- Joshua Quagmire
Joshua Quagmire (sometimes shortened to JQ) is an American
cartoon ist for underground and more commercially popularcomic books , best known for his creationCutey Bunny .Quagmire's biographical information is a bit sketchy. It is not known whether or not "Joshua Quagmire" is a
pseudonym . He was raised in the Los Angeles area, though he has remarked that his grandfather served in theCanadian Forces inWorld War I ; Quagmire has dedicated a story, "The Last Time I Saw Tommy", to his grandfather. On the few occasions he has drawn himself into a story, he has never shown his own face. He is a frequent guest at theSan Diego Comic Convention .Cutey Bunny, a furry
superhero ine and apastiche ofGo Nagai 'sCutey Honey , first appeared in the self-produced underground comic "Army Surplus Komikz " in 1982 as well as in Cerebus' Unique Story section. The story, writing, and art style recall not onlymanga , but the madcapMAD Magazine and syndicatedcomic strips of the 1940s and 1950s, together with aburlesque sense of both humor and sexuality. Quagmire uses an "ensemble cast" of characters who will tend to show up no matter what the situation or genre; along with Cutey, they include:* Vicky Feldhyser, a sadomasochistic switch
lesbian fox and sometimes-rivalsecret agent to Cutey, whom she lusts after
* Taffy, Cutey's little sister
* Fatty Tubbins, a cat, and Cutey's friend and companion (who is also frequently credited at Quagmire'sinker )
* The Space Gophers, a quintet (or sometimes more) of not exceptionally bright interplanetary-traveling gophers, all of whom are named "Al"
* Pandora, a Scottish-brogued female robot who travels with the Gophers
* Gran'ma Phooby, Cutey's "grandmother", of indeterminate species and dreadful cooking skill
* Heidi and Etsuko, a pair of German and Japanese (respectively) scantily clad female elves, typically involved in some nefariousespionage plot
* The Purple Puffle, an odd creature who appears mainly as a background ornamentThere are a few projects which Quagmire has done outside this ensemble, such as the more serious CyberFox or the more overtly sexual Bronco Bunny.
Quagmire is also fond of introducing caricatures of real personalities to his comics.
Bob Hope andBing Crosby , in character as they were in the popular "Road to... " movies, frequently appear to help Cutey Bunny. A frequent adversary is "Uncle Joe" - quite obviouslyJoseph Stalin - and hismarionette henchman, "Howdy Ivan". And Cutey, as an American secret agent, is often shown taking orders from a dodderingRonald Reagan or a sinisterGeorge H. W. Bush . Even fellow comic book writerChris Claremont appeared in one issue, helping unmask a villain who turned out to beAdolf Hitler in disguise.Although
politics was never taboo in Quagmire's comics, they have been more emphasized in his recent works. Typically, he has been even-handed in his treatment - he recounts the tale of a socialist friend of his, who, upon reading an Uncle Joe story, couldn't determine whether it was for or against socialism and said that it seemed to be "anti-every ideology". However, Quagmire has become more pointed in his criticism ofGeorge W. Bush and other contemporary leaders based on Quagmire's opposition to war and the current state of world economics and the environment. For example, in a 2004 story, Heidi and Etsuko join the Department of Homeland Security, and are dispatched to theMiddle East to search forweapons of mass destruction - and remove the stickers on them which read "Made in U.S.A." However, they succeed only in finding weapons in practically every country in the area "except"Iraq .References
External links
* [http://www.cuteybunny.com The QUAGMIRE] - JQ's official Website
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