Jean Gould O'Connell is the daughter of Dick Tracy's creator, the late Chester Gould.
Jean Gould O'Connell is the daughter of Dick Tracy's creator, the late Chester Gould.
photo by:Ben Jenkins

Happy Birthday, Dick Tracy

Dick Tracy, the stern, upright, big-city police detective in the bright yellow fedora who snagged some of the most sinister criminals known in the comic-strip world, turns 75 years old this week.

Dick Tracy, the stern, upright, big-city police detective in the bright yellow fedora who snagged some of the most sinister criminals known in the comic-strip world, turns 75 years old this week.

But bad guys beware: Age hasn’t slowed him down. In fact, the eternally vigorous crime buster continues to thrill a new generation of fans—and chase down an ever-growing gaggle of crooks—in 52 newspapers across the nation, as well as many others overseas.

Tracy first appeared during a time when gangsters’ violent shootouts made real-life headlines and big-city police departments became tarnished by corruption. “Al Capone in Chicago owned the entire police department,” says New York Daily News editor Jay Maeder, who’s also a Dick Tracy historian. “Tracy was the guy who couldn’t be bought. He was incorruptible. All through the 1930s, he was a huge hero.”

Created by the late cartoonist Chester Gould, Dick Tracy debuted in 1931 in the Detroit Mirror and was carried by more than 700 other papers within five years. Readers fell in love with this tough, tenacious character who became a police officer at age 34 after witnessing armed robbers murder the father of his beloved fiancée, Tess Truehart, who then patiently waited 18 years for a wedding while Tracy pursued his passion for crime-fighting. After all, there could be no true happily-ever-after as long as demons such as Pruneface, a disfigured Nazi agent, and Mumbles, a mush-mouthed con man, roamed the streets.

Tracy’s popularity grew during the next decade, when he emerged as a mainstay in radio and film as well, both in his own shows and as a reference in others. “On the radio, Jack Benny and all of these programs would always insert, ‘Who do you think you are—Dick Tracy?’” recalls Gould’s daughter, Jean Gould O’Connell, 79, of Geneva, Ill., who is completing a book about her father for release early next year. “Dick Tracy came up all the time.” Tracy appeared on television in the early 1960s in The Adventures of Dick Tracy, an animated series featuring the voices of Everett Sloan, Paul Frees and Mel Blanc. He was depicted on the silver screen in 1990, when Warren Beatty portrayed him in a movie.

“The original Tracy was an earnest caricature of American manhood facing hard times and legions of bad guys,” says Robert Storr, dean of the Yale University School of Art. “For some, he still is.”

In some ways, the world that Tracy patrols today is much different than the one featured in the Depression-inspired panels that launched the detective into legend. Corporate crimes and international espionage influence today’s Dick Tracy artist and writer, Dick Locher, the Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist who took over the strip after Gould retired in 1977. Locher collaborated on Dick Tracy initially with journalist and crime novelist Mike Killian, who died in 2005.

Locher, 77, who lives in Napierville, Ill., says his goal is to create a story that people want to read—and return to—each day. “I like something you don’t give away right away,” he says. “We pick a theme. It might even have a chase, it might have romance or spying, phone taps, theft or endangerment, like Tracy hanging from the top of the Sears Tower, things like that that would keep your interest.”

The topic for Tracy’s Oct. 4 birthday was easy: “We have a whole panel just saying ‘Happy Birthday,” Locher says. Also in honor of the anniversary, Classic Media is releasing a collector’s edition DVD set that includes episodes from the 1960s animated series.

“Dick Tracy remains appealing to today’s population because he represents the timeless values of justice, law and order, and honesty, but not in a way that is too good to be believable,” says Steve Tippie of Chicago’s Tribune Media Services, which syndicates the Dick Tracy strip. “I think his hard-nosed conviction—that it is the forces of the law that stand between the public and the criminals who threaten them—resonated with the public in the era of Al Capone, and still resonates in the era of Al Qaeda.”

From 1920 until 1931, cartoonist Gould couldn’t sell any of his 60 ideas for a humorous comic strip. One evening after dinner at home in Woodstock, Ill., as he was reading the newspaper, the headline “Another Gangster Killing” shifted his thoughts to a serious strip. Crime was rampant in Chicago. If police couldn’t catch the crooks, Gould would create a character that could. Dick Tracy—originally called Plainclothes Tracy—was born, modeled after Gould’s childhood hero, Sherlock Holmes.

“He asked himself, ‘What would a Sherlock Holmes look like in present day?’ Well, he wouldn’t wear a deerslayer hat; he would wear a fedora and trench coat,” O’Connell says. “He gave him a sharp nose for ‘tracing’ clues—that is where the name Tracy came from. He gave him a strong chin for strength. Dick Tracy stood for everything my father stood for: truth and honesty. And the fact that crime does not pay was the major reason for Dick Tracy.”

Perhaps Gould, who died in 1985, also looked in the mirror for inspiration. “My dad was Dick Tracy,” O’Connell says. “He could be so gentle and loving, and he could be so strong; not like Hercules, but strong when he needed to use strength. He had everything a human being needed.”

Tracy is indeed human—not a superhero, like other comic book crime-fighters such as Superman—so he always had to rely on his smarts and persistence to catch the crooks. “He also used the latest police procedures and technology to battle crime,” says Jim Johnson, director of the Chester Gould-Dick Tracy Museum in Woodstock, Ill. “Chester Gould consulted and even had staff assistance of police officers to make sure everything Tracy did was in accordance with appropriate police procedures and technology.”

Gould kept Tracy on the cutting edge of technology, introducing futuristic devices in his strip that later became reality. Tracy introduced his crook-finding “electronic telephone number pickup” in 1954; the rest of us didn’t get Caller ID until years after its 1982 patent. Tracy went to the moon in 1962, seven years before the first Apollo moon landing, and his ever useful “two-way wrist radio” preceded such later innovations as cellular phones and pocketsize computers.

But gadget-savvy Gould was first and foremost a storyteller who mastered the art of continuity, an idea that was new to comic strips at the time. Readers couldn’t wait to get the next day’s edition to see how Tracy was going to escape his latest predicament, whether he had been shot, stabbed or frozen, or what evil deeds those despicable crooks were going to do next.

“Gould made the villains intentionally grotesque because he didn’t feel that crime or criminals were beautiful, with a few exceptions, like Breathless Mahoney,” Johnson says. “But generally they were characters like The Brow or Pruneface or Flattop. They were ugly as crime is ugly.”

Locher is committed to maintaining Gould’s integrity in today’s strip, so while Tracy’s crime-fighting technology has evolved, it still is driven by vivid characters and the philosophy that crime doesn’t pay, whether it’s in corporate high-rises or seedy back alleys.

“Chester Gould said if we don’t obey laws, we are in big trouble, and I wholeheartedly agree,” Locher says. “The laws are there for a reason, and that’s the backbone of Dick Tracy.”

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Here are some of the current comments about this article. To read more or post your own comments, visit our message boards.
peconpie wrote:
Just want to say Thanks so much for the article re: Dick Tracy's birthday. I began to read tracy in the comics around 1939. I knew he has been around a long time but until I read the article I did not know just how long. I was surprised to see that he is only eight days older than myself. He debuted on October 4, 1931 and I debuted on October 12, 1931. Congratulations Dick Tracy on your longevity. May we both continue for many more years.
mamie wrote:
Dr. Mr. Pie: So you will be having a birthday soon too, eh? I hope it's a happy 75th!
g-mahermie wrote:
I enjoyed reading all about Dick Tracy's history. I remember reading it, or having it read to me when I was a child. I was especially interested to hear he had a fiancee, & that's why he became a detective. The reason I found this so interesting is because while cleaning out my parents attic after my mothers death we found a little baby doll. My older sister & cousin told me she was a "Sparkle Plenty" doll, Dick Tracy's daughter, & I had begged & begged for it for Christmas one year! I really didn't remember the doll at that time, & have tried to find out if Dick Tracy really did get married & have a daughter, but never found out. This article at least let me know he may have gotten married, & maybe someone else may know about a daughter or how to find more information how the subject.
Thank you, & Happy 75th Birthday Dick Tracy!!!
In response to g-mahermie (10/9/06), Sparkle Plenty was the daughter of B.O. Plenty and Gravel Gertie who were friends of Dick Tracy.
jhansen wrote:
It is my belief that there may be a conspiracy among us. Yeah, you read that right. I would have to say, though, that my greatest fear in this whole thing is that I may very well be the only person left who knows the truth. It's a conspiracy that runs so deep within the basic infrastructure of our society that we, as Americans, have long since forgotten the truth. Now, I don't blame us, because the person responsible for this had an incredible talent for masking the truth. This conspiracy involves the man in this article; Dick Tracy. Don't get me wrong, I'm not blaming American Profile, because this chain of events was set in motion long before their doors opened. No it's deeper than that. They, along with everyone else, just misrepresented the facts. What is the conspiracy you ask? Well, here goes, It is my belief that this man we know as Dick Tracy is indeed a superhero. Wait it gets better, I believe he was the first superhero. The problem is that at some point in history somebody sought to cover up the truth. But who would do this you ask? I'll tell you, for I believe I have the whole situation worked out. You see, Dick Tracy was revealed to the public in 1931, before any of the "real" superheroes, so to the American public he was a superhero. Now this man looked really good to a society who was in the heat of a great depression. Of course in the depression big business was not looking so hot, big business such as Wayne Enterprises. With the amount of people who were being laid off, and Bruce Wayne's steady multi-billionare status, he was bound to look bad to society. Maybe you've heard of this corporation. It's headed by Bruce Wayne, who we know today as Batman rather than CEO Bruce Wayne. I believe this Bruce Wayne saw the success of Dick Tracy and decided to have a go at the superhero lifestyle. Now at first he started with other people being superheroes, revealing Superman in 1932, and this was successful for a while. He made the public think that Superman and Bruce Wayne were friends. This worked for a while, but eventually it had to wear off, and he knew this, so he revealed another superhero, and another superhero, and more superheroes, until the world was so caught up in this "superhero frenzy" that in 1941 he could introduce himself as his own superhero, Batman. He even started a league for these magnificent people with eight core members. Of course Batman's abilities were never any better than Dick Tracy's, but America forgot this because Batman was in a "justice league." Well, it is my belief that this league is not at all out to promote justice, and I have proof, but I won't go into it here for my hand is cramping. Meanwhile, back to the conspiracy, Bruce Wayne knew the Justice League was a farce, obviously, and knowing the original, real superhero Dick Tracy was an investigator and could blow the lid off this whole operation if he ever decided that he wanted to join, he made himself and his other "heroes" look so incredible that they eventually looked so superior to Dick Tracy, that the humble Dick Tracy would never even try to join a league so amazing as the Justice League, let alone the uproar that the people of America would raise because of his seemingly small abilities compared to the rest of the superheroes if he ever did try to join. So in conclusion, it is my belief that this quote by Jim Johnson saying Dick Tracy is not a superhero in your article, is just another attempt by the Justice League to keep Dick Tracy down, when in all actualality he is the only real superhero.

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