Difference between revisions of "Donald Duck (comics)"
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+ | ==New Tales from Old Mother Goose (Walt Disney's Silly Symphonies #4, 1954)== | ||
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==What's for Lunch... Supper? (Donald Duck Adventures (Disney Comics) #11, 1991)== | ==What's for Lunch... Supper? (Donald Duck Adventures (Disney Comics) #11, 1991)== | ||
− | The nephews refuse to eat Donald | + | The nephews refuse to eat Donald's sloppily-done cooking, so Donald studies multiple cookbooks and starts serving mishmash dishes. The nephews refuse this also, leaving Donald to eat it himself. He also takes cooking classes and restaurant tours, soon getting too fat. The nephews send Donald to Dr. Floyd's Slenderizing Clinic, which acts like a military base, but he is booted out for repeatedly sneaking food. Now unable to get through the door to his house, Donald finally goes on a diet by eating far less. |
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[[Category:Pigs]] | [[Category:Pigs]] |
Latest revision as of 23:33, 15 December 2024
Donald Duck has been adapted to comics since the 1930s. Among all of Disney's characters in comics, Donald is the most popular throughout the world, especially in European countries. His stories span from comic strips to comic books, and he has been increasingly developed by many authors, such as the notable Carl Barks.
Contents
- 1 Donald Duck Finds Pirate Gold (Four Color, 1942 Series #9, 1942)
- 2 Limber W Guest Ranch (Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #35, 1943)
- 3 Mystery of the Swamp (Four Color, 1942 Series #62, 1944)
- 4 Christmas on Bear Mountain (Four Color, 1942 Series #178, 1947)
- 5 Wintertime Wager (Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #88, 1948)
- 6 Luck of the North (Four Color, 1942 Series #256, 1949)
- 7 No Such Varmint (Four Color, 1942 Series #318, 1951)
- 8 New Tales from Old Mother Goose (Walt Disney's Silly Symphonies #4, 1954)
- 9 Reading Mania (Four Color, 1942 Series #600, 1954)
- 10 Too Much Help (Four Color, 1942 Series #1150, 1960)
- 11 Heavy Duty (Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #537, 1988)
- 12 Fast Away Castaway (Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #640, 1988)
- 13 What's for Lunch... Supper? (Donald Duck Adventures (Disney Comics) #11, 1991)
- 14 The Duck Who Never Was (Walt Disney's Donald Duck #286, 1994)
- 15 The Gift of the Gods (Topolino #2277, 1999)
- 16 Unknown comic published in early 2000's in the polish "Kaczor Donald" magazine
- 17 The Way The Cookie Crumbles (Walt Disney's Uncle Scrooge #346, October 2005)
- 18 A Blow For Good Taste (Anders And & Co. #21, 2009)
- 19 See also
Donald Duck Finds Pirate Gold (Four Color, 1942 Series #9, 1942)
Yellow Beak downs a mug of slumgullion he requested from Donald and his nephews.
Limber W Guest Ranch (Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #35, 1943)
Donald inflates after drinking spring water that has gas in it.
Mystery of the Swamp (Four Color, 1942 Series #62, 1944)
Christmas on Bear Mountain (Four Color, 1942 Series #178, 1947)
After a mother bear scares Donald and his nephews out of the cabin, she and her cub eat all the food.
Wintertime Wager (Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #88, 1948)
Luck of the North (Four Color, 1942 Series #256, 1949)
After tricking Gladstone into going to the Arctic with a fake map, Donald worries that he might get eaten by a polar bear.
No Such Varmint (Four Color, 1942 Series #318, 1951)
To rescue Donald from a sea serpent, Huey, Dewey, and Louie launch kegs of pepper into the monster's mouth, causing him to drink water to soothe it.
New Tales from Old Mother Goose (Walt Disney's Silly Symphonies #4, 1954)
Reading Mania (Four Color, 1942 Series #600, 1954)
Daisy thinks she has gained weight and worries that she will get fatter.
Too Much Help (Four Color, 1942 Series #1150, 1960)
Daisy takes Gladstone to Grandma Duck's farm, believing it to have trouble. His luck causes the pigs to grow too fat.
Heavy Duty (Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #537, 1988)
Daisy Duck holds a weight contest, in which the heaviest resident of Duckburg can win their weight in gold, courtesy of the Gobblemore Foundation. Upon mishearing a phone call, Donald Duck decides to gain weight just to win Daisy's affection, but only before mishearing again that he is just too heavy for her.
Fast Away Castaway (Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #640, 1988)
Gyro Gearloose invents a machine that creates infinite ice cream.
What's for Lunch... Supper? (Donald Duck Adventures (Disney Comics) #11, 1991)
The nephews refuse to eat Donald's sloppily-done cooking, so Donald studies multiple cookbooks and starts serving mishmash dishes. The nephews refuse this also, leaving Donald to eat it himself. He also takes cooking classes and restaurant tours, soon getting too fat. The nephews send Donald to Dr. Floyd's Slenderizing Clinic, which acts like a military base, but he is booted out for repeatedly sneaking food. Now unable to get through the door to his house, Donald finally goes on a diet by eating far less.
The Duck Who Never Was (Walt Disney's Donald Duck #286, 1994)
In a story commemorating the character's 60th anniversary, Donald, miserable at how nobody seems to have remembered his birthday, idly wishes to a genie that he'd never been born. Without the influence of his adventurous spirit, he discovers that his nephews have become lethargic, unambitious couch potatoes.
The Gift of the Gods (Topolino #2277, 1999)
Granny De Spell inhales the air from Aeolus' bag of winds, thinking it was coffee.
Unknown comic published in early 2000's in the polish "Kaczor Donald" magazine
In this comic, Donald fattens up a thief in order to escape from being held hostage by him.
The Way The Cookie Crumbles (Walt Disney's Uncle Scrooge #346, October 2005)
After a rare lapse in judgment shakes his confidence in his own market predictions, Scrooge becomes dependent on stock tips as dictated by Chinese fortune cookies. Since these require a meal to be eaten beforehand, Scrooge ends up eating twenty-seven full-course meals per day, ballooning in weight.
A Blow For Good Taste (Anders And & Co. #21, 2009)
Gyro Gearloose invents the "Tastemat", a machine that can make everything taste good. This makes several residents of Duckburg fat.