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Archie Comics



 
 
Archie Comics is an American comic book
Comic book

A comic book is a magazine or book of narrative artwork and dialog and descriptive prose. The style was introduced in 1934. Despite the term, comic books do not necessarily feature humorous subject-matter; in fact, it is often serious and action-oriented....
 publisher, known for its many series featuring the fictional teenage Archie Andrews
Archie Andrews (comics)

'Archibald "Archie" Andrews', created in 1941 by Bob Montana, is a fictional character in an United States comic book series published by Archie Comics, the long-running Archie Andrews radio series, a syndicated comic strip and animation ? The Archie Show, a Saturday morning cartoon television series by Filmation, plus Archie's Weird...
, Betty Cooper
Betty Cooper

Elizabeth "Betty" Cooper is a fictional character of Archie Comics, the blonde-haired daughter of Hal and Alice Cooper. Betty likes sports, and is also a cheerleader....
, Veronica Lodge
Veronica Lodge

Veronica "Ronnie" Lodge is an adolescent fictional character in the Archie Comics books series. Since the Archie characters are ageless, Lodge remains a high-school teenager after 66 years....
, Reggie Mantle
Reggie Mantle

Reginald "Reggie" Mantle III is a fictional character in the Archie Comics book. His full name is given as Reginald Mantle, but he is usually called by his nickname Reggie, and sometimes refers to himself as "Mantle, The Magnificent." The character was introduced in 1942....
 and Forsythe "Jughead" Jones
Jughead Jones

Forsythe Pendleton "Jughead" Jones III is a fictional character in Archie Comics, first appearing in December 1941. He is the son of Forsythe II....
 characters by publisher/editor John L. Goldwater
John L. Goldwater

John L. Goldwater founded MLJ Comics , and served as editor and co-publisher for many years. In the mid-1950s he was a key proponent and custodian of the comic book censorship guidelines known as the Comics Code Authority....
, written by Vic Bloom and drawn and created by Bob Montana
Bob Montana

Robert William "Bob" Montana was an United States of America comic strip artist who created the visual look of the main characters published by Archie Comics....
. The characters were based in part on people the three knew, including Montana's friends in Haverhill, Massachusetts
Haverhill, Massachusetts

Haverhill is a city in Essex County, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 58,969 at the 2000 census. Haverhill is home to Northern Essex Community College....
, and people met by Goldwater "in the midwest".

Archie's first appearance in Pep Comics
Pep Comics

The publication Pep Comics was a comic book series from MLJ Magazines , published from January, 1940, to March, 1987.The first issue introduced a line of superheroes and other characters: The Shield by Irving Novick; The Comet by Jack Cole; Jocko, a funny animal picture story by Dick Ryan....
 #22 on December 22, 1941 was drawn by Montana and written by Vic Bloom.






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Encyclopedia


Archie Comics is an American comic book
Comic book

A comic book is a magazine or book of narrative artwork and dialog and descriptive prose. The style was introduced in 1934. Despite the term, comic books do not necessarily feature humorous subject-matter; in fact, it is often serious and action-oriented....
 publisher, known for its many series featuring the fictional teenage Archie Andrews
Archie Andrews (comics)

'Archibald "Archie" Andrews', created in 1941 by Bob Montana, is a fictional character in an United States comic book series published by Archie Comics, the long-running Archie Andrews radio series, a syndicated comic strip and animation ? The Archie Show, a Saturday morning cartoon television series by Filmation, plus Archie's Weird...
, Betty Cooper
Betty Cooper

Elizabeth "Betty" Cooper is a fictional character of Archie Comics, the blonde-haired daughter of Hal and Alice Cooper. Betty likes sports, and is also a cheerleader....
, Veronica Lodge
Veronica Lodge

Veronica "Ronnie" Lodge is an adolescent fictional character in the Archie Comics books series. Since the Archie characters are ageless, Lodge remains a high-school teenager after 66 years....
, Reggie Mantle
Reggie Mantle

Reginald "Reggie" Mantle III is a fictional character in the Archie Comics book. His full name is given as Reginald Mantle, but he is usually called by his nickname Reggie, and sometimes refers to himself as "Mantle, The Magnificent." The character was introduced in 1942....
 and Forsythe "Jughead" Jones
Jughead Jones

Forsythe Pendleton "Jughead" Jones III is a fictional character in Archie Comics, first appearing in December 1941. He is the son of Forsythe II....
 characters by publisher/editor John L. Goldwater
John L. Goldwater

John L. Goldwater founded MLJ Comics , and served as editor and co-publisher for many years. In the mid-1950s he was a key proponent and custodian of the comic book censorship guidelines known as the Comics Code Authority....
, written by Vic Bloom and drawn and created by Bob Montana
Bob Montana

Robert William "Bob" Montana was an United States of America comic strip artist who created the visual look of the main characters published by Archie Comics....
. The characters were based in part on people the three knew, including Montana's friends in Haverhill, Massachusetts
Haverhill, Massachusetts

Haverhill is a city in Essex County, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 58,969 at the 2000 census. Haverhill is home to Northern Essex Community College....
, and people met by Goldwater "in the midwest".

Archie's first appearance in Pep Comics
Pep Comics

The publication Pep Comics was a comic book series from MLJ Magazines , published from January, 1940, to March, 1987.The first issue introduced a line of superheroes and other characters: The Shield by Irving Novick; The Comet by Jack Cole; Jocko, a funny animal picture story by Dick Ryan....
 #22 on December 22, 1941 was drawn by Montana and written by Vic Bloom. With the creation of Archie, publisher John L. Goldwater hoped to appeal to fans of the Andy Hardy
Andy Hardy

Andy Hardy was a fictional character played by Mickey Rooney in an extremely successful Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film series from 1937 to 1958. Spanning over 20 years, the 16 movies were based on characters in the play Skidding by Aurania Rouverol....
 movies starring Mickey Rooney
Mickey Rooney

Mickey Rooney is an United States film actor and entertainer whose film, television, and theatre appearances span nearly his entire lifetime. During his career he has won multiple awards, including an Academy Award, a Golden Globe and an Emmy Award....
.

Archie Comics is also the title of the company's longest running publication, the first issue appearing with a cover date of Winter 1942. Starting with issue #114 the title was shortened to simply Archie.

History

Archie Comics started out in 1939 as MLJ Comics, named after the first initials of its three founders: Maurice Coyne, Louis Silberkleit, and John L. Goldwater.

Early MLJ titles featured generic superhero
Superhero

A superhero is a Character "of unprecedented physical prowess dedicated to act of derring-do in the public interest". Since the debut of the prototype superhero Superman in 1938, stories of superheroes?ranging from brief episodic adventures to continuing years-long sagas?have dominated American comic books and crossed over into other mass...
es remembered in the lore of comic collectors' trivia. The Shield
The Shield (Archie)

The Shield is the name of several Fictional character patriotism superheroes created by MLJ . The Shield has the distinction of being one of the first superheroes with a costume based upon the American Flag, appearing fourteen months before Captain America, who has a similar origin....
 was the first flag-themed superhero, a year before Captain America
Captain America

Captain America is a Character that appears in comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character First appearance in Captain America Comics #1 , from Marvel Comics' 1940s predecessor, Timely Comics, and was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby....
. The Comet
The Comet (Archie)

The Comet was a superhero who first appeared in Pep Comics #1 in January, 1940 in comics. Possibly the first superhero killed in the line of duty, he died in issue #17 , which also introduced his brother, a brutal hero called the Hangman who would use the projected image of a scaffold and descriptions of hanging to frighten crooks....
 was the first superhero killed in the line of duty.

The Hangman (the Comet's younger brother) might be the most brutal superhero of the 1940s. Roy the Superboy preceded Superboy
Superboy

Superboy is the name of several fictional characters that have been published by DC Comics, most of them youthful incarnations of Superman. These characters have also been the main characters of four ongoing Superboy comic book series published by DC....
 by half a decade, and Steel Sterling was dubbed "the Man of Steel" before Superman
Superman

Superman is a Character , a comic book superhero widely considered to be an American cultural icon. Created by American writer Jerry Siegel and Canadian-born artist Joe Shuster in 1932 while both were living in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio, and sold to DC Comics in 1938, the character first appeared in Action Comics Action Comics 1 and subseque...
. None remained popular. In 1941, a teenage humor strip called Archie began as a new back-up feature in Pep, replacing Madam Satan
Madam Satan

Madam Satan was produced and directed by Cecil B. DeMille as a musical drama for MGM, one of the few films DeMille made for the Culver City studio....
. Striking a popular nerve with emerging youth culture, Archie and his gang were such a hit that MLJ changed its name to Archie Comics in 1946.

In the 1950s and 1960s, cartoonist
Cartoonist

A cartoonist is a person who specializes in drawing cartoons. Traditionally much of this work was, and still is, humorous, and is intended primarily for entertainment purposes....
 Dan DeCarlo
Dan DeCarlo

Daniel S. DeCarlo was an United States cartoonist best known as the artist who developed the look of Archie Comics in the late 1950s and early 1960s, modernizing the characters to their contemporary appearance and establishing the publisher's house style....
 ceased work on Atlas Comics
Atlas Comics (1950s)

Atlas Comics is the 1950s comic book publishing company that would evolve into Marvel Comics. Magazine and mass market paperback publisher Martin Goodman , whose business strategy involved having a multitude of corporation entities, used Atlas as the umbrella name for his comic-book division during this time....
' Millie the Model
Millie the Model

Millie the Model was Marvel Comics' longest-running humor title, first published by the company's 1940s predecessor, Timely Comics, and continuing through its 1950s forerunner, Atlas Comics , to 1970s Marvel....
 and brought his influential style to the Archie Comics universe. DeCarlo is primarily responsible for the modern look of the Archie characters, and the creation of popular Archie spin-off comics Sabrina, the Teenage Witch
Sabrina, the Teenage Witch

Sabrina the Teenage Witch is a comic book series published by Archie Comics about the adventures of a teenager fictional character named Sabrina Spellman....
 and Josie and the Pussycats
Josie and the Pussycats (comic)

Josie and the Pussycats is a teenage humor comic book about a List of fictional music groups, created by Dan DeCarlo and published by Archie Comics....
.

The enduring Archie legacy has spanned dozens of Archie titles, including spin-off
Spin-off

A spin-off is a new organization or entity formed by a split from a larger one, such as a television series based on a pre-existing one, or a new company formed from a university research group or business incubator....
s, digest collections, and magazines focused on particular characters. Some of the older series feature Archie and his friends cast as superhero versions of themselves or playing spies in a parody of The Man from U.N.C.L.E.
The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

The Man from U.N.C.L.E. is an American television program that was broadcast on NBC from September 22, 1964, to January 15, 1968....
. Some series, such as Life With Archie and Archie at Riverdale High, feature straight adventure and/or mystery stories.

In May 2007, Archie debuted what they call a more "dynamic", realistic art style since its title characters' debut in Pep Comics
Pep Comics

The publication Pep Comics was a comic book series from MLJ Magazines , published from January, 1940, to March, 1987.The first issue introduced a line of superheroes and other characters: The Shield by Irving Novick; The Comet by Jack Cole; Jocko, a funny animal picture story by Dick Ryan....
 #22 (December, 1941), also features longer serialized stories.

The Archie characters have been continually successful in other mediums since the comic's inception. The Archie Andrews radio program debuted May 31, 1943, and ran on various networks until September 5, 1953. The Archie newspaper comic strip was launched on February 4th, 1946, and was drawn by Bob Montana until his death in 1975. In 1968, Archie was adapted into a Saturday morning cartoon
Saturday morning cartoon

A Saturday morning cartoon is the colloquial term for the animated television series programming which was typically scheduled on Saturday mornings on the major United States television networks from the 1960s to the 1990s....
 series by Filmation
Filmation

Filmation Associates was an American production company that produced animated television series for television during the later half of the 20th century....
, The Archie Show
The Archie Show

The Archie Show was the first in a long line of Saturday morning cartoon animated series produced by Filmation. It was based upon the Archie Comicss, created by Bob Montana in 1941....
. In 1969, the teen bubblegum pop band, The Archies
The Archies

The Archies are a fictional garage band founded by Archie Andrews , Reggie Mantle, and Jughead Jones, a group of adolescent fictional characters of the Archie Comics universe, in the context of the animated TV series, The Archie Show....
, earned a gold record with their #1 hit "Sugar, Sugar
Sugar, Sugar

"Sugar, Sugar" is a pop song written by Jeff Barry and Andy Kim. It was a four-week 1969 number-one hit single by fictional characters The Archies....
". In 1974, a network television pilot was made in an attempt to bring a live-action Archie show but was unsuccessful.

In the 1970s and 1980s, the Archie characters were authorized for use in a series of Christian
Christian

A Christian is a person who adheres to Christianity, a Monotheism#Christian view religion centered on the life and teachings of Jesus and interpreted by Christians to have been prophesied in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament....
 comic books written and drawn by Al Hartley
Al Hartley

Henry Allan Hartley was an United States comic book writer-artist known for his work on Archie Comics, Atlas Comics , and many Christian comics....
 for Spire Christian Comics
Spire Christian Comics

Spire Christian Comics was a line of comic books published by Baker Book House starting in 1972. In 1981 Hugh Revell Barbour started his own company, Book Bargains, which soon became Barbour & Company....
.

Several attempts have been made to revive MLJ's original superhero line, without success. Recently at Comiccon 2008 it was announced that the characters have been licensed to DC. J. Michael Straczynski
J. Michael Straczynski

Joseph Michael Straczynski , known professionally as J. Michael Straczynski and informally as Joe Straczynski or JMS, is an award-winning United States writer/television producer....
 will be using his run on The Brave and the Bold
The Brave and the Bold

The Brave and the Bold is the title shared by many comic book series published by DC Comics. It was first published as an ongoing series from 1955 in comics to 1983 in comics, then two mini-series in 1991 in comics and in 1999 in comics, and was finally revived as an ongoing in 2007 in comics....
 to fully integrate these characters into the DC Universe
DC Universe

The DC Universe is the shared universe where most of the comic book stories published by DC Comics take place. The fictional characters Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman are well-known superheroes from this universe....
, saying "The goal is to really give them a leg up on that process .... once they’ve appeared in 'The Brave and the Bold,' they can be used by the rest of the DCU books, and some of them may get their own titles".

Lawsuits


  • The February 1962 issue of Harvey Kurtzman
    Harvey Kurtzman

    Harvey Kurtzman was a United States of America cartoonist and magazine editor. In 1952, he was the founding editor of the comic book MAD Magazine. Kurtzman was also known for the long-running Little Annie Fanny stories in Playboy , parody the very attitudes that Playboy promoted....
    's Help!
    Help! (magazine)

    Help! was a magazine published by James Warren . It wasHarvey Kurtzman's longest-running magazine project after leaving Mad and EC Comics Publications, and during its five years of operation it was always chronically underfunded, yet innovative....
     magazine featured a parody of the Archie characters in its Goodman Beaver story, Goodman Goes Playboy, written by Kurtzman and illustrated by frequent collaborator, Will Elder
    Will Elder

    William "Will" Elder was an American illustrator and comic book artist who worked in numerous areas of commercial art, but is best known for a zany cartoon style that helped launch Harvey Kurtzman's Mad comic book in 1952....
     (the magazine itself hit newsstands on December 1960). Attorneys for Archie Comics filed suit shortly thereafter, for copyright infringement
    Copyright infringement

    Copyright infringement is the unauthorized use of material that is covered by copyright law, in a manner that violates one of the copyright owner's exclusive rights, such as the right to reproduce or perform the copyrighted work, or to make derivative works....
    . An agreement was reached in March 1964, with $1000 in damages paid, and an apology was issued. Later attempts to reprint the Goodman Beaver story, with names and artwork altered by Kurtzman and Elder to minimize similarities to Archie characters and trademarks, were again met with threatened legal action by Archie Comics. However, according to a May 2008 posting on The Comics Journal
    The Comics Journal

    The Comics Journal, often abbreviated TCJ, is the largest United States magazine of news and criticism pertaining to comic books and strips....
     website: "It resulted in waves of lawyers raining upon the strip’s creators, ultimately leading to Kurtzman and Elder handing the copyright to the story over to Archie and signing an agreement promising never to reproduce it again. Some 40 years or so later, Gary Groth
    Gary Groth

    Gary Groth is an United States comic book editing, publisher, and critic. He is editor in chief of The Comics Journal and a co-founder of Fantagraphics Books....
     discovered that Archie had forgotten to renew the copyright to the strip, and that it had fallen into the public domain." As a result, Goodman Goes Playboy can now be reprinted by anyone, anywhere, at anytime, since it is no longer copyrighted by anyone. Ironically, despite the above legal wrangling, Archie Comics never took any action against Kurtzman, Elder nor publisher William Gaines
    William Gaines

    William Maxwell Gaines , was the publisher and co-editor of EC Comics, and publisher of Mad for over 40 years.Following a shift in EC's direction in 1950, Gaines was arguably the first publisher to oversee a line of comic books with sufficient artistic quality and interest to appeal to adults....
     for the 1954 Mad Magazine story Starchie, which has been reprinted numerous times.


  • Archie Comics sued music duo The Veronicas
    The Veronicas

    The Veronicas are a pop-rock band based in Australian music. The band was formed in 2005, in Brisbane, by twin sisters Jessica and Lisa Origliasso....
     for trademark infringement in 2005 over the band's name, which was taken from the comic book character. Archie Comics and Sire Records (The Veronicas' record company) finally resolved their problems through a co-promotion deal.


  • Fanfiction.Net
    FanFiction.Net

    FanFiction.Net is an automation fan fiction archive site. It was founded on October 15, 1998 by Los Angeles, California computer programmer Xing Li, who also runs the site....
     received a cease and desist
    Cease and desist

    A cease and desist is an order or request to halt an activity, or else face legal action. The recipient of the cease-and-desist may be an individual or an organization....
     order from Archie Comics to remove any Archie comic based fan fiction from its site, as they are derived from their copyrighted and trademarked properties and were stated to damage Archie's public image. It included public statements by Archie Comics, who have stated that they do not allow (even family-oriented) fan fiction based on Archie comics works. (It should be noted, however, that story contests are frequently run through the official Archie website, allowing fans to create their own stories in accordance with site's rules).


  • On April 4, 2003, Dad's Garage Theatre Company
    Dad's Garage Theatre Company

    Dad's Garage Theatre Company, located in Inman Park near Little Five Points in Atlanta, Georgia , was founded in 1995 by graduates from Florida State University, and a couple non-FSU alums from Portland, Oregon and Orlando, Florida....
     in Atlanta was scheduled to debut a new play, Archie's Weird Fantasy, which depicted Riverdale's most famous resident coming out of the closet and moving to New York. The day before the play was scheduled to open, Archie Comics issued a cease and desist order, threatening litigation if the play proceeded as written. Dad's Garage artistic director Sean Daniels said, "The play was to depict Archie and his pals from Riverdale growing up, coming out and facing censorship. Archie Comics thought if Archie was portrayed as being gay, that would dilute and tarnish his image."


  • Jughead's Revenge, an American punk rock
    Punk rock

    Punk rock is a rock music genre that developed between 1974 and 1976 in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia. Rooted in garage rock and other forms of what is now known as protopunk music, punk rock bands eschewed the perceived excesses of mainstream 1970s rock....
     band was forced to split up after a lawsuit from Archie Comics in April 2001.


The Archie universe

Archie is set in the small town of Riverdale. The state, or even the general location of the town, is unclear. It is known, however, that John L. Goldwater attended Horace Mann School
Horace Mann School

The Horace Mann School is an independent school college preparatory school in New York City. Founded in 1887, Horace Mann spans from nursery school to the twelfth grade and is a member of the Ivy Preparatory School League....
, which is located in the Riverdale
Riverdale, Bronx

Riverdale is a an upper-class residential neighborhood in the northwest portion of the borough of the Bronx in New York City.Riverdale's ZIP codes are 10463 and 10471....
 section of the Bronx
The Bronx

The Bronx is the northernmost of the Five Boroughs of New York City and the newest of the 62 Administrative divisions of New York#county of New York State....
 in New York City
New York City

The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
. In the early years of Archie, Riverdale was located in Massachusetts, with Mr. Lodge being a senator for that state, but this is no longer considered canon
Canon (fiction)

Canon, in terms of a fictional universe, is any material that is considered to be "genuine," or can be directly referenced as material produced by the original author or creator of a series....
.

For the comics' 60th anniversary in 2002, several geographical and historical hints to the location of Riverdale were printed in every digest issue. At the end of the year, it was revealed that the hints point to Riverdale being located in the "Missouri
Missouri

Missouri is a U.S. state in the Midwestern United States of the United States bordered by Iowa, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Nebraska....
 area," but that officially Riverdale has no location. It is essentially located wherever the reader wants it to be. Indeed, the geography of Riverdale is far too inconsistent for it to be any one specific location (see below).

Titles


Dynamic "New Look" Series
In 2007, Archie Comics started making four part "new look" series where the first part of four issues is a diffrerent story and the characters are drawn in an updated, less cartoony style. Here are the titles for the issues:

Title Comic Release No. of Issues Release Date
Bad Boy Trouble
Bad Boy Trouble

Bad Boy Trouble is an United States comic book story by writer Melanie J. Morgan and artists Steven Butler and Al Milgrom that was originally serialized in Betty & Veronica Double Digest # 151-154....
Betty & Veronica Double Digest
Veronica Lodge

Veronica "Ronnie" Lodge is an adolescent fictional character in the Archie Comics books series. Since the Archie characters are ageless, Lodge remains a high-school teenager after 66 years....
151-154September 4, 2007
The MatchmakersJughead's Double Digest
Jughead's Double Digest

Jughead's Double Digest, began, as, a, companion, publication, to, the, Jughead, 32-page comic book and the Jughead With Archie Digest magazine, and is a publication of "Archie Comics"....
139-142April 19, 2008
Breakup BluesPals n' Gals Double Digest124-127October 13, 2008
My Father's BetrayalBetty & Veronica Double Digest
Betty Cooper

Elizabeth "Betty" Cooper is a fictional character of Archie Comics, the blonde-haired daughter of Hal and Alice Cooper. Betty likes sports, and is also a cheerleader....
170-173April 15, 2009


Characters


The Archie gang (main characters)
  • Archibald "Archie" Andrews
    Archie Andrews (comics)

    'Archibald "Archie" Andrews', created in 1941 by Bob Montana, is a fictional character in an United States comic book series published by Archie Comics, the long-running Archie Andrews radio series, a syndicated comic strip and animation ? The Archie Show, a Saturday morning cartoon television series by Filmation, plus Archie's Weird...
    , main character, a typical red-headed teenage boy with a great interest in dating. He tends to be clumsy and accident prone.
  • Elizabeth "Betty" Cooper
    Betty Cooper

    Elizabeth "Betty" Cooper is a fictional character of Archie Comics, the blonde-haired daughter of Hal and Alice Cooper. Betty likes sports, and is also a cheerleader....
    , the blonde girl next door
    Girl next door

    The cultural and sexual stereotype of the girl next door is invoked in United States contexts to indicate wholesome, unassuming, femininity; as opposed to the culture's other female stereotypes such as the tomboy, the valley girl, the femme fatale, or the slut....
    , who is a good student, athlete, cook, and auto mechanic.
  • Veronica "Ronnie/Ron" Lodge
    Veronica Lodge

    Veronica "Ronnie" Lodge is an adolescent fictional character in the Archie Comics books series. Since the Archie characters are ageless, Lodge remains a high-school teenager after 66 years....
    , the rich, sometimes nice and sometimes snobbish girl. Betty's best friend and rival for Archie's affections.
  • Forsythe Pendleton "Jughead" Jones III
    Jughead Jones

    Forsythe Pendleton "Jughead" Jones III is a fictional character in Archie Comics, first appearing in December 1941. He is the son of Forsythe II....
    , Archie's best friend, Jughead is sarcastic, obsessed with eating, lazy, and apathetic towards girls; however he is also portrayed to be very clever and knowledgeable on a wide variety of subjects, being second only to Dilton Doily.
  • Reginald "Reggie" Mantle III
    Reggie Mantle

    Reginald "Reggie" Mantle III is a fictional character in the Archie Comics book. His full name is given as Reginald Mantle, but he is usually called by his nickname Reggie, and sometimes refers to himself as "Mantle, The Magnificent." The character was introduced in 1942....
    , the vain and conceited practical joker who thinks he can date anyone he wants.


Parents (of the main characters)
Of all the parents, it is Veronica's father and Archie's parents who appear most frequently.
  • Mr. Hiram Lodge
    Hiram Lodge

    Hiram Lodge is a fictional character by Archie Comics. He is married to Hermione Lodge and they have a daughter, Veronica Lodge. He is also the richest man in Riverdale ....
    , Veronica's rich father; who often dreads meeting Archie due to Archie's clumsiness and knack for causing him trouble
  • Mr. Frederick "Fred" Andrews
    Fred and Mary Andrews

    Fred Andrews and Mary Andrews are fictional characters in Archie Comics and the parents of Archie Andrews ....
    , Archie's father who is pear-shaped, old-fashioned, and balding.
  • Mrs. Mary Andrews
    Fred and Mary Andrews

    Fred Andrews and Mary Andrews are fictional characters in Archie Comics and the parents of Archie Andrews ....
    , Archie's typical all-American suburban mother.


The other parents appear less frequently:
  • Mrs. Hermione Lodge
    Hermione Lodge

    Hermione Lodge is a fictional character in the Archie Comics universe. She is the wife of Hiram Lodge and mother of Veronica Lodge. Her maiden name has not been revealed....
    , Veronica's mother. Appears far less frequently than her husband, and rarely plays a significant role. (also been called Julie circa 1980s).
  • Mr. Hal Cooper
    Hal and Alice Cooper

    Hal Cooper and Alice Cooper are fictional characters in Archie Comics and the parents of Betty Cooper and her older siblings Polly and Chic....
    , Betty's middle-class but hard-working father who works as a druggist.
  • Mrs. Alice Cooper
    Hal and Alice Cooper

    Hal Cooper and Alice Cooper are fictional characters in Archie Comics and the parents of Betty Cooper and her older siblings Polly and Chic....
    , Betty's caring, highly supportive mother.
  • Mr. Forsythe Pendleton Jones Jr
    Forsythe and Gladys Jones

    Forsythe Pendleton Jones II and his wife Gladys are fictional characters in Archie Comics and the parents of Jughead Jones and Jellybean Jones....
    , Jughead's father (referred to as Timothy Jones in one story), who looks just like his son, only older and balding.
  • Mrs. Gladys Jones
    Forsythe and Gladys Jones

    Forsythe Pendleton Jones II and his wife Gladys are fictional characters in Archie Comics and the parents of Jughead Jones and Jellybean Jones....
    , Jughead's mother.
  • Other parents of Archie characters
    Minor characters in Archie Comics

    This is a list of minor recurring characters who have appeared in the Archie Comics universe. Most have interacted with Archie and his friends in the "mainstream" universe, but a few appeared only in "alternate universes" or the Little Archie universe ....
    .


Other Teens/Expanded Archie Gang (supporting)
  • Marmaduke "Moose"/"Big Moose" Mason
    Moose Mason

    Marmaduke "Moose" Mason is a fictional character in the Archie Comics universe. He attends Riverdale High School and his difficulties with school were later attributed to dyslexia....
     (earlier Moose McGee), a muscular star athlete who is a poor student and is possessive about his girlfriend. He also is known to be dyslexic
  • Midge Klump
    Midge Klump

    Midge Klump is a fictional character from Archie Comics. She is a friend of Betty Cooper and Veronica Lodge. Midge is also the girlfriend of Moose Mason, although Reggie Mantle is also known to be in love with her....
    , Moose's girlfriend. (earlier "Midge Collins")
  • Dilton Donald "Dilly" Doiley
    Dilton Doiley

    Dilton Donald Doiley is a fictional character in the Archie Comics universe. He is the smartest teenager in Riverdale High School ....
    , the very intelligent nerd
    Nerd

    Nerd is a term often bearing a derogatory connotation or stereotype, that refers to a person who passionately pursues intellectual activities, esoteric knowledge, or other obscure interests rather than engaging in more Social relation or popular activities....
     and inventor.
  • Ethel "Big Ethel" Muggs
    Big Ethel

    "Big" Ethel Muggs is a fictional character by Archie Comics. She is a student of Riverdale High School , known to her schoolmates by the nickname Big Ethel....
     (earlier Ethel Dinklehof), a tall, stringy, somewhat dorky but goodhearted teenager who always tries to win over Jughead, albeit unsuccessfully.
  • Charles "Chuck" Clayton
    Chuck Clayton

    Charles "Chuck" Clayton is an African-American teenager fictional character published by Archie Comics. Chuck lives in the fictional town of Riverdale , and is the friend of Archie Andrews , Betty Cooper, Jughead Jones, and other students at Riverdale High School....
    , an African-American athlete and cartoonist.
  • Nancy Woods
    Nancy Woods

    Nancy Woods is a fictional character, an African American, who appears in the Archie Comics. A friend of the whole Archie's Gang, Woods dates Chuck Clayton, a American football player at Riverdale High School ....
    , Chuck's girlfriend.
  • Other teenagers in Archie Comics
    Minor characters in Archie Comics

    This is a list of minor recurring characters who have appeared in the Archie Comics universe. Most have interacted with Archie and his friends in the "mainstream" universe, but a few appeared only in "alternate universes" or the Little Archie universe ....
    .


The Faculty
  • Mr. Waldo Weatherbee
    Mr. Weatherbee

    Waldo Weatherbee is a fictional character in the Archie Comics universe. Mr. Weatherbee is the Principal of Riverdale High School , where Archie Andrews is a student....
    , the school principal, popularly referred to as 'The Bee'. He is often a victim of Archie's clumsiness, and the latter frequently finds himself in detention.
  • Miss Geraldine Grundy
    Miss Grundy

    Miss Geraldine Grundy is a fictional character of the Archie Comics series. In the comics, she is the homeroom teacher at Riverdale High School, occasionally teaching English and Math, as well....
    , a teacher at Riverdale High. Usually portrayed as an English teacher. She mostly teaches every subject not including gym or chemistry. Most students consider her as a "nice" or "good" teacher. She is pretty old with white hair.
  • Professor Benjamin Flutesnoot
    Flutesnoot

    Professor Elmer Benjamin Flutesnoot, or Mr. Flutesnoot, is a fictional character from the Archie Comics books.Mr. Flutesnoot is a chemistry professor ....
    , science teacher (also band teacher in Little Archie
    Alternate Universes in Archie Comics

    This is a list of various alternate universes regarding the characters from Archie Comics. While continuity between the "mainstream" Archie stories is loose at best and nonexistent at worst, there have been several series of stories that definitely do not cross over into these regular stories....
    ).
  • Coach Kleats, the head physical education
    Physical education

    In most educational systems, physical education class,Phys Ed, is a course that utilizes learning in the cognitive, affective and psychomotor domains in a play or movement exploration setting....
     teacher. He only teaches football.
  • Coach Floyd Clayton
    Coach Clayton

    Floyd Clayton or Harry Clayton is a fictional character, an African American coach of the Archie Comics universe. He is Chuck Clayton's father....
    , Chuck's dad, also a physical education teacher. He is the basketball coach.
  • Miss Bernice Beazley
    Miss Beazley

    In the Archie Comics universe, Miss Bernice Beazley is the cafeteria chef of Riverdale High School. In a stereotype of high school cafeterias, Miss Beazley is portrayed as an awful cook who is quite curt and outspoken, even to the principal, Mr....
    , the somewhat grouchy school cafeteria cook. No one likes her food besides Jughead. No one likes her but herself.
  • Mr. Svenson
    Mr. Svenson

    In the Archie Comics universe, Mr. Svenson is the custodian at Riverdale High School. A Sweden, he is bashful and speaks with a thick accent that is often hard for Archie's Gang to understand....
    , Swedish school custodian. He often stays at school when it is closed and cleans. A lot of the students like him and try to help him if he has problems. He also has a girlfriend named Olga.
  • Other faculty members
    Minor characters in Archie Comics

    This is a list of minor recurring characters who have appeared in the Archie Comics universe. Most have interacted with Archie and his friends in the "mainstream" universe, but a few appeared only in "alternate universes" or the Little Archie universe ....
    .


Other Characters
  • Terry "Pop" Tate
    Pop Tate

    ----Terry "Pop" Tate, a fictional character in the fictional Archie Comics universe, is the owner and manager of the Chok'lit Shoppe, a soda shop and frequent hangout of Archie's Gang....
    , (earlier Leo Tate)owner of the Chocklit Shoppe (in older comics, Pop's Malt Shop) where Archie and the gang frequently hang out.
  • Jellybean, Jughead's little sister. Her real name is Forsythia.
  • Hot Dog
    Jughead Jones

    Forsythe Pendleton "Jughead" Jones III is a fictional character in Archie Comics, first appearing in December 1941. He is the son of Forsythe II....
    , Jughead's faithful pet dog.
  • Minor characters in Archie Comics
    Minor characters in Archie Comics

    This is a list of minor recurring characters who have appeared in the Archie Comics universe. Most have interacted with Archie and his friends in the "mainstream" universe, but a few appeared only in "alternate universes" or the Little Archie universe ....


Superheroes

At various points, Archie Comics has experimented with publishing various superhero titles. Beginning with the companies "very first comic publication" - Blue Ribbon Comics
Blue Ribbon Comics

Blue Ribbon Comics is the name of two United States comic book series, the first published by Archie Comics during the 1930s and 1940s period known as the Golden Age of Comic Books, and the second during the 1980s by a later incarnation of the same company....
 #1 (Nov. 1939), and continuing throughout the 1940s with titles such as Zip Comics, Jackpot Comics, Hangman Comics, Shield-Wizard Comics and Pep Comics
Pep Comics

The publication Pep Comics was a comic book series from MLJ Magazines , published from January, 1940, to March, 1987.The first issue introduced a line of superheroes and other characters: The Shield by Irving Novick; The Comet by Jack Cole; Jocko, a funny animal picture story by Dick Ryan....
. This last title was, "before Archie came along in issue #22... home to the first ever patriotic superhero, The Shield."

During "Archie's Silver Age
Silver Age of Comic Books

The Silver Age of Comic Books was a period of artistic advancement and commercial success in mainstream American comic books, predominantly those which featured the superhero archetype....
 (late 1950s through the 1960s)," the Shield led other characters in the Joe Simon
Joe Simon

Joseph H. Simon is a Jewish-American comic book writer, artist, editing, and publishing. Simon created or co-created many important characters in the 1930s-1940s Golden Age of Comic Books, and who served as the first editor of Timely Comics, the company that would evolve into Marvel Comics....
/Jack Kirby
Jack Kirby

Jacob Kurtzberg , better known by the pen name Jack Kirby, was an American comic book artist, writer and editing. Growing up poor in New York City, Kurtzberg entered the nascent comics industry in the 1930s....
 title The Double Life of Private Strong, while Simon & Kirby soon added another title - The Adventures of the Fly - which in turn was later joined by The Jaguar
The Jaguar (Archie)

The Jaguar is a superhero published by Archie Comics. He was created as part of Archie's "Archie Adventure Series", before that line was camped up as part of their Mighty Comics line....
. "By the mid-'60s, the superheroes were back in full force" with Mighty Comics
Mighty Comics

Mighty Comics Group, sometimes referred to as Archie Adventure Series and Radio Comics, refer to the attempt by Archie Comics to revamp and publish superhero comics in the mid-1960s....
 Presents
and The Mighty Crusaders
Mighty Crusaders

The Mighty Crusaders is a fictional superhero team published by Archie Comics. The team originally appeared in Fly-Man #31, #32 and #33 before being launched in its own title, Mighty Crusaders....
 featuring "all of Archie's superhero characters teaming up for epic adventures." The Mighty Crusaders comprised: The Fly
The Fly (Archie Comics)

The Fly is a fictional character comic book superhero published by Red Circle Comics. He was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby as part of Archie's "Archie Adventure Series" and later camp as part of the company's Mighty Comics line....
, The Shield, Jaguar, Steel Sterling, Captain Flag
Captain Flag

Captain Flag is a fictional superhero created by MLJ Comics' writer Joe Blair and artist Lin Streeter. He first appeared in September 1941, in issue #16 of Blue Ribbon Comics....
, The Comet, Fly Girl
Flygirl

Flygirl is a super-heroine published by Archie Comics.Kim Brand was an actress rescued by the Fly from a fall from a hotel window in issue #13 of The Adventures of the Fly....
, Firefly and The Fox.

Many of these characters were later licensed to DC.

Mighty Comics


Red Circle Comics


In October 1973, Archie's new "Red Circle Comics" imprint debuted with Chilling Adventures in Sorcery #3 (formerly Chilling Adventures in Sorcery as told by Sabrina
Sabrina, the Teenage Witch

Sabrina the Teenage Witch is a comic book series published by Archie Comics about the adventures of a teenager fictional character named Sabrina Spellman....
), later morphing into Red Circle Sorcery with issue #6, running for a further six issues, until issue #11 (Feb, 1975). A small handful of other shortlived, non-Archie, titles were published by Red Circle Comics before - in 1978/79 - two digests were published collecting some of the Archie Superhero comics from the previous decade. These were Archie's Super Hero Special and Archie's Super Hero Comic Digest Magazine - the latter notable for printing a previously-unpublished revamp of the Black Hood
The Black Hood

The Black Hood was originally a golden age character created by Archie Comics, later known as Archie Comics. The Black Hood first appeared in Top Notch Comics #9, October 1940 and became one of MLJ's most popular characters....
 by Gray Morrow
Gray Morrow

Gray Morrow was an American illustrator of paperback books and comics. Born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, he is best known as art director of Spider-Man between 1967 and 1970 and as illustrator of the syndicated Tarzan, Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon and Prince Valiant comic strips, among others....
 and Neal Adams
Neal Adams

Neal Adams is an United States comic book and commercial art artist best known helping to create some of the definitive modern imagery of the DC Comics characters Superman, Batman and Green Arrow among others....
.

In the 1980s, Archie's superheros returned. Initially published by JC Comics
JC Comics

JC Comics , was a very short-lived comic book company owned by John Carbonaro that published a few titles in the early 1980s. Carbonaro had purchased the rights to the T.H.U.N.D.E.R....
 in JCP Features #1, (Dec 1981), in March 1983, the first issue of Mighty Crusaders
Mighty Crusaders

The Mighty Crusaders is a fictional superhero team published by Archie Comics. The team originally appeared in Fly-Man #31, #32 and #33 before being launched in its own title, Mighty Crusaders....
 appeared, leading to a procession of new titles under the Red Circle Comics banner, soon to be rebranded (in February 1984) the "Archie Adventure Series," before cancellation in September, 1985.

Impact


Archie's super-heroes were later leased to DC Comics
DC Comics

DC Comics is one of the largest and most popular American comic book and related media companies, along with Marvel Comics. A subsidiary of Warner Bros....
 for use in its short-lived Impact Comics
Impact Comics

Impact Comics was an imprint of DC Comics that was aimed at younger audiences. It was begun in 1991 and ended by 1993. Its titles featured the adventures of altered versions of superheroes licensed from Archie Comics including the Fly , the Comet , the Shield , the Jaguar , the Web , and the Black Hood....
 line, "and while many of their titles received critical acclaim, there were already too many superhero comics flooding the market."

External links