Background seaplane used by Hergé as inspiration for the type used by Tintin in the book Amidst the
German occupation of Belgium during World War II, Hergé became the founding editor of
Le Soir Jeunesse, a children's supplement in Belgium's leading newspaper,
Le Soir. Hergé's previous employer, the
Catholic newspaper
Le Vingtième Siècle (which had originated
The Adventures of Tintin through its own children's supplement,
Le Petit Vingtième) was no longer allowed by the German authorities to continue publishing;
Le Soir, in contrast, was allowed to stay open under the administrative control of the occupying
military government.
Le Soir Jeunesse serialized most of
The Shooting Star's immediate predecessor,
The Crab with the Golden Claws, but ceased publication due to paper shortages in 1941.
The Adventures of Tintin was then moved to
Le Soir itself, where
The Crab with the Golden Claws was concluded and the subsequent four
Adventures (including
The Shooting Star) were serialized. During its initial serialization,
The Shooting Star featured the United States as the primary antagonists; explaining this, Hergé asserted that the story revolved around the theme of "the rivalry for progress between Europe and the United States". Although not disliking
Americans themselves, he had a strong disdain for American big business, and had exhibited anti-American themes in earlier works, in particular in
Tintin in America. During serialisation of
The Shooting Star, in December 1941, the U.S. entered the war on the side of the
Allies, thus coming into direct conflict with Germany. All of the scientists featured were from
Axis,
neutral, or occupied countries which might be a reflection of the strip's anti-Allies political slant. Hergé biographer
Harry Thompson stated this should not be interpreted as a strong anti-Ally bias, for the only two nation-states in Europe that were part of the Allies at that point were the
Soviet Union and United Kingdom, and that the characters of Haddock and Chester were British. As he had done for other
Adventures of Tintin which featured sea travel, Hergé was careful to obtain as much data about ships as possible in order to make his portrayals more realistic. The design of the
Aurora was based on the
RRS William Scoresby, while that of the
Peary was most likely based upon another
Antarctic ship, the
RRS Discovery. The seaplane on which the expedition travels was based on the German
Arado 196-A. Hergé nevertheless later criticised his own efforts in this area, saying that if
Aurora had been a real ship, it would probably be unseaworthy.
The Shooting Star shared plot similarities with
The Chase of the Golden Meteor, a 1908 novel by pioneering French
science-fiction writer
Jules Verne. As in Hergé's story, Verne's novel features an expedition to the North Atlantic to find a meteorite fragment containing a new element. In both stories, the competing expedition teams were led by an eccentric professor and a Jewish banker, and Verne's novel had a Doktor Schultze to Hergé's Professor Schulze—both from the
University of Jena. Hergé denied deliberately copying Verne's story, saying that he had only read one of the French novelist's works; it is possible that the influence from Verne came via
Jacques Van Melkebeke, Hergé's friend and assistant, who was a fan of the genre. The Swedish expedition member Eric Björgenskjöld physically resembles a real person:
Auguste Piccard, who later became Hergé's inspiration for
Professor Calculus.
Antisemitism Under Nazi control,
Le Soir was publishing a variety of
antisemitic articles, calling for the Jews to be further excluded from public life and describing them as racial enemies of the
Belgian people. Hergé biographer
Pierre Assouline noted that there was a "remarkable correlation" between the antisemitic nature of
Le Soir editorials and
The Shooting Star depiction of Jews. Within months of the story's publication, legislation was passed to
collect and deport Jews from Belgium to
Nazi concentration camps. Thus,
The Shooting Star reflected trends in the Belgian political situation at the time. However, the story was not the first time that Hergé had adopted such a perspective in his work; he had recently provided illustrations for
Robert de Vroyland's
Fables, a number of which contained
antisemitic stereotypes, reflecting the racism in much of de Vroyland's book. Similarly, his depiction of the character of
Rastapopoulos, who was introduced in
Tintin in America, has been cited as being based upon antisemitic stereotypes. When
The Shooting Star appeared in
Le Soir, Hergé featured a gag in which two Jews hear the prophetic news that the end of the world is near. They rub their hands together in eagerness, and one comments: "Did you hear, Isaac? The end of the world! What if it's true?" The other responds: "Hey, hey, it vould be a gut ding, Solomon! I owe my suppliers 50,000
francs, and zis way I von't haf to pay vem!" Hergé omitted this scene from the collected edition. The character of Blumenstein displays antisemitic stereotypes, such as having a bulbous nose and being an avaricious, manipulative businessman. Hergé later dismissed concerns over this Jewish caricature, saying "That was the style then". In his assessment of Franco-Belgian comics, Matthew Screech expressed the opinion that Blumenstein was an anti-American stereotype rather than an anti-Jewish one. Similarly, reporter and Tintin expert
Michael Farr asserted that Blumenstein was "more parodied as a financier than Jew". Conversely,
Lofficier and Lofficier asserted that both anti-Americanism and antisemitism were present, and that it is the United States and
International Jewry who were the "ruthless opponents" of Tintin. Nazi apologists and revisionists such as French
Holocaust denier Olivier Mathieu used
The Shooting Star as evidence that Hergé was an antisemite with Nazi sympathies. To graphic novel specialist Hugo Frey, the competing expeditions are presented as a simplistic race between good and evil, wherein Blumenstein displays the stereotypes of Jews held by advocates of the
Jewish World Conspiracy presented in works such as the antisemitic
Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Frey writes that Blumenstein's "large and bulbous nose ... rounded forehead, receding black hair, and small beady eyes" were stock antisemitic imagery in the 1930s and 1940s, as promoted by those such as journalist
Édouard Drumont, whose antisemitic Paris-based newspaper
La Libre Parole was influential in Brussels. According to Frey, Blumenstein's depiction as an overweight cigar-smoker reflected the antisemitic stereotype of Jews as being financially powerful, while he suggested that the scene in which Blumenstein learned that he was to be tracked down for his crimes recalled the contemporary roundup of Jews in Nazi Europe. Frey contrasts Hergé's complicity with the antisemites to the actions of other Belgians, such as those who struck against the Nazis at the
Université libre de Bruxelles and those who risked their lives to hide Jews.
Publication The Shooting Star was serialised daily in from 20 October 1941 to 21 May 1942 in French under the title (
The Mysterious Star). Tintin's previous adventure,
The Crab with the Golden Claws, had been serialised weekly until the demise of '''''s children's supplement, , before continuing daily in the main newspaper itself; the earlier serial had ended the day before
The Shooting Star began.
The Shooting Star was the first
Tintin adventure to be serialised daily in its entirety. As with earlier
Adventures of Tintin, the story was later serialised in France in the Catholic newspaper
Cœurs Vaillants, where it first appeared on 6 June 1943. On page 20 of the published book, Hergé included a cameo of the characters
Thomson and Thompson and
Quick & Flupke. The story also introduced Captain Chester, who is mentioned in later adventures, and
Professor Cantonneau, who returns in
The Seven Crystal Balls. On 21 May 1942,
The Shooting Star concluded serialisation. Less than a week later, the occupied government proclaimed that all Jews in Belgium would have to wear a
yellow badge on their clothing, and in July the
Gestapo began raids on Jewish premises, followed by deportations of Jews to Nazi concentration camps and
extermination camps, resulting in around 32,000 Belgian Jews being killed. Hergé later recalled: "I saw very few Jews wearing the yellow star, but finally, I did see some. They told me that some Jews were gone; that people had come for them and sent them away. I didn't want to believe it". The earlier
Tintin albums reproduced the newspaper strips, which had come to appear weekly in Thursday supplements, two-page allotments of three tiers to a page. War shortages reduced the space for the strip by a third, and later the supplements disappeared completely; the comic appeared daily in the main newspaper as a four-panel strip. For publication in book form,
Casterman insisted that Hergé must adhere to a new album format of four sixteen-page signatures, which gave sixty-two pages of story plus a cover page. Though the format reduced the page count, it maintained the same amount of story by reducing the size of the panels reproduced. As
The Shooting Star progressed, Hergé cut up and laid out clippings of the strip in an exercise book in preparation for the new layouts. It was the first volume of
The Adventures of Tintin to be originally published in the 62-page full-colour format that thereafter was the series standard (as opposed to first being published in a black and white newspaper strip reproduction format that all prior books had done).
Casterman published the album in September 1942. Unlike the previous books in the series, because it was printed immediately in colour, it did not need to be totally redrawn. The 177 daily strips from the original serialisation were not enough to fill the 62 pages Casterman had allotted, so Hergé added large panels, such as a half-page panel of a giant telescope on page three. Hergé wanted to include a small gold star inside the "o" of "Étoile" on the cover page, but Casterman refused, deeming it too expensive. In 1954, Hergé began making various changes to the story for its re-publication. Aware of the controversy surrounding the depiction of Blumenstein, he renamed the character "Bohlwinkel", adopting this name from , a Brussels dialect term for a
confectionery store. He later discovered that, by coincidence, Bohlwinkel was also a Jewish name. Trying to tone down the book's anti-American sentiment, he also changed the United States to a
fictional South American nation called São Rico, replacing the U.S. flag flown by the
Pearys crew with that of the fictional state. In 1959, Hergé made a new list of changes to be made to the artwork in
The Shooting Star, which included altering Bohlwinkel's nose, but the changes were postponed and never made. ==Adaptations==