evilution an - yahoo gomez and pugsley are enthusiastic. morticia is even in disposition, muted,...
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Gomez and Pugsley are enthusiastic. Morticia is even in disposition, muted, witty, sometimes deadly.
Grandma Frump is foolishly good-natured. Wednesday is her mother’s daughter. A closely knit family,
the real head being Morticia—although each of the others is a definite character—except for Grandma,
who is easily led. Many of the troubles they have as a family are due to Grandma’s fumbling, weak
character. The house is a wreck, of course, but this is a house-proud family just the same and every
trap door is in good repair. Money is no problem.
Strong family values are evident throughout Charles Addams’s depictions of the family from the dark
side. They hang together; they feel secure with one another; they have rules and morals that keep the family
unit intact. Sure, the logs they burn in their fireplace are carved to look like men; they moonbathe instead of
sunbathe; they prefer gazing at the sweeping vista of a cemetery rather than sunlit rolling hills; they take their
outings in Central Park in the dead of night. The point is, they do these things together. They might be scary,
weird, creepy, and macabre, but The Addams Family is our secret envy. If only our family dinners could be so
much fun!
the Familythe Family
the “evilution” of Charles Addams’s singularly eccentric family
began long before the television and film interpretations made them
icons of American popular culture. Addams first created Morticia,
Lurch, and The Thing in a cartoon published in a 1938 issue of the New
Yorker—though he hadn’t named them at the time, or even conceived
of a family unit. (When he did name the deadly matriarch, he was
inspired by the Yellow Pages listing for “Morticians.”) Other charac-
ters were born and developed in a multitude of Addams’s cartoons
over the next twenty-six years, before the cheerfully creepy clan
debuted on ABC television in 1964 and later on the big screen, in 1991
and 1993.
The Addams Family: An Evilution is the first book to trace The
Addams Family history, presenting more than 200 cartoons created
by Charles Addams (American, 1912–1988) throughout his prolific
career; many have never been published before. Text by H. Kevin
Miserocchi, director of the Tee and Charles Addams Foundation,
offers a revealing chronology of each character’s evolution (for
instance, did you know that Addams originally named Pugsley
“Pubert”?), while Addams’s own incisive character descriptions,
originally penned for the benefit of the television show producers,
introduce each chapter. As the presence of the Family continues to
permeate generation after generation, and in celebration of the
Broadway musical opening in 2010, this book reminds us where these
oddly lovable characters came from and, in doing so, offers a lasting
tribute to one of America’s greatest humorists. A phenomenon of rare
proportion, The Addams Family is the manifestation of one artist’s
dark but irresistible wit, expressed with an uncommonly deft hand. 224 pages, 8 x 10 inches
Smyth-sewn casebound, with jacket
More than 200 cartoons (approximately 50 are
published here for the first time), many in color
10 chapters explore each Addams Family character,
as well as—their mansion a “house to die for”
Copyright © 2010 by Tee and Charles Addams
Foundation. All rights reserved.
$39.95 US ($47.95 Canada)
ISBN 978-0-7649-5388-0
Catalog No. A180
Available March 2010
Printed in China
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