In the days when Carl Barks was
employed by the Walt Disney Company new cartoon and comic book
characters would occasionally emerge. None of the employees were
credited for dreaming up the new characters (to the public they
were all supposed to have been invented by Walt himself), so
their 'birthgivers' will forever be unknown.
One of these characters was Gus Goose. How he came about and for
what purpose can only be a matter of speculation, but it is
certain that Barks was at least one of the inventors. When he
moved on to comic book work he would use Gus from time to time (mostly
in stories written by others), but he has always remained an
unobtrusive figure in both books and cartoons. This is probably
due to his fairly limited characteristics as mainly being a lazy
and gluttonous figure. This page takes a look at one of Disney's
most overlooked characters.
THE CARTOON YEARS
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THE COMIC BOOK YEARS
Gus premiered in
the comic books on May 9, 1938, in a daily newspaper
strip drawn by Al Taliaferro. Below are examples from stories which Barks later drew featuring Gus. |
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VP1 'Donald's Grandma Duck' - 1950 |
VP1 'Donald's Grandma Duck' - 1950 |
WDCS132 'Visitors' - 1951 |
CP8 Grandma's Present - 1956 |
FC1025 Dream Planet - 1959 * |
FC1073 'Mopping Up' - 1960 |
FC1161 The Training Farm Fuss - 1961 |
FC1184 The Cube - 1961 |
FC1184 The Cube - 1961 |
* This was the only story with Gus in the logo credit. It read Gyro Gearloose and Gus Goose. |
http://www.cbarks.dk/THEOVERLOOKEDCHARACTER.htm | Date 2008-11-27 |