Death of comic strip author Christian Godard

by Andrea
0 comments
Death of comic strip author Christian Godard

The creator of Norbert and Kari et Martin Milan died at his home in Paris at the age of 92.

The French cartoonist and comic book author, creator of Norbert and Kari et Martin Milandied at his Parisian home at the age of 92, his relatives announced Monday, November 11 in a message on his website. “He fought courageously for more than a year against cancer and he fell asleep forever, at home, in Paris, near his family”they clarified.

Born March 24, 1932 in Paris, Christian Godard made his debut under the pseudonym Ème in the early 1950s in illustrated periodicals like Coq boldi, before publishing under his own name “in all the youth magazines”of Pilot has Pif Mag passing through and , “from the 1960s to the present”recalls its site.

More than 230 albums to his credit

Designer of René Goscinny (for Lili Mannequin, Jacquot the Mousse…) for a dozen years, he found success with Norbert and Karia series launched in 1963 in Pilote, where it explores the friendship between a Polynesian and a Parisian who has decided to flee the capital. He does it again with Martin Milanhis other, most personal series, on the adventures of an altruistic plane-taxi pilot, started in 1967 in the Tintin newspaper.

As a screenwriter, Christian Godard also signed The crazy jungle with French designer Mic Delinx. Then, in the 1970s, The Wanderer of Limboscience fiction series illustrated by the Spaniard Julio Ribera, with whom he created a publishing house in 1988, The silver shipclosed in 1991. With more than 230 albums to his credit, this multi-faceted author has also written novels, plays, sketches and even television scripts.

He will be buried Thursday at 3 p.m. in the Saint-Ouen cemetery.

source

You may also like

Our Company

News USA and Northern BC: current events, analysis, and key topics of the day. Stay informed about the most important news and events in the region

Latest News

@2024 – All Right Reserved LNG in Northern BC