Capturez un Marsupilami

Capturez un Marsupilami!, written and drawn by André Franquin, is a comic album containing the adventures and short gags of the Marsupilami. Although not collected in one album until 2002, the contents are the earliest works of the original artist, from publications in Risque Tout and Spirou magazine, and therefore given the number 0 in the series of Marsupilami albums.

Marsupilami #0
Capturez un Marsupilami!
Cover of the Belgian edition
Date2002
SeriesMarsupilami
PublisherMarsu Productions
Creative team
WritersFranquin
with Marcel Denis
Greg, Peyo, Gos
Yvan Delporte
ArtistsFranquin
with Jidéhem, Will
Cerise (colors)
Original publication
Published inSpirou magazine
Issues
  1. 975 - #2270
Date of publication1955 - 1981
LanguageFrench
ISBN2-9125-3645-6
Chronology
Followed byLa Queue du Marsupilami, 1987

Story edit

  • Le Marsupilami descend sur la ville (The Marsupilami Goes to the Village), 1955
  • Noël d’un bagarreur (A Warrior's Christmas), 1956
  • La bûche de noël (The Work of Christmas), 1957
  • Touchez pas aux rouges-gorges (Don't Touch the Robins), 1956
  • Les patins téléguidés (The Remote-controlled Rollerskates), 1957
  • Le homard (The Lobster), 1957
  • Tarzan (previously named Houu Bai), 1977
  • La cage (The Cage), 1965 #1420
  • Capturer un marsupilami (To Capture a Marsupilami), 1977-1981

and 15 short gags from 1968 to 1972

Background edit

For the 50th anniversary of the character, Marsu Productions assembled this album, composed of the majority of Franquin's Marsupilami solo stories. Touchez pas aux rouges-gorges and La cage had been included in Spirou et Fantasio albums, but other stories were previously published in varied forms of Spirou context. This release also collects Franquin's two stories featuring the intrepid poacher Bring M. Backalive, and a story featuring the secondary Spirou et Fantasio character Le Petit Noël.

The album's title was given by the title of the final story, Capturer un Marsupilami, but the verb tense is changed from infinitive to imperative, "to capture" to "capture!".

This album was first published in Scandinavia in the 80s (titled as Å fange Spiralis in Norway, Jag Marsupilami in Sweden,[1] and Spirillen in Denmark).

References edit

Footnotes
  1. ^ Daniel Andréason, Kirk Reichmann. "Jag Marsupilami" (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 2011-07-14.

External links edit