with Charlie Brown which he can't see himself."[13]
Annual football strips[edit]
Lucy frequently pulls the football away from Charlie Brown right as he is about to kick it.[14][15][16][17]
The first occasion on which she did this was November 16, 1952[18] (Violet unintentionally did the same thing a year before because she was afraid Charlie Brown would accidentally kick her),[19] but unlike subsequent stunts, Lucy first pulled the ball away because she did not want Charlie Brown to get it dirty (he took a second try in the same strip, only to trip over it at the end).
The football strips became an annual tradition, and Schulz did one nearly every year for the rest of the strip's run, becoming a core part of Peanuts lore. One of her infamous example is in the animated special It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown, where her actions (she pulled the ball away four times) cost the football team to lose in the Homecoming game, which Charlie Brown is blamed even though it's not his fault.
Charlie Brown did in fact kick the football in the September 12, 1956 strip, but only because Schroeder was holding the ball.[20] In a July–August 1979 story when Charlie Brown checked himself into the hospital due to feeling ill, Lucy was so distraught at Charlie Brown in that state that she vowed that she would let Charlie Brown kick the football. When Charlie Brown was released, he kept her to that vow. Unfortunately, when Charlie Brown made his place kick, he missed the ball and hit her hand instead.