Nemo propheta in patria: Topo Gigio
Nemo propheta in patria: Topo Gigio
Topo Gigio Annual
1967
Hardback
Number of pages: 93
Publisher: Century 21 Publishing Ltd. and City Magazines Ltd.
Nemo propheta in patria: Topo Gigio
Topo Gigio Annual
1967
Hardback
Number of pages: 93
Publisher: Century 21 Publishing Ltd. and City Magazines Ltd.
John Lennon biocomic
Lennon
Album
Scénario: Corbeyran, Éric Foenkinos, David
Dessin: Horne
Editeur: Marabout
Collection: MARAbulles
Planches: 146
France
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fz-d54I8xNo
Xtina and the bomb
Gaston Lagaffe and The Twilight Zone
Gaston Lagaffe
Created: André Franquin et Yvan Delporte
First appearance: Le Journal de Spirou no 985
Date: 28 February 1957
Publisher: Dupuis
Pays: France
Language: French
The Twilight Zone episode
Title: Mr: Bevis
Season: 1
Episode: 33
Directed by: William Asher
Written by: Rod Serling
Original air date: June 3, 1960
Cast:
Orson Bean as James B. W. Bevis
Henry Jones as J. Hardy Hempstead
Charles Lane as Mr. Peckinpaugh
Florence MacMichael as Margaret
William Schallert as Policeman
Vito Scotti as Tony, the Fruit Peddler
Horace McMahon as Bartender
Network: CBS
Country: USA
Language: English
Mr. Bevis loses his job, gets tickets on his car (which has tipped over) and gets evicted from his apartment, all in one day. Bevis then meets and gets assistance from his guardian angel, one J. Hardy Hempstead. Bevis gets to start the day over again, except now he is a success at work, his rent is paid and his personal transportation is now a sportscar (Austin-Healey) instead of Bevis’s previous jalopy, a soot-spewing 1924 Rickenbacker.
Comics Xmas quiz
which characters on these sunday pages?
From: Artists and Models
Director: Frank Tashlin
Writers: Herbert Baker (screenplay), Michael Davidson (play)
Stars: Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, Dorothy Malone, Shirley MacLaine, Eddie Mayehoff, Eva Gabor, Anita Ekberg
Country: USA
Language: English
Release Date: 7 November 1955 (USA)
Production Co: Wallis-Hazen
Runtime: 109 min
Color (Technicolor)
Xtina, A Merry Christmas To All! in Disney’s style
Prince Valiant, a great (and big) Christmas gift
Women cartoonists: Janice Valleau
Janice Valleau (November 6, 1923 – December 8, 2013), sometimes credited as Ginger or Janice S., was a Golden Age artist and inker who worked for MLJ (Archie) Publications, Charlton Comics, Novelty Press, and Quality Comics.
Janice Valleau was born to John McChesney and Gertrude (Kaiser) Valleau, and grew up in Teaneck, New Jersey.[1][2] Valleau’s father was an executive at Paine Webber. She contracted polio as a child and had to wear leg braces until young adulthood. Her first published work appeared in Smash Comics, published when she was just 16. After high school, she attended the Phoenix Art Institute where she studied commercial art.
When she graduated, she went to work for MLJ (Archie) Publications; Archie creator Bob Montana was also an alumnus of Phoenix. She began working for Quality Comics soon after, and worked in comics for the next eleven years.[3] She is best known for her work on the “Toni Gayle” feature for Young King Cole featuring a glamorous model-detective.
She met her husband, Edward, in 1948. In the mid-1950s, they moved to Pittsburgh, where she continued to work on comics. She left comics in 1955 after the Wertham-era crackdown, which put her off working professionally in any art field. In her 60s, she returned to art and took up painting recreationally and continued well into her 80s.[3] In 1982, she moved to Florida with her husband. They had four children: Steve, Daniel, Dale, and Ellen.[1] Her husband died in 2009 after 61 years of marriage.
She passed away at age 90 in Jacksonville, Florida, after some time in hospice care.
Outis Comics Christmas Tree
Look at all our books on Outisfumetti
Women cartoonist: Nina Albright
Nina Albright
(15 February 1907 – 7 February 1997, USA)
Nina Albright worked on comic books through studios like Funnies Inc, L.B. Cole and Bernard Bailey in the 1940s. For Novelty Press in New York, she worked on comic titles like ‘Young King Cole’, ‘Lem the Grem’, ‘Dr Doom’, ‘Bull’s Eye Bill’ and ‘The Cadet’, which appeared in Novelty Press publications like 4most. She also workedon Fiction House features like ‘Captain Terry Thunder’, ‘Hooks Devlin’, ‘Inspector Dayton’ and ‘Senorita Rio’. She additionally worked for Holyoke (‘Miss Victory’, ‘Molly O’Moore’, ‘Mr Nobody’), Aviation Press (‘Black Venus’) and illustrated romance stories for Marvel, Archie Publications, St. John and Ziff-Davis up until the early 1950s. By then, she switched to illustrating, working for magazines like American Girl and the Polly French series.