7 friendly facts about Casper the Ghost
Image: Harvey Comics
Who doesn't love Casper the Friendly Ghost? Why wouldn't you? The good-natured specter just wanted to make friends instead of participate in ghostly shenanigans. A character that was originally passed on — as you'll soon read — became one of the most recognizable pop culture figures almost 80 years later. Here are a few fun facts about the affable apparition.
Casper dates back to 1939
Though Casper comics were one of the publisher’s biggest sellers, the little ghost first appeared in the late 1930s, as a pitch for a children’s book by Seymour Reit and Joe Oriollo. Though the book fell through, they sold the rights to him to Paramount Pictures’ Famous Studios animation division. His first appearance as a cartoon was in 1945. Harvey Comics started writing Casper comics in 1952 and purchased the ghost’s copyright a few years later.
Image: Famous Studios
He’s an East Coast ghost
In the 1945 Noveltoon, Casper has a pretty thick New York accent, and his uncle Stretch has a Boston one. In the 1995 movie, he lives in a mansion called Whipstaff Manor, in Friendship, Maine.
Image: Pixabay
Many other supernatural Harvey Comic characters are “opposites” as well
Just like Casper chooses to try to make friends instead of scare people away, Wendy the Good Little Witch uses her magic to do good deeds, and Hot Stuff the Little Devil does nice things to annoy the other demons.
Image: Harvey Comics
There has been some controversy over how he came to be
Early Casper depictions showed him living by his gravestone, suggesting that he was certainly once a living boy. However, this depiction was later altered, thinking that the death of a child was too macabre for a twee cartoon about a friendly ghost. Harvey Comics decided to portray ghosts as just another supernatural creature, giving Casper parents, stating that Casper was just a ghost because his parents were already ghosts when they got married.
Image: Famous Studios
Casper didn’t have a last name until the 1995 live-action movie
His name is Casper McFadden, and he’s the ghost of a 12-year old boy who died of pneumonia. This is the first time the story of how he became a ghost was told and the first time he was depicted as a human as well. This gave Casper a darker vibe than the original Casper stories.
Image: Universal Pictures
Speaking of, it was the first feature film to have a CGI character as the lead role
Without Casper, would there have been Avatar?
Image: Universal Pictures
Harvey Comics sued Columbia Pictures
In 1987, the comic publisher sued the distributor of Ghostbusters, arguing that the movie’s logo looked too similar to one of their characters, Fatso —a member of the Ghostly Trio, Casper’s uncles. People also thought he was the inspiration behind the character Slimer. However, the court ruled against Harvey Comics, since their copyright was out of date and the fact that there are “limited ways to draw a figure of a cartoon ghost.”
They got over it, though. Dan Ackroyd makes a quick appearance in Casper as Ray Stantz, checking out Whipstaff Manor for specters.