From The Comics Beat.
He was 70 years old. The news broke mere days after the strip passed its landmark fiftieth anniversary.
Hägar the Horrible, which satirised contemporary American society under the guise of its faux Viking-era setting, began February 4, 1973.
It was created by Richard Arthur Allan “Dik” Browne for the King Features Syndicate.
The strip proved immensely popular and is syndicated in approximately 1900 newspapers, across 56 countries, around the globe.
A framed copy of the cartoon was even spotted in the background of President Joe Biden’s Oval Office at the White House.
Chris’ thirty-plus year tenure on the character (his brother Chance works mainly on the continuation of their father’s other series Hi and Lois but assisted with edits) – from 1989 to 2023 – makes him the strip’s longest serving cartoonist (his father retired in 1988, accumulating 16 years of material).
Born May 16, 1952, Chris served as an assistant to his father on Hägar the Horrible and Dik Browne’s other syndicated strip Hi and Lois (which Dik co-created with Mort Walker in 1954).
Born May 16, 1952, Chris served as an assistant to his father on Hägar the Horrible and Dik Browne’s other syndicated strip Hi and Lois (which Dik co-created with Mort Walker in 1954).
His first professionally published gag strips in the early ‘70s appeared in National Lampoon, where he would become a mainstay for a decade.
He also become a contributor to Playboy magazine.
As well as continuing his father’s legacy with Hägar, Chris also had his own original syndicated strip – the semi-autobiographical Raising Duncan (2000-2005).
“For years I’ve had on my desk a quote of my father’s that says simply, “My son can do better than this.” which is something my father said to me after I’d worked really hard on a set of Hagar dailies, and when I handed it into him, he said “If anyone else had given me this work, I would say it was terrific. But, you’re my son, and my son can do better than this.” It was a real challenge, but it has really helped me on raising the bar on myself.”He also spoke about continuing his father’s legacy with the strip:
“I worked side by side with my father from the very beginning of Hagar. Some of the earliest gags were mine. When we lost Dad in 1989, I was devastated and the only thing that got me through was the love of my wife, Carroll, and the idea that I could stay in touch with my dad’s spirit by getting up every day and continuing his work on Hagar.”
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