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When asked to name his characters for the then upcoming 1964 TV adaptation, Charles Addams, creator of the original The New Yorker cartoon strips, first named the household's grandmother as Granny Frump and described her as Gomez's mother, thus making her Morticia's mother-in-law and Wednesday and Pugsley's paternal grandmother.
The Addams Family is a fictional family created by American cartoonist Charles Addams.They originally appeared in a series of 150 standalone single-panel comics, about half of which were originally published in The New Yorker between 1938 and their creator's death in 1988.
Family mentioned: Cousin Bleak (who had a middle eye that drooped), Morticia's Cousin Curdle (implied to have at least one eye in the back of her head), Cousin Farouk (named as the owner of the leg jutting from the stuffed swordfish on the wall), Aunt Blemish (who is mistaken for a barn in a photo), Grandpa Slurp (mistaken for two people in a ...
The Addams Family is an American Gothic sitcom based on Charles Addams's New Yorker cartoons.The 30-minute television series took the unnamed characters in the single-panel gag cartoons and gave them names, back stories, and a household setting.
The Addams Family is an American animated television series produced by H-B Production Co. and based on the eponymous comic strip characters by Charles Addams. [1] It is the second cartoon show to feature the characters (the first was the 1973 series, also produced by Hanna-Barbera), and ran from September 12, 1992, to November 6, 1993, on ABC.
"The dog is like 'what girl, go get you one too,'" someone else teased. "The way it’s folded makes it look like she’s holding it herself," a third person kidded.
That December, he officially premiered “Grandma” when the band played the long-gone Railhead steakhouse-bar near Park Lane. “When you’re singing in bars,” he said, “novelty songs get ...
Addams was born in Westfield, New Jersey.He was the son of Grace M. (née Spear; 1879–1943) and Charles Huey Addams (1873–1932), a piano company executive who had studied to be an architect. [2]