The Lockhorns

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The Lockhorns
The Lockhorns
Author(s)Bill Hoest (1968–1988)
Bunny Hoest (1988–present)
Illustrator(s)Bill Hoest (1968–1988)
John Reiner (1988–present)
WebsiteThe Lockhorns
Current status/scheduleRunning
Launch dateSeptember 9, 1968; 55 years ago (September 9, 1968)
Syndicate(s)King Features Syndicate (1968-2023)
Andrews McMeel Syndication (2024-present)

The Lockhorns is a United States single-panel cartoon created September 9, 1968 by Bill Hoest and originally distributed by King Features Syndicate to 500 newspapers in 23 countries.[1] The Lockhorns joined Andrews McMeel Syndication (AMS) January 1, 2024 and continues to appear in hundreds of newspapers worldwide and online through websites including AMS's GoComics! After Hoest's death in 1988 the comic panel was continued by his wife Bunny Hoest and cartoonist John Reiner.[2] In 2017 Hoest donated the archives of more than 37,000 or her cartoons - including The Lockhorns, Howard Huge and others - to Adelphi University where she obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree and an honorary doctorate.

Premise[edit]

The Lockhorns presents the ups and downs of committed relationships through the lens of the married couple Loretta and Leroy Lockhorn. The two exchange witty barbs and sarcastic quips all while demonstrating their deep love and affection for each other. Through thick and thin, couples counseling and Leroy's occasional trips to the bar, Loretta and Leroy exemplify the enduring nature of their relationship, bound together "til death do us part."

The strip initially was titled The Lockhorns of Levittown, and many of the businesses and institutions depicted in the strip are real places located in or near Huntington, New York, on the North Shore of Long Island. "When we use names, we get permission," Bunny Hoest said in 2019. “Dr. [Harold] Blog was our doctor for many years. He passed away. We still use him. He stays alive in the comic."[3] Anticipating national syndication, Bunny Hoest suggested shortening the title to The Lockhorns.

It began as a single-panel daily on September 9, 1968, with the Sunday feature launched April 9, 1972. The Sunday feature employs an unusual layout that grouped together several single-panel cartoons.

Characters[edit]

Leroy works at an unnamed job, trying to make ends meet while Loretta keeps the home fires burning...literally. A notoriously bad cook, she has on more than one occasion set off smoke alarms in every part of the house. She is also a self-confessed shopaholic. Loretta plays the piano - and drives the car - both by ear. Leroy's wandering eye and lazy lifestyle form part of the couple's comic conflicts too. The humor comes primarily from the exchanges between the couple themselves, with an occasional appearance by Leroy's outspoken mother-in-law and a hapless marriage counselor, Dr. Pullman.


Books[edit]

Hoest has published multiple collections of The Lockhorns with Signet, Tor and Simon and Schuster's Wallaby Books. Tor has reissued expanded collections of several of these books. Hoest has published other books for other strips the studio has produced.

"What's the Garbage Doing on the Stove?" Signet (1975),  

"Loretta, the Meatloaf is Moving" Signet (1976), "Who Made the Caesar Salad, Brutus?" Signet (1977), "Is This the Steak or the Charcoal?" Signet (1979), "I See You Burned the Cold Cuts Again" Signet (1981), "Of Course I Love You - What Do I Know?" Signet (1981), "You Name It... I'm Guilty" Signet (1982), "Let's Go For a Walk and Bring your Wallet" Signet (1982), "I Could Live without These Meatballs-Probably Longer" Signet (1982), "This is Our Twenty-Fifth Anniversary. Don't You Think That's Enough?" Simon and Schuster's Wallaby Books (1982), "What Do You Mean You Weren't Listening? I Didn't Say Anything" Tor (1983), "Leroy is Very Proud ofThat Trophy and Wouldn't You Know it, He got if from Running Backwards" Tor (1984), "I'm Sticking to My Story...Whatever It Is" Tor (1985), "Dessert! We Made It into the Homestretch!" Tor (1985), "I'm Trying to Improve My Marriage, But I Can't Get her to Leave" Tor (1990), "It's a Letter Inviting Mother to Come Visit with Us I'll Mail it Myself" Tor (1990), "The Trouble With You is that You Judge Food Too Much by its Taste" Barking Hollow Studios (2015), "You Have to Spend Money to Make Money...I can Handle That" Barking Hollow Studios (2024)

Awards[edit]

Bill Hoest received the National Cartoonists Society's Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award for the strip for 1975 and 1980.[4]

John Reiner won the National Cartoonists Society Award for Best Gag Cartoons in 1994. In 2013, Bunny Hoest and John Reiner were honored with The Golden Key Award and incited into the National Cartoonists Society Hall of Fame.

Origin/Location[edit]

Bill Hoest was a prolific gag cartoonist, submitting work to nearly every publication in the 1960s. He noticed that many of his submissions were on the subject of marriage and decided to create a comic strip with that theme. King Features liked the strip samples but suggested it would work better as a single panel, ironically having Hoest return the work into its original single-panel form. The Lockhorns began syndication later that year. Originally titled "The Lockhorns of Levittown," a reference to the new post-war Long Island suburban community, the single-panel cartoon appeared as a daily feature on September 9, 1968 until April 9, 1972, when its growing popularity brought about the addition of a Sunday cartoon, which incorporated a number of individual, stand-alone panels. Due to its widening appeal, the feature shortened its name to simply "The Lockhorns."

the panel's humorous and universal take on a couple's life together resonates with readers around the world, appearing in many different countries, for more than 50 years. They appear in Spanish as "Los Melaka," in French as "La Famille Chicane," as well as in Chinese, German, Finnish, Hebrew, and more.


References[edit]

  1. ^ Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 244. ISBN 9780472117567.
  2. ^ The Lockhorns at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on November 16, 2015.
  3. ^ Solnik, Claude (February 1, 2019). "Lloyd Neck writer gives 50 years of 'Lockhorns' to Adelphi". Newsday. New York City / Long Island. Archived from the original on February 5, 2019. Retrieved April 10, 2020. Canterbury Ales, a restaurant Bill's son, Billy, used to own, still appears in 'The Lockhorns,' along with Long Island locations Bunny Hoest loves, such as Aboff's, the paint store, and Huntington's Book Revue and Bistro Cassis, where panels grace the walls.
  4. ^ "National Cartoonists Society Awards". Archived from the original on March 16, 2009. Retrieved December 19, 2011.

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