Condorito

Condorito
Author(s) René Pepo Ríos
Website Condorito Online
Current status / schedule Running/Daily
Launch date 13 August 1949 [1][2]
Syndicate(s) Universal Press Syndicate (current) (1994-present)
United Feature Syndicate (former) (until 1993)
Publisher(s) Inverzag, S.A.
Editorial Televisa Chile, S.A. (comic magazine)

Condorito (Little Condor in Spanish) is a comic book and comic strip that features an anthropomorphic condor living in a fictitious town named Pelotillehue—a typical small Chilean provincial town. He is meant to be a representation of the Chilean people.

Condorito was created by the Chilean cartoonist René Ríos, known as Pepo. Despite his Chilean origin, Condorito is very popular throughout Latin America, where the character is considered part of the general popular culture, and has a growing readership in the United States as well. Condorito and his friends appear in a daily comic strip.

The structure of Condorito is very simple: each page is an independent joke, without any continuity with others (though some jokes are larger or shorter than one page). The jokes are often sexist or male chauvinistic in nature, and some of the details included in the artwork are gender-dependent, but the humor is usually couched in double-entendres that children would be unlikely to understand.

One peculiar characteristic of Condorito is that the character that goes through the embarrassing moment and/or serves as the butt of the joke in a given strip almost always falls backwards to the floor (legs visible or out of frame) in the final panel, although new comic strips have now put the victim of the joke looking at the reader instead. This classic comic strip "flop take" is accompanied by a free-fall onomatopoeic sound (usually ¡Plop!). From time to time, this is replaced by the victim of the joke saying ¡Exijo una explicación! ("I demand an explanation!"), usually as a twist or downbeat ending. Another catchphrase, usual for Condorito, but used with almost all the characters, is "Reflauta", to show surprise or other emotions.

Characters

A statue of "Condorito" and "Washington" in San Miguel (Santiago, Chile).

Places

Stage gags

Fictional products

Parodies

Condorito has done many parodies of well-known characters. Generally these parodies have several pages dedicated to a story.

Origins

The first Condorito collection, published in Chile in 1955

In 1942, the Walt Disney Company created the animated film Saludos Amigos depicting Donald Duck and a cast of anthropomorphic characters representing various nations of the Americas. In the film, while the Disney characters are represented as humorous versions of charros, gauchos, etc., Chile was represented as Pedro, a small airplane engaged in his very first flight, whose attempt to fly over the Andes to pick up air mail from Mendoza is humorously depicted. Pepo created Condorito in response to what he perceived as a slight to the image of Chile.

Condorito and politics

Condorito through the 1960s and 1970s held to a conservative perspective on Chile and its society, poking fun at both the new left-wing poets and the hippies. At the first age of the comic, the jokes usually have a very basic context and themes, like African people always represented as primitive cannibals, women as bad drivers or as a jealous wife waiting for her husband to come back from a party, etc.

After the military coup of 1973, some Chilean cartoonists were censored by the military regime, yet unlike other publications (such as the Argentinian Mafalda), which combined criticism of society with humor, Condorito, which lacked the former, continued to be published. Since that time, many Chilean comics with a political view on society (e.g. Hervi's Super Cifuentes) have been forgotten. Condorito remains the best-known Chilean comic book character.

References

  1. https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/pepo.htm
  2. Gravett, Paul, "1001 Comics You Must Read Before You Die", Universe, page 145.
  3. In Chile, Cholguán it's the brand name of a type of plywood, and "tabla", means a wooden board. "Tabloide" (tabloid), in this sense, thus, is a joke what suggest the "Cholguán" like a false "tabla", creating a paradox between this falsehood and the honesty described in the motto
  4. In Chile, many wines use the name of a Roman Catholic saint as brands. The female name "Clota" could be interpreted like a diminutive of "Clotilde", but also a pun on the slang verb "clotear", a colloquialism for "falling"
  5. A reference to drunkenness
  6. for the alcoholic breath
  7. Onomatopoeia of Cough
  8. Condorito Gigante 743, November 17, 2007, Editorial Televisa Internacional: Mexico
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