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Edward Sorel
Saturday, Jan 01, 2000, 12:00am
Edward Sorel (Born in 1929 in the Bronx) famous illustrator and cartoonist (often political) whose work has appeared in scores of magazines including the cover of the New Yorker and elsewhere.
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Hanoch Piven
Saturday, Jan 01, 2000, 12:00am
Hanoch Piven, born in Uruguay, is an Israeli illustrator whose work appears in several major magazines. Famous for celebrity caricatures made from collages of objects.
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Herb Gardner
Saturday, Jan 01, 2000, 12:00am
Herb Gardner (December 28, 1934 in Brooklyn - September 25, 2003) started drawing a short-lived but always remembered comic strip "The Nebishes" in the early sixties. He later turned to the theater writing such memorable plays as "A Thousand Clowns" and "I'm Not Rappaport".
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Art Spiegelman
Saturday, Jan 01, 2000, 12:00am
Art Spiegelman (born February 15, 1948) is an American comics artist, editor, and advocate for the medium of comics, best known for his Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel memoir, Maus.
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Herb Gardner
Saturday, Jan 01, 2000, 12:00am
Herb Gardner (December 28, 1934 in Brooklyn - September 25, 2003) started drawing a short-lived but always remembered comic strip "The Nebishes" in the early sixties. He later turned to the theater writing such memorable plays as "A Thousand Clowns" and "I'm Not Rappaport".
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Aaron Sopher (December 16, 1905 – April 1972)
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
Baltimore pen/ink artist cartoonist political events. Many of his works could be found in the Baltimore Sun, The New Yorker.
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Arlene Klasky
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
Creator of the popular cartoon series "The Rugrats".
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David Levine (Born: December 20, 1926)
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
David Levine (born December 20, 1926) is an American caricaturist noted for his caricatures in the The New York Review of Books.
His first cartoons appeared in 1963. Since then he has drawn hundreds of pen-and-ink caricatures of famous writers and politicians for the Review. His style is similar to that of the French caricaturist Honoré Daumier (1808-1879). Both enlarge the subject's head, making the body look small by comparison.
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Jack Kirby
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
Jack Kirby (born Jacob Kurtzberg, August 28, 1917 – February 6, 1994) was one of the most influential, recognizable, and prolific artists in American comic books, and the co-creator of such enduring characters and popular culture icons as the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, the Hulk, Captain America, and hundreds of others stretching back to the earliest days of the medium. He was also a comic book writer and editor. His most common nickname is "The King".
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Jules Feiffer
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
Jules Ralph Feiffer (born January 26, 1929) is an American syndicated comic-strip cartoonist and author. In 1986 he won the Pulitzer Prize for his editorial cartooning in The Village Voice, and in 2004 was inducted into the Comic Book Hall of Fame.
Feiffer was born in New York City, in the borough of the Bronx, and attended the former James Monroe High School. Feiffer served as an assistant for Will Eisner in the 1940s, learning to tell stories with words and pictures while working on Eisner's acclaimed The Spirit comic strip. Feiffer also wrote the stage play Little Murders, the screenplay for Mike Nichols's 1971 film Carnal Knowledge, illustrated the children's book classic The Phantom Tollbooth, wrote the book The Great Comic Book Heroes (an extract of which Quentin Tarantino adapted for a speech in his film Kill Bill), and won an Oscar in 1961 for his short animation "Munro". In addition, Feiffer has written the screenplay for Robert Altman's Popeye film, a movie version of Little Murders, and the screenplay for Alain Resnais's film I Want to Go Home.
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Ranan R. Lurie (1932)
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
Ranan R. Lurie is an American Israeli editorial cartoonist and journalist. He is a Senior Associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a member of the United Nation Correspondents Association, and the editor of Cartoon News magazine.
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Rube Goldberg (July 4, 1883 - December 7, 1970)
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
Reuben Garret Lucius Goldberg was an American cartoonist who received a 1948 Pulitzer Prize for his political cartooning. He is best known for his series of popular cartoons depicting Rube Goldberg machines, complex devices that perform simple tasks in indirect, convoluted ways. The Reuben Award of the National Cartoonists Society is named in his honor. In addition, there are several contests around the world known as Rube Goldberg contests which challenge high school students to make a complex machine to perform a simple task.
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Saul Steinberg (June 15, 1914 – May 12, 1999)
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
Saul Steinberg was a Romanian-born American cartoonist and illustrator, best known for his work for The New Yorker magazine.
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Stan Lee (Born: December 28, 1922)
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
Stan Lee, born Stanley Martin Lieber, is an American writer, editor, creator of comic book superheroes, and the former Chairman of Marvel Comics.
With several artist co-creators, most notably Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, he co-created Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, the Hulk, Iron Man, Daredevil, Doctor Strange, and many other characters, introducing complex, naturalistic characters and a thoroughly shared universe into superhero comic books. He subsequently led the expansion of Marvel Comics from a small division of a publishing house to a large multimedia corporation.
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Stanley Mack
Friday, Dec 31, 1999, 07:00pm
Stanley Mack is a cartoonist and reporter best known for his series, "Stan Mack's Real Life Funnies", which ran in The Village Voice for over 20 years. He is also a reporter, with articles appearing in The New York Times.
In 1998, Mack wrote and illustrated The Story of the Jews: A 4,000 Year Adventure, a humorous cartoon look at the history of the Jews.
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