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Most
fun for the adults: I liked tracing the Peanuts cartoons.
Most fun for the kids: The kids
liked all the interactions with the entire exhibit.
Best ages for this attraction: 3+
Price per tickets: Included in museum
admission. $7 for children and adults.
The Good Grief! Exhibit running at the Chicago Children's Museum September
20 - November 30, 2003 celebrates the late Charles M. Schulz. His comic
strip, PEANUTS, is brought to life and invites children to step inside
the Peanuts world. The exhibit is both highly interactive and very funny.
When
you first step into the exhibit you come upon a life-size version of Snoopy's
dog house. He is lying on top while Charlie Brown is crawling out of the
house from down below. Next to that is the WWI Flying Ace's plane and
children are encouraged to strap on some goggles and fly like Snoopy did
for all those years, through his imagination.
Peanuts is a classic comic strip reflecting American history and culture.
Browse through decades of comics while looking back onto our own history
and you begin to understand the true genius of Charles M. Schulz. There
is a section of the exhibit where visitors are able to pick up a paper
and pencil and set it down atop a lit up table to trace a variety of Peanuts
characters. In the same room you can see the Peanuts cartoons translated
into various languages and become introduced to how the comic was distributed
throughout the world.
Kids
can walk amongst life-size statues of the Peanuts gang all dressed up
and playing a game of baseball. There is a piano that plays beautiful
music with any key the child presses. Lucy's "the doctor is in"
booth is set up with interesting topics to discuss with your children
such as prejudice and peer pressure. The kids can even help build Woodstock's
nest. All this is in addition to watching various cartoons of the cute
characters and all their trial and tribulations.
As if the exhibit isn't entertaining enough, Snoopy, everyone's favorite
beagle, appears at the Chicago Children's Museum every Friday, Saturday
and Sunday at 11am, noon and 1pm through the length of the exhibit.
From Charlie Brown's baseball woes, Lucy's Psychiatry Booth and the WWI
Flying Ace's plane to a gallery of classic comic strips reflecting American
history and culture through the decades, this exhibit allows kids to build
language and problem-solving-skills and families to see themselves in
a whole new way.
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