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Scrooge McDuck is a rich and thrifty Fictional Character created by artist Carl Barks for The Walt Disney Company 's Comic Book s. Scrooge is the uncle of Donald Duck , and first appeared in the story '' Christmas On Bear Mountain '' in December 1947. He was partly inspired by Andrew Carnegie , John D. Rockefeller and other industry captains of the 19th Century (his Scottish ancestry is likely a nod to Carnegie, however it could also be a reference to the Scottish reputation for frugality). He was the first member of The Clan McDuck to appear in the comics. Scrooge's name was based on the Miser ly Ebenezer Scrooge , a character from Charles Dickens 's '' A Christmas Carol ''.

Along with many of the characters of Duckburg , Scrooge has enjoyed popularity in many countries, particularly in Europe . To find Scrooge's name in other countries, please see the List Of Disney Characters' Names In Various Languages .


COMICS HISTORY


First appearance


Scrooge, maternal uncle of previously established character Donald Duck, made his first appearance in "Christmas on Bear Mountain" in December 1947, a story written and drawn by artist Carl Barks . The story's title was based on " Night On Bald Mountain " by Modest Mussorgsky (the source of a scene in '' Fantasia '' featuring Chernabog ). A prototype for Scrooge McDuck, however, appeared earlier in the 1943 cartoon " Spirit Of '43 ", in which Scrooge (or his prototype) reminds Donald to save his money to support the War Effort .

Scrooge did not yet have his familiar characteristics in his first comic story. In "Christmas on Bear Mountain", Scrooge was a bearded, bespectacled, reasonably wealthy old man, visibly leaning on his cane. He was living in isolation in a "huge mansion", which is said to be influenced by Xanadu from Orson Welles 's '' Citizen Kane ''. Scrooge has always been a somewhat bitter character, but his Misanthropic thoughts in this first story are probably less characteristic of Scrooge than those of his rival Flintheart Glomgold : ''"Here I sit in this big lonely dump, waiting for Christmas to pass! Bah! That silly season when everybody loves everybody else! A curse on it! Me—I'm different! Everybody hates me, and I hate everybody!"''

In the story, Scrooge plans to entertain himself by inviting his nephew Donald Duck and grand-nephews Huey, Dewey And Louie Duck to his mountain cabin and then scaring them out of it.


As a recurring character


Barks would later claim that he originally only intended to use Scrooge as a one-shot character, but then decided Scrooge could prove useful in further stories. Barks continued to experiment with Scrooge's appearance and personality over the next four years.

Scrooge's second appearance, in " The Old Castle's Secret " (first published in June 1948), had Scrooge recruiting his nephews to search for a family treasure hidden in Dismal Downs, the McDuck family's ancestral castle, built in the middle of Rannoch Moor in Scotland . "Foxy Relations" (first published in November 1948) was the first story where Scrooge is called by his title and Catchphrase "The Richest Duck in the World".

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First hints of Scrooge's past


"Voodoo Hoodoo", first published in August 1949, was the first story to hint at Scrooge's past with the introduction of two figures from it. The first was Foola Zoola, an old Africa n sorcerer and chief of the Voodoo tribe who had cursed Scrooge, seeking revenge for the destruction of his village and the taking of his tribe's lands by Scrooge decades ago.

Scrooge privately admitted to his nephews that he had used an army of "cutthroats" to get the tribe to abandon their lands, in order to establish a Diamond -mining colony. The event was placed in 1879 during the story, but it would later be Retcon ned to 1909 to fit with Scrooge's later-established personal history.

The second figure was Bombie The Zombie , the organ of the sorcerer's curse and revenge. He had reportedly sought Scrooge for decades before reaching Duckburg, mistaking Donald for Scrooge. It should be noted that Bombie was not really Undead and Foola Zoola did not practice Necromancy .

Barks, with a note of Skepticism often found in his stories, explained the zombie as a living person who has never died, but has somehow gotten under the influence of a sorcerer. Although some scenes of the story were intended as a Parody of Bela Lugosi 's '' White Zombie '', the story is the first to not only focus on Scrooge's past but also touch on the darkest aspects of his personality.


Precursors to later stories


"Trail of the Unicorn", first published in February 1950, introduced Scrooge's private Zoo . One of his pilots had managed to photograph the last living Unicorn , which lived on the India n part of the Himalayas . Scrooge offered a reward to competing cousins Donald Duck and Gladstone Gander to whoever would be the first to capture the unicorn for his collection of animals.

This was also the story which introduced his private Airplane . Barks would later establish Scrooge as an experienced Aviator . Donald had previously been shown as also being a skilled aviator, with Flintheart also being shown as such in later stories. In comparison, Huey, Dewey and Louie were only depicted having taken flying lessons in the story "Frozen Gold" (published in January 1945).

"The Pixilated Parrot", first published in July 1950, introduced the precursor to Scrooge's money bin; in this story, Scrooge's central office building is said to contain "three cubic acres of money". Two nameless burglars who briefly appear during the story are considered to be the precursors of the Beagle Boys .


Scrooge as a major character


"The Magic Hourglass", first published in September 1950, was arguably the first story to change the focus of the Duck stories from Donald to Scrooge. During the story, several themes were introduced for Scrooge.

Donald first mentions in this story that his uncle practically owns Duckburg, a statement that Scrooge's rival John D. Rockerduck would later put in dispute. Scrooge first hints that he was not born into wealth, as he remembers buying the Hourglass of the story in Morocco when he was a member of a ship's crew as a cabin boy. It is also the first story in which Scrooge mentions speaking another language besides his native English and reading other alphabets besides the Latin Alphabet , as during the story, he speaks Arabic and reads the Arabic Alphabet .

The later theme would be developed further in later stories. Barks and current Scrooge writer Don Rosa have depicted Scrooge as being fluent in Arabic , Dutch , German , Mongolian , Spanish , Mayan , Finnish , and various dialects of Chinese . Scrooge acquired this knowledge from years of living or traveling to the various regions of the world where those languages are spoken. Later writers would depict Scrooge having at least working knowledge of several other languages.

Scrooge was shown in "The Magic Hourglass" in a more positive light than in previous stories, but his more villainous side is present too. Scrooge is seen in this story attempting to reacquire a magic Hourglass that he gave to Donald, before finding out that it acted as a protective charm for him. To convince his nephews to return it, he pursues them throughout Morocco, where they had headed to earlier in the story. Memorably during the story, Scrooge interrogates Donald by having him tied up and tickled with a feather in an attempt to get Donald to reveal the hourglass's location. Scrooge finally manages to retrieve it, exchanging it for a flask of Water , as he had found his nephews exhausted and left in the desert with no supplies. As Scrooge explains, he intended to give them a higher offer, but he just could not resist having somebody at his mercy without taking advantage of it.


Final developments


"A Financial Fable", first published in March 1951, had Scrooge teaching Donald some lessons in productivity as the source of wealth, along with the laws of Supply And Demand . Perhaps more importantly, it was also the first story where Scrooge observes how diligent and industrious Huey, Louie and Dewey are, making them more similar to himself rather than to Donald. Donald in Barks's stories is depicted as working hard on occasion, but given the choice often proves to be a shirker. The three younger nephews first side with Scrooge rather than Donald in this story, with the bond between granduncle and grandnephews strengthening in later stories.

"Terror of the Beagle Boys", first published in November 1951, introduced the readers to the Beagle Boys, although Scrooge in this story seems to be already familiar with them. "The Big Bin on Killmotor Hill" introduced Scrooge's money Bin , built on Killmotor Hill in the center of Duckburg.

By this point, Scrooge had become familiar to readers in the United States and Europe. Other Disney writers and artists besides Barks began using Scrooge in their own stories, including Italian writer Romano Scarpa . Western Publishing , the then-publisher of the Disney comics, started thinking about using Scrooge as a protagonist rather than a supporting character, and decided to launch Scrooge in his own self-titled comic. ''Uncle Scrooge'' #1, featuring the story "Only a Poor Old Man", was published in March 1952. This story along with " Back To The Klondike ", first published a year later in March 1953, became the biggest influences in how Scrooge's character, past, and beliefs would become defined.

After this point, Barks produced most of his longer stories in ''Uncle Scrooge'', with a focus mainly on adventure, while his ten-page stories for other Disney comics continued to feature Donald as the star and focused on comedy. In Scrooge's stories, Donald and his nephews were cast as Scrooge's assistants, who accompanied Scrooge in his adventures around the world. This change of focus from Donald to Scrooge was also reflected in stories by other contemporary writers. Since then, Scrooge remains a central figure of the Duck comics' universe, thus the coining of the term " Scrooge McDuck Universe ".


SCROOGE MCDUCK TIMELINE

Details are constantly added to Scrooge's biography by many different writers. However, one popular timeline was created by writer Don Rosa , consisting of the most important "facts" about Scrooge's life. Please note this tentative timeline is in serious disharmony with the '' DuckTales '' cartoon (as well as a lot of Non-Barks comics), as much of the technology displayed in that series is simply nonexistent when working within this timeline. (Note that this timeline is not Rosa's, but attempts to incorporate elements from other authors. These facts are in parentheses.)

  • 1867: Scrooge was born in Glasgow , Scotland , to Fergus McDuck and Downy O'Drake . (He had an older half brother, Rumpus McFowl .) He would have two younger sisters, namely Matilda McDuck and Hortense McDuck (and a younger half brother named Gideon McDuck ).

  • 1877: Scrooge becomes a shoe polisher, but his first customer fools him and pays him with an American Dime . He keeps the Dime he cannot spend as his symbol of success.

  • 1880: Scrooge emigrates to the United States . He first meets his uncle, Mississippi riverboater Angus "Pothole" McDuck , and the Beagle Boys , a family of outlaws that remain his enemies for the rest of his life.

  • 1882: His uncle retires and leaves his riverboat, named ''Dilly Dollar'', to Scrooge. The Beagle Boys destroy the Riverboat in an act of revenge. Scrooge decides to try his luck in the American West and later in the year gets hired as a Cowboy by cattle baron Murdo MacKenzie (an actual historical figure, one of the many that Scrooge met).

  • 1883: Scrooge becomes a miner searching for Silver and Copper .

  • 1885: Scrooge's father calls his son back to Scotland on an important family matter. Just a week before he leaves he meets and befriends the Millionaire Howard Rockerduck , who had become rich in the California Gold Rush of 1849. He also meets Howard's seven-year-old spoiled son John Rockerduck , who will grow up to become the Third Richest Duck in the world and one of Scrooge's main rivals.

  • 1886–1889: Scrooge searches for gold in South Africa . During his first year there he saves the life of a duck about his age named Flintheart Glomgold . A little later they become bitter enemies, and remain as such for the rest of their lives. Glomgold later became the Second Richest Duck in the World.

  • 1889–1893: Scrooge returns to the United States to search for Gold . He meets many famous historical figures but his search fails.

  • 1893–1896: Scrooge goes to Australia to search for gold but his search again fails.

  • 1896–1899: Scrooge searches for gold in the Klondike . During his years there he meets the saloon owner, singer and occasional thief "Glittering" Goldie O'Gilt . He continues to have a love/hate relationship with her for the rest of his life. His search for gold succeeds.

  • 1897: Scrooge's mother Downy O'Drake dies, aged 57, in the Duckenburgh, Dismal Downs.

  • 1899–1902: Scrooge becomes a millionaire and buys a Bank . He starts building a small financial empire; by 1902 he has become a Billionaire .

  • 1902: Scrooge returns to Scotland to get his sisters Matilda McDuck and Hortense McDuck to come to America with him. Also in 1902, Scrooge's father Fergus McDuck dies, aged 67, in the Duckenburgh, Dismal Downs. Scrooge's mother and one of his two uncles, Angus "Pothole" McDuck (deceased in 1901, aged 72), had already died by this point. Scrooge, Matilda and Hortense are the last of the McDuck Clan . Scrooge settles in the small village of Duckburg , Calisota , USA , which he chose as his home base.

  • 1909–1930: While his sisters remain in Duckburg and run his empire, Scrooge travels the world expanding his empire in every continent.

  • 1930: Scrooge becomes the richest duck in the world, but a fight with his family leaves him with no contact with them for the next seventeen years. Note that during this year he met his ten-year-old nephew Donald Fauntleroy Duck and his nephew's twin sister Della Thelma Duck for the first time. (He also first met Brigitta McBridge , a woman who fell in love with him; they continued to have a love/hate relationship for the rest of their lives.)

  • 1942: Scrooge feels depressed and tired and decides to retire.

  • 1947: Scrooge meets his nephew Donald Duck again and his grandnephews, Della's children, Huey, Dewey, And Louie Duck. He decides to become active again and soon a circle of activities whirl around him as he attracts the attention of relatives, old and new enemies and friends.

  • 1953: Scrooge's uncle Jake McDuck dies, aged 121, in Glasgow , Scotland . According to Carl Barks (1901–2000), Jake McDuck was the oldest-ever member of the Duck/McDuck family.

  • 1961: Scrooge meets the Italian Sorceress Magica De Spell for the first time, as she begins her various attempts to steal Scrooge's Number One Dime so she can melt it into an Amulet .

  • 1967: After a life of adventure, Scrooge McDuck purportedly dies at the age of 100, according to Don Rosa 's unofficial timelines (though sometimes Rosa does not trust his timeline).

  • 1994: According to Carl Barks, Scrooge McDuck is still alive in 1994, having found the Trojan Horse .

  • 1997: Barks states that Scrooge is still alive in this year, according to the story "Somewhere in Nowhere".



SCROOGE'S WEALTH AND PERSONALITY


Wealth, personality traits

Scrooge is arguably the richest Duck in the world, rivaled by Flintheart Glomgold , John D. Rockerduck and, less prominent, the Maharaja of the Fictional Country Howdoyoustan, having worked his way up the financial ladder from humble immigrant roots to fantasticillionaire status. He keeps his wealth in a massive Money Bin overlooking the city of Duckburg. A shrewd businessman and noted tightwad, his hobbies include diving into his money like a Dolphin , burrowing through it like a Gopher , and throwing coins into the air to feel them fall upon his skull. He is also the richest member of The Billionaires Club of Duckburg, a society which includes the most successful Business men of the world and allows them to keep connections with each other. Glomgold and Rockerduck are also influential members of the Club.

Keeping all one's money out of circulation is not the best investment strategy. This was addressed in the short cartoon '' Scrooge McDuck And Money '', first released on March 23 , 1967 . There, Scrooge stated to his nephews that the money in his bin is but a percentage of his total wealth. The rest is generally known to be invested in a worldwide financial empire. Comic books have stated that the money bin contains currency of personal significance to Scrooge, including the first dime he ever earned, also known in the stories as his "Number One Dime".

Both as a businessman and as a treasure hunter, Scrooge is noted for his need to set new goals in addition to those he has already achieved and face new challenges in addition to those he has already successfully faced. As Carl Barks described his character, for Scrooge there is "Always another rainbow". The phrase later provided the title for one of Barks's better-known paintings depicting Scrooge. Periods of inactivity between adventures and lack of serious challenges tend to be depressing for Scrooge after a while; some stories depict this phase to have negative effects on his health. In extended periods of a lack of activity, including his retirement between 1942 and 1947, Scrooge is depicted as even suffering from symptoms of Clinical Depression .


Education

Scrooge is not formally educated, as he quit school at an early age. However, he has a sharp mind and is always ready to learn new skills.

Because of his secondary occupation as a treasure hunter, Scrooge has become something of a Scholar and an amateur Archaeologist . Starting with Barks, several writers have explained how Scrooge becomes aware of the treasures he decides to pursue. This often involves periods of conducting research in various written sources in search of passages that might lead him to a treasure. Often Scrooge decides to search for the possible truth behind old legends, or discovers obscure references to the activities of ancient conquerors, explorers and military leaders that he considers interesting enough to begin a new treasure hunting expedition.

As a result of his research, Scrooge has collected an extensive personal library, which includes many rare written sources. In Barks's and Rosa's stories, among the prized pieces of this library is an almost complete collection of Spanish and Dutch naval logs of the 16th and 17th centuries. Their references to the fates of other ships have often allowed Scrooge to locate sunken ships and recover their treasures from their underwater graves. Mostly self-taught as he is, Scrooge is a firm believer in the saying "knowledge is power".


Morality and beliefs

As a businessman, Scrooge often resorts to aggressive tactics and deception. He seems to have gained significant experience in manipulating people and events towards his own ends. As often seen in stories by writer Guido Martina and occasionally by others, Scrooge is noted for his Cynicism , especially towards ideas of Morality when it comes to business and the pursuit of set goals. This has been noted by some as not being part of Barks's original depiction of the character, but it has since come to be accepted as one valid interpretation of Scrooge's way of thinking.

However, Scrooge does seem to have a personal sense of honesty that offers him an amount of self-control. As a result, Scrooge can often be seen contemplating his course of action, while divided between adopting a ruthless pursuit of his current goal and using tactics which he considers more honest. In times, he can sacrifice this goal in order to remain within the limits of this sense of honesty. Several fans of the character have come to consider these depictions of him as adding to the depth of his personality, because based on the decisions he takes Scrooge can be both the Hero and the Villain of his stories. This is one thing he has in common with his nephew Donald Duck , and a main difference they both have with the generally ethical Mickey Mouse . Scrooge's sense of honesty also makes him different from his rival Flintheart Glomgold, who places no such limitations on his own actions.

Scrooge has a fairly nasty temper and rarely hesitates to use violence against those who provoke his anger; however, he seems to be against the use of lethal force. On occasion, he has even saved the lives of enemies who had threatened his own life but were in danger of losing theirs. According to Scrooge's own explanation, this is in order to save himself from feeling guilt over their deaths; he generally awaits no gratitude from them. Scrooge has also expressed his belief that only in Fairy Tale s do bad people turn good, and that he is old enough to not believe in fairy tales.

Scrooge McDuck is a character who reveals the morality of the particular cartoonist/author who crafts a Scrooge story. Carl Barks gave him a definite set of ethics that was in tone with the time he was supposed to have made his fortune. The robber barons and industrialists of the 1890–1920 era were McDuck's competition as he earned his fortune. He proudly asserts "I made it by being tougher than the toughies and smarter than the smarties! And I made it square!" It is obvious that Barks's creation is averse to dishonesty in the pursuit of money. Don Rosa's Scrooge is a caricature of Barks's original and much more frequently shows anger, malice and violence in response to situations rather than shrewdness and sheer dogged determination. When Disney filmmakers first contemplated a Scrooge feature cartoon in the fifties, the animators had no understanding of the Scrooge McDuck character and simply envisioned Scrooge as a duck version of Ebenezer Scrooge— a very unsympathetic character. In the end they shelved the idea because a duck who gets all excited about money just was not funny. Many of the European Scrooge comics have created their own Scrooge McDucks as well, usually involving McDuck in slapstick adventures.

In an interview, Barks summed up his beliefs about Scrooge and capitalism:

I've always looked at the ducks as caricatured human beings. In rereading the stories, I realized that I had gotten kind of deep in some of them: there was philosophy in there that I hadn't realized I was putting in. It was an added feature that went along with the stories. I think a lot of the philosophy in my stories is conservative—conservative in the sense that I feel our civilization peaked around 1910. Since then we've been going downhill. Much of the older culture had basic qualities that the new stuff we keep hatching can never match.


Look at the magnificent cathedrals and palaces that were built. Nobody can build that sort of thing nowadays. Also, I believe that we should preserve many old ideals and methods of working: honor, honesty, allowing other people to believe in their own ideas, not trying to force everyone into one form. The thing I have against the present political system is that it tries to make everybody exactly alike. We should have a million different patterns.


They say that wealthy people like the Vanderbilts and Rockefellers are sinful because they accumulated fortunes by exploiting the poor. I feel that everybody should be able to rise as high as they can or want to, provided they don't kill anybody or actually oppress other people on the way up. A little exploitation is something you come by in nature. We see it in the pecking order of animals—everybody has to be exploited or to exploit someone else to a certain extent. I don't resent those things.


This is Barks most outright defense of capitalism and the indictment of any political system that "tries to make everybody exactly alike", which is the Marxist philosophy of equality in all things. Equality under the law is good, but actual equality in wealth or in nature just does not work. Scrooge McDuck is both morally righteous and has to exploit people (such as his nephews and Donald at 35 cents an hour) to accumulate his fortune. Scrooge McDuck is a noble capitalist as conceived by Barks. Other cartoonists generally fail to capture the nuanced morality and ethics held by Scrooge.


SCROOGE'S ENCOUNTERS WITH HISTORICAL FIGURES

In several Don Rosa stories, Scrooge McDuck encountered historical people. The most notable of these encounters was with in 1883, in Duckburg in 1902, and in Panama in 1906.

Other historical people who met Scrooge:

Furthermore, Don Rosa often hides images of himself, his friends or Carl Barks in his stories.


IN OTHER MEDIA

Scrooge's first appearance in animated form (save for a brief cameo appearance on the '' Mickey Mouse Club '' television series) was in Disney's 1967 theatrical short '' Scrooge McDuck And Money '', in which he teaches his nephews some basic financial tips.

He later appeared as Ebenezer Scrooge in '' Mickey's Christmas Carol '' (1983), an animated version of the Dickens classic. He appeared as himself in the Television Special ''Soccermania with Sport Goofy ''.

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Scrooge's biggest role outside of comics would come in the 1987 Animated Series '' DuckTales '', a series loosely based on Carl Barks's comics, his character being voiced by Alan Young . In this series, which first aired on September 11 , 1987 , Scrooge becomes the caretaker of Huey, Dewey and Louie when Donald joins the United States Navy . The ''Soccermania'' special can be considered a prototype of this series. Scrooge's persona in ''DuckTales'' is considerably softer than in most previous appearances; his ruthlessness is played down considerably and his often abrasive personality is reduced in many episodes to that of a crotchety but lovable old uncle. Still, there are flashes of Barks' Scrooge to be seen, especially in early episodes of the first season.

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He has appeared in some episodes of '''' (which was based off of Barks' stories and ''DuckTales''), but he is mentioned by Magica before the confrontation with her in the PlayStation 2 and GameCube version of the game.

In 2002, '' Forbes '' magazine named Scrooge McDuck history's 4th richest fictional character. Scrooge McDuck was attributed 8.2 billion dollars which he obtained through his mining endeavors. See '' Forbes' Fictional 15 ''.


HIS NAME IN OTHER LANGUAGES

  • Arabic : عم ذهب (romanized: `amm dhahab; lit. "uncle Gold").

  • French : Balthazar Picsou / Onc' Picsou

  • German : Dagobert Duck

  • Finnish : Uncle Roope

  • Portuguese : Tio Patinhas

  • Spanish : In Mexico: Rico McPato. Members of the family call him Tio Rico.



SEE ALSO




EXTERNAL LINKS

;Additional information


;Further reading
Uncle Scrooge McDuck

Carl Barks Library

Scrooge McDuck Capitalist and Proud of it!

: ''How to Read Donald Duck--Imperialist Ideology in the Disney Comic'', Dorfmann & Mattelart, International General 1975

;Other languages
  • German: Dagobert Duck , the largest Scrooge McDuck website in Europe