Marge (cartoonist)

The first single-panel installment ran in the Post on February 23, 1935; in it, Lulu appears as a flower girl at a wedding and strews the aisle with banana peels.[7] Thereafter, Little Lulu was widely merchandised,[8] and was the first mascot for Kleenex tissues;[5] from 1952 to 1965 the character appeared in an elaborate animated billboard in Times Square in New York City[9] designed by Artkraft Strauss.Little Lulu comic books, popular internationally, were translated into Arabic, Dutch, Finnish, French, Japanese, Norwegian, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish and Greek.The two reached a compromise in their career ambitions, in that the husband agreed to turn down promotions that would result in relocation, and the wife would keep her creation enough in check that she would be available for her children.[7] She also shied away from politics, and resisted requests from her sons to include progressive elements such as a black playmate for Lulu or overtly feminist themes.The papers include a collection of fan mail, comic books, scrapbooks of high points in Lulu's history and a complete set of the newspaper cartoons.
The first Little Lulu from the February 23, 1935 issue of The Saturday Evening Post
Little LuluPhiladelphiaPennsylvaniaElyriacartoonistpen nameMalverncartoonPublic LedgerCollier'sCountry GentlemanLadies' Home Journalsyndicatedcomic stripRuth Plumly ThompsonThe Saturday Evening PostCarl Andersonflower girlbanana peelsChicago Tribune–New York News SyndicateParamount PicturesKleenexTimes SquareArtkraft Straussgreeting cardsArabicFinnishFrenchJapaneseNorwegianPortugueseSpanishSwedishJohn StanleyNancy and SluggoWestern PublishingBell Telephone CompanylymphomaElyria, OhioHarvardQueens CollegeFriends of LuluWomen Cartoonists Hall of FameSchlesinger LibraryHarvard UniversityConnecticut PostNew York TimesHarvard GazetteRobbins, TrinaDuncan, RandySmith, Matthew J.ABC-CLIOMIT PressCharactersTubby TompkinsLittle Lulu and Her Little FriendsThe Little Lulu ShowIrving TrippLuluzinha Teen e sua Turma