U.S. Acres
From Free net encyclopedia
Image:USAcresCast.jpg U.S. Acres (known as Orson's Farm outside the United States) is a comic strip that ran from 1986 to 1989 created by Jim Davis, author of the popular comic strip Garfield. The comic was launched on 3 March 1986 in a then-unprecedented 505 newspapers by United Feature Syndicate. At the peak of the comic's popularity, there were children's books, plush animals (particularly of the characters Booker, Sheldon, and Orson), and posters of the main characters. Its animated adaptation was included in the TV show Garfield and Friends. U.S. Acres features various barnyard animals living on a farm.
The final daily strip was printed on 15 April 1989, while the final Sunday, and the strip itself, appeared on 7 May 1989. The strip's cancellation did not affect its animated counterpart, though, which remained a part of Garfield and Friends in its seven-year run.
Contents |
Books
Comic strip collections
Five comic strip collections were published, by Topper Books of New York City.
Children's books
- Template:Cite book
- Hold That Duck!
- I Wasn't Hatched Yesterday
- It's a Pig's Life
- Sir Orson to the Rescue
- Take this Rooster, Please!
- Try Counting Sheep
- Wade Dives In
- Wade's Haunted Halloween
Characters
Main characters
The primary traits of the cartoon's main characters were established during the run of the comic strip, even down to such visual gags as the head on Wade's inner tube having the same facial expression as Wade.
- Orson Pig: (voiced by Gregg Berger) A kindhearted but often naive bibliophile whose work ethic makes him the functional leader. His good humor being tested is one of the common gags in the cartoons. He tends to avoid conflicts. He sometimes becomes a costumed superhero named Power Pig, which more often than not causes his friends or adversaries to fall down laughing at him. His imagination, especially when reading, is a double-edged sword: it can lead to him being the target or conduit for Roy's tricks, or he might unwittingly solve a real-life problem while imagining himself to be a book's character. It is known to cause mass hallucinations (indeed, one can often deduce that Orson is reading by the change of scenery) or even warp reality. (Oddly enough, this does not happen when he reads bedtime stories to Booker and Sheldon.) In the first two years of the strip's run, Orson had eyelashes like Nermal.
- Roy Rooster: (Thom Huge) A loud, greedy rooster who enjoys practical jokes. Except for a few instances, he is tolerated because his job (waking up everyone and 'tending' to chickens) is important, although he does his best to avoid labor whenever possible. He has a special delight in tormenting the easy target of Wade.
- Wade Duck: (Howard Morris) His good nature is sometimes shadowed by his overwhelming hypochondria and phobia of nearly everything, especially flying. Wade is so scared of drowning that he constantly wears a kiddie pool inner tube (which has a likeness of him on the front which, for careful-eyed fans, sometimes changes expression depending on his own mood). He can be easily driven into an incoherent raving of fear.
- Bo Sheep: (Frank Welker) Lanolin's brother with a pleasant, "surfer" drone in his voice. Not particularly bright sometimes, but always cool, collected, and dependable. (Possibly a pun on Bo Peep.)
- Lanolin Sheep: (Julie Payne) Usually shown as a hard worker but with a personality the polar opposite of her brother: loud and disagreeable (although she disagrees with everything he says and is often in denial). Was often seen doing laundry despite the fact none of the animals wore clothes. (Her name is that of the grease produced by wool-bearing animals, particularly sheep.)
- Booker: (Frank Welker) A chick hatched by Orson after finding a pair of abandoned eggs, named for the pig's love of books. (Booker's comment to Orson about his name: "I'm just glad you don't love kumquats!" (May 23 1986) He is extremely adventurous and (over)confident despite his size. He often chases worms, but can never seem to catch them. In the comic, he often called Orson "Mom."
- Sheldon: (Frank Welker) Booker's brother, who refused to hatch completely and appears as a walking egg with chicken feet sticking out of him. A common gag is to portray his shell as the perfect living space within (complete with microwave oven), without ever showing it. In one episode, the shell finally hatched, only to reveal another shell underneath.
Secondary characters
Note: Most of the following characters only ever appeared in the animated cartoon version of U.S. Acres, or appeared differently in the original comic strip. Orson's brothers, for example, only appeared in the first few weeks of the comic strip, and were never named.
- The main characters continually mention the farmer, although he is never seen. For example: "The farmer's not gonna be happy when he sees this mess."
- Booker continually chases worms (unnamed), without success.
- The farm's resident chickens (generally unnamed, though Frieda, Louise, Charlotte, Mabel, Valerie, Olivia, Vanna, and Natalie) are often romanced by Roy, as he is usually rescuing them from the Weasel.
- Cody, a dog who only appears in the strip. He likes to attack the other farmyard animals and tries to maul them.
- Blue, a cat who only appears in the strip. She keeps Cody out of trouble.
- Brutus is the farm's local bull. Always angry, he usually charges around if he gets loose.
- Mort, Gort, & Wart (Frank Welker, Thom Huge, and Howard Morris, respectively) are Orson's three ugly, mean older brothers, and the only things Orson fears. Usually, they show up to abuse Orson or steal the gang's crops. Their appearances on the cartoon were almost universally accompanied by a stylized, electric guitar version of "In the Hall of the Mountain King."
- Fred Duck is Wade's geeky cousin, who isn't afraid of flying. (However, he has been known to pack a parachute in case he has a problem while flying.)
- The Weasel (Gregg Berger) often tries to kidnap the chickens so that he can eat them, but is usually stopped by Roy. The only other regularly recurring antagonist (even though he never appeared in the strip), he occasionally attempts to catch and eat Sheldon as well. Apparently, he's not the only weasel around, as one episode also had two completely different weasels, named Waylon and Spence, going after the chickens. The chickens have also been hunted by a Fox early on, and later a Wolf, neither of whom appeared as frequently.
- Plato is a brown rooster who applied to be the farm's resident rooster once, and he could easily charm the chickens, much to Roy's chagrin. However, he is also afraid of weasels. After his experience there, he went on to raise a herd of giant bunnies.
- Bernie is Roy's agent, who is also an anthropomorphic pig. Sometimes, Roy, upset over how things are going with him, complains to Bernie, demanding him to put him on a different show.
- The Incredibly Stupid Swamp Monster, called Swampy for short, is a robot who ran into the swamp after he was created by Dr. Karloffis Boar (a pun on Boris Karloff) and later became friends with Orson and the gang. The stuff from the swamp stayed on him for him to appear as a swamp monster. As his name suggests, he is incredibly stupid, and according to Wade, he has good billing because his name is in the title of both of the episodes he appears in.
- Chloe, Roy's niece, came to visit her uncle and his co-stars in the sixth season. After her uncle rescued her from the weasel, she took part with the gang in a fantasy based off of Snow White.
- Aloysius Pig, Orson's pushy cousin, took charge in a few episodes of the seventh season. He bean-counted every scene, looking for anything that might be the least bit objectionable or cutting out anything that would be slightly considered over the show's budget, to the annoyance of the rest of the cast. His catchphrase is "That's not right!!"
- Garfield himself occasionally turns up in the animated version to make a special guest cameo. One particular episode even focused on his appearance as a thinly-disguised "mystery guest".
Comic strip chronology
Orson the pig:
Orson's mom, unnamed:
Orson's three brothers, unnamed:
Roy the rooster:
- First appearance - April 14 1986
Booker and Sheldon:
Wade the duck:
- First appearance - August 4 1986
The worm
- While worms had appeared in the strip throughout most of 1986, the first time that one was given a "voice" was on December 1 1986. A few of the worm characters occasionally had names, such as "Willy," a young worm, with "Mom" and "Dad" (and who called each other "Estelle" and "Filbert" respectively).
Lanolin the sheep
- First appearance - 15 January 1987
- First mentioned by name - 21 January 1987
Bo the sheep
- First appearance - 19 January 1987
- First mentioned by name - 21 January 1987
Max, the skateboarding bird - character was sketched/designed by a child reader in a contest, to give Wade someone else to be afraid of.
Cody, the dog
- First appearance - 30 November 1987
- First mentioned by name - 2 December 1987
- Last appearance - 2 July 1988
Blue, the cat
- First appearance - 4 December 1987
- Last appearance - 28 March 1988
Trivia: While Cody and Blue were drawn on the back cover of the first U.S. Acres collected comic strip book, published in early 1987, they did not appear in the comic strip itself until late in 1987 (and thus don't appear until the third book).