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1[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/andycapp_1903.jpg]]
2->''"Heh, heh, heh... Oh, Andy Capp. You wife-beating drunk."''
3-->-- '''Homer Simpson''', ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', "Marge vs. the Monorail"
4
5''Andy Capp'' is a British comic strip set in [[UsefulNotes/NorthEastEngland Hartlepool]], created by Reg Smythe in 1957 for the London ''Daily Mirror''. It also was syndicated in the United States by Creators Syndicate, starting in 1963.
6
7In its early days, the ''Andy Capp'' strip was accused of perpetuating stereotypes about Britain's [[UsefulNotes/NorthEastEngland Northerners]], who are seen in other parts of England as chronically unemployed, dividing their time between the living room couch and the neighbourhood pub, with a few hours set aside for fistfights at soccer games. Even his name is a perfect phonetic rendition of that region's pronunciation of the word "handicap" (which the cartoonist chose because a handicap is exactly what Andy is to his hard-working wife, Flo). But Smythe, himself a native of that region, had nothing but affection for his good-for-nothing protagonist, a fact which showed in his work. Since the very beginning, Andy has been immensely popular among the people he supposedly skewers. (Maybe the comic should be criticised for glorifying such negative behaviour instead.)
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9By the way, Smythe claimed he modelled his main characters after his own parents. But it seems unlikely that his father, who built boats for a living, could possibly have been very much like Andy, or his family would have starved. It's also been suggested that Andy Capp owes something to Ally Sloper, Britain's first successful comics character, also a lovable lowlife.
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11The first British paperback reprints of the strip appeared in 1958, and American reprints started in the early 1960s. In both countries, the volumes now number in the dozens. Andy has also been the star of a minor TV series; its six episodes featured James Bolam in the title role and Paula Tilbrook as Flo, and were aired by Creator/{{ITV}} in 1988. It's arguable that the series died a death ''because'' it was trying to be a three-dimensional comic strip rather than a conventional SitCom.
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13The strip even had a spin-off of sorts in 1960, Fleetway Publications, which was owned by The Mirror, launched a successful comic book titled ''ComicBook/{{Buster}}'', whose main character was supposedly Andy Capp's son (though this family connection was never mentioned in the strip itself and was later forgotten in the comic book as well). Andy was even animated once, when he crossed over with ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' in the episode "And the Wiener Is...", which first aired on August 8, 2001.
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15Reg Smythe wrote and drew ''Andy Capp'', both daily and Sunday, until his death in 1998. Since then, the strip has been continued by unnamed successors, though for years, Smythe's signature remained affixed to it. Since November 2004, it's been signed by Roger Mahoney and Roger Kettle. It now appears in over 1,400 newspapers worldwide — not quite in the range of top strips like ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'', ''ComicStrip/Blondie1930'', ''ComicStrip/HagarTheHorrible'' and ''ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}'', but well ahead of ''ComicStrip/{{BC}}'', ''ComicStrip/DennisTheMenaceUS'', ''ComicStrip/{{FoxTrot}}'' and other very successful comics.
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17And it's translated into 13 different languages, proving that Andy's appeal goes far beyond the minor regional stereotype he supposedly represents.
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19He is also the mascot for [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andy_Capp%27s_fries a line of snack foods.]]
20----
21!!Tropes present:
22* TheAlcoholic: Andy is a mild version.
23* ArtEvolution: Andy and Flo looked ''very'' different in the early years of the strip.
24* AsideComment: Frequent for delivering an observation that serves as the punchline.
25* AwfulWeddedLife
26* BarredFromEveryBar: Andy is a shiftless lush, mooching his wife's wages to pickle himself in British pubs. His principal haunt is The Rose and Crown, where proprietor Jack often tosses a pickled Andy into the street at closing time. Andy has also gotten himself ejected from other pubs, mainly for being a combative, impatient jerkass.
27* BigBallOfViolence: Is used to represent fights, with (at least sometimes) limbs of the combatants sticking out symmetrically at the four "corners" of the cloud. (Perhaps a more common stylistic way of depicting a fight is to show the participants just above the ground but not standing on it, facing each other inside an imaginary circle, limbs in an aggressive stance, and rolling along the ground or in place.)
28* DeadpanSnarker: Everyone.
29* DomesticAbuse: Although it's been toned down considerably from the strip's early years.
30* EyeObscuringHat: Andy has always worn his cap to obscure his eyes, even while Reg Smythe adjusted his character models.
31* ItsAllAboutMe[=/=]JerkAss: Andy is incredibly self-centred and selfish, but does not see it that way at all. Oddly, it gives him pause when someone else implies that he thinks this way ("I know, it could have been worse, it could have happened to you.") Even though he says almost exactly the same thing on another occasion himself, this time it makes him wonder whether that's really how other people see him.
32* KavorkaMan: Andy. Though his attempts onscreen often fail, he nevertheless seems to find new girlfriends younger than himself all the time -- even though he's a short, poor-ish, impolite, sexist, self-centred creep, not to mention married. It may be just due to the sheer amount of trying.
33* LazyBum: Andy's days seem to consist of lying on the couch while his wife goes to work, then going to the pub. The only job he's seriously tried to apply for is at the brewery.
34* LowerClassLout: Andy is a lazy, self-centred, hard-drinking and violent asshole who habitually beats and cheats on his wife.
35* MyLocal: The Rose and Crown, Andy's home away from home.
36* NeverBareheaded: Andy is always seen wearing a cap. [[PunnyName Funny how that works]].
37* NoAccountingForTaste: Andy and Flo's marriage.
38* PrintLongRunners / OutlivedItsCreator: Strangely, it was still credited to Smythe after his death.
39* PunnyName: As mentioned above, a play on "handicap ('andicap)".
40* SpinOffspring: The weekly AnthologyComic paper ''Buster'' headlined the eponymous Buster, "Andy Capp's Son." His parents got cameos and mentions in the first few years, but eventually this aspect of Buster's background was dropped.
41** Buster may well have grown up, married and had children, carrying the Capp family into a third generation. The ''Daily Mirror'' runs a strip in similar art style called ''Mandy Capp''. Mandy is an attitudinal single mother who is notionally Andy and Flo's grand-daughter.
42* StillWearingTheOldColors: Clothing rationing in Britain was not ended until 1949, therefore availability was limited and choice was poor. Many demobilised British servicemen still preferred wearing the best of their uniform items (made of hardwearing cloth and manufactured to higher standards) and the early strips reflect this. Even well into the 1950's, Andy is portrayed as wearing his Army greatcoat with DLI - Durham Light Infantry - on the shoulder patch. His readers would have understood this completely.
43* ThrowTheBookAtThem: A shop owner calls Andy some bad names. Andy quips "Words can't hurt me, mate." He is hit in the head with a dictionary the shop owner throws at him.
44* UnsympatheticComedyProtagonist: By now, it should be abundantly clear that Andy's one who puts even the likes of [[Series/FawltyTowers Basil Fawlty]] to shame.
45* UnusualHiringPractices: * One strip has him go to an interview for a job he doesn't want:
46-->'''Interviewer''': You afraid of hard work?
47-->'''Andy''': Petrified.
48-->'''Interviewer''': A clockwatcher?
49-->'''Andy''': Can't keep me eyes off it.
50-->'''Interviewer''': Come in, you're the first honest lad we've had all week.
51* TheVicar: Who even Andy treats with a measure of respect.
52* VitriolicBestBuds: Andy and his mate Chalkie White enjoy each other's mishaps.
53* TheVoice: Andy's mother-in-law. We see at most her leg, and even that's a rare occasion, but she delivers as many creative insults to Andy as he to her.
54* WishingWell: Flo drops a coin into a wishing well in the strip for Sunday 29 February 2004. Andy sneers, "You don't believe in those things, do you?" Flo turns to gaze pointedly at him, and replies, "Not any more."
55* WouldHitAGirl: The strip ran into some controversy as the years passed due to the often... physical outcome of Andy and Flo's arguments. It should be said that it wasn't just one sided abuse, as it was often full fledged fights between the two. The strip didn't seem quite able to decide whether Flo was capable of standing up for herself physically or not; sometimes she was, sometimes she wasn't.

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