Leo Baxendale strips (1953–1962) Minnie the Minx, created and drawn by Leo Baxendale, first appeared in
The Beano in December 1953. Her first strip introduced her as "wild as wild can be" and showed her exasperated mother attempting to get her to be more creative rather than fight. Taking a book, Minnie then proceeds to beat her classmates during a revenge scheme using the scrapbook as a weapon. The closing panel shows her thanking her mother for the scrapbook stating she has "won nine scraps with it." Most of Minnie's earlier strips consisted of six-panel boxes; however, as her popularity grew, it quickly became more plausible to give Minnie her own full page with added colour. This introduced her trademark flaming red hair and red and black jersey. Like many other
Beano stars at the time, many of her later strips showed Minnie to get her comeuppance towards the end be it a cane, slipper or simply a case of karma. Minnie also appeared alongside
Dennis the Menace in his own strip in the edition of 23 January 1954 of The Beano. In the strip, she swapped toys with Dennis for the day as she received his trusty catapult and he proceeded to 'menace' with her doll's pram. In the end, she got out of trouble scot free whilst Dennis had to suffer for all her minxing. It was possibly this that began their future eternal rivalry.
Jim Petrie strips (1962–2001) In 1962, when Baxendale left
D.C. Thomson, a new artist was taken on to continue Minnie's adventures. Young art teacher
Jim Petrie was given the opportunity. His first strip, coincidentally, started similarly to Baxendale's in that Minnie is seen being asked by her mother to read rather than minx. Much to her mother's dismay, Minnie's chosen book influences her to take up red Indian traditions in which she gets up to much mischief. In the end, however, after aggravating a sleeping bull, Minnie is caught by a farmer and taken home to be slippered by her father. Despite the pain, it appears Minnie still attempts to ensure to the public that she is still an Indian stating her name is 'Minnie – Ha!'. She appeared once again alongside Dennis in issue 1894, in which she states that Dennis' famous jersey is actually her trademark, so he has no right to call them 'Dennis Jerseys'.
The Beanos 50th Anniversary issue in 1988 was significant, as an increase in the number of colour pages in the comic led to Minnie appearing in full colour for the first time. In the strip itself, Minnie dressed up as
Pansy Potter in compliance with the editor's wishes. Throughout the strip she attempts impossible feats in hope to appear just like Pansy. This even consists of attempting to sink war submarines, something the old character used to do during The Beano's war times. Despite the fact she is weaker than Pansy, Minnie does manage to withhold four sailors before they finally manage to catch her and tie her up leaving her before her father. However, previously she had filled her father's jumper with balloons and using Pansy's unique hairstyle, manages to burst the balloons causing her father to flee home in the nude, the thought of punishing his daughter forgotten. Minnie also made a cameo in the 1992
Beano Annual story, "Dennis Through The Beano Book", in which she played the Queen of Hearts. She has also been the star of several Beanotown pantomimes, playing the role of
Cinderella in each. With the turn of the new century, Minnie was featured in a feature-length strip alongside Dennis the Menace,
Roger the Dodger and
The Bash Street Kids. The plot revolved around treasure which was apparently buried sometime near the end of the 19th century. Minnie was called over to Dennis' house by Roger who had gained a copy of the Treasure Map due to Smiffy, the dipsy member of The Bash Street Kids, leaving the original in the photocopier machine in Beanotown Library. Upon finding out The Bash Street Kids were also hunting for the treasure, the trio followed them to London. Once the mystery had unfolded that the treasure was buried deep in the
Millennium Dome, the Bash Street Kids instantly found it and celebrated their victory. However, Dennis attempts to intimidate the treasure off Fatty but he quickly flattened leaving Minnie and Roger to chase after Danny, who had just run off with the treasure. Finding him hiding in a storage cupboard, Roger forms a plan to get Danny to duel with Dennis for the treasure. Whilst all seems fair at first, it is quickly discovered that the three menaces had no intent on fair play when it comes to treasure and it is revealed that Roger had in fact tied Danny's catapult to a piece of string, thus yanking it away at a pinnacle moment. Appearing to have won, the trio leave a humiliated Danny and head home. However, a plot quickly unravels that Roger wasn't the only one who was intent on unfair play. Danny had switched the treasure with pebbles whilst he was hiding in the storage cupboard. Alongside Dennis, Minnie chased Roger through the streets of Beanotown, giving Danny the opportunity to switch the treasure. Minnie also attended Dennis the Menace's 50th Birthday House Party. Like the other guests, Minnie bought Dennis a
Beano Annual 2001. She participated in all menacing party games but, due to her friendship with Dennis, she was one of few to not get menaced. She can also be seen fighting in the final food fight and twirling her beret when the celebrities and Dandy characters arrive. Petrie decided to retire, with his final strip appearing on 13 January 2001. The story consisted of Minnie meeting her former artist and bidding farewell. The strip was Petrie's 2000th and last, a tally for one artist drawing the same strip in the Beano, only surpassed by David Sutherland on the Bash Street Kids.
Tom Paterson strips (2001–2008) The following week,
Calamity James artist
Tom Paterson took over the strip, adding his own distinct trademarks and ideas on Minnie's canon. In 2003, Brain Duane from The Dandy visited Beanotown and proceeded to mock Minnie for her lack of intelligence. Choosing brawn over brains and fuelled with jealousy over Duane's new gadget-filled car, Minnie threatened Duane into making her a custom-built skateboard. The next week, after asking to meet Dennis she proceeds to minx him with her new weapon-filled vehicle. This causes Dennis to get his revenge the next week with his own Menace Buggy. It was revealed in succeeding issues that this, along with several other strips from around the same time, was a buildup to a brand new PC Game
Beanotown Racing. She appeared as a playable character in the video game upon its release date in 2003. Initially Paterson drew the vast majority of strips, with the occasional story drawn by Keith Reynolds, but, by 2003, other artists, such as Leslie Reavey, began to ghost the strip due to Tom Paterson's workload. Through 2004 and 2005, ghosted strips became increasingly common, and eventually, in early 2006, Steve Horrocks took up the artistic duties. However, in the autumn of that year, Paterson returned to the strip, but in a different style, the most notable change being that Minnie's Parents appeared to look very similar to those of Sweeney Toddler. The following year, Tom Paterson's style changed again, and the changes made to her parents were largely reversed, although Minnie's Dad's moustache was still absent. In October 2007, Minnie's jumper changed colour from her familiar black and red stripes to red and yellow, with her skirt also changing from black to blue. This style was also seen on the cover of the 1965 Beano book.
Ken Harrison strips (2008–2012) By 2007, Minnie was struggling in the readers' poll and, in early 2008, several significant changes were made in response to this.
Iain McLaughlin took over as writer and, in Beano issue 3422, dated 15 March 2008, former Desperate Dan artist
Ken Harrison took over as the strip's artist. Harrison re-introduced many aspects of Leo Baxendale's original depiction of the character and reverted her jumper to its original colours. However, the style of writing changed, with McLaughlin placing greater emphasis on the relationship between Minnie and her Dad. Some minor changes were made to her appearances, with her standard brown or grey school shoes replaced with the more modern
trainers. A new tagline was introduced, citing Minnie as the World's Wildest Tom Boy, similar to Dennis the Menace's original tagline of being the World's Wildest Boy. Minnie's Teacher also became a regular character during this time, and Minnie now attends what appears to be an all-girls school. The changes reinvigorated the strip as Minnie soon returned to a top four position in the poll. Although Harrison has been the main artist throughout this time, when he has been unavailable to draw the strip, the main ghost artist has been
Laura Howell. Since 2009, occasional Jim Petrie reprints have been used, particularly during the postal strikes in autumn 2009. In the summer of 2010, Minnie began a quest for fame which received a lot of media attention in the UK.
Cheryl Cole, who was spotted sporting a red and black dress in her music video, was featured as well as
Wayne Rooney and
Jamie Oliver. Each attempt landed Minnie in more trouble than the last so, in her final strip, she decided to give up the search for fame and instead continue her day-to-day minxing. On 30 July 2011, Minnie and several of her Beano co-stars were a part of a UK advertising campaign for
National Trust. This included a special of The Beano which included a comic strip of her and her father exploring Northern Ireland for Finn McCool and the Giant's Causeway. In November 2012, Minnie loses her second page as it is reserved for Funsize Funnies (
Gnash Gnews,
Little Plum,
Winston and
Rasher)
Current Strips (2012–present) Ken Harrison drew his last Minnie the Minx strip in November 2012, drawing the first Minnie story reduced down to a single page. The week after, Nigel Parkinson took over and both wrote and drew the strip from then on. He confirmed that he was the new Minnie artist some months later, on his blog. For the 75th anniversary special, Minnie the Minx met Andy Murray in a tennis battle. Minnie also met Harry Hill, Jeremy Clarkson and Matt Smith (plus others) in the 2013 Comic Relief special. During Parkinson's time he tried to surprise the readers by never following a script template and allowing Minnie's character to dictate storylines. In 2013, Minnie stories went back up to two pages, with Nigel Parkinson and Paul Palmer and, later in 2015,
Cavan Scott writing the scripts. In 2018, as the Beano celebrated an eightieth anniversary, there was a collector's edition magazine-
Minnie – 65 Years of Minxing. Laura Howell began drawing Minne in 2018, the first woman to draw Minnie. , her work has appeared in 127 Beano issues. ==Personality traits==